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Corporate headquarters on the left in theBrooklyn area ofDowntown Jacksonville | |
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Banking,Financial services |
Predecessors | First Alliance Bank |
Founded | October 1, 1998; 26 years ago (1998-10-01) in Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. |
Founder | Frank Trotter, Rob Foregger, Vincent Amato, and David Galland |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Greg Seibly, CEO David DePillo, President |
Products | Consumer banking,corporate banking,credit cards,finance and insurance,foreign currency exchange,investment banking,private equity,wealth management |
Total assets | ![]() |
Owner | Funds managed by Stone Point Capital,Warburg Pincus, Reverence Capital Partners,Sixth Street Partners, and Bayview Asset Management as well asTIAA. |
Website | www |
Footnotes / references [1] |
EverBank is an American diversifiedfinancial services company providingbanking andinvestment services, primarily via adirect bank. It is based inJacksonville, Florida. It is owned by funds managed by Stone Point Capital,Warburg Pincus, Reverence Capital Partners,Sixth Street Partners, and Bayview Asset Management as well asTIAA. It is on thelist of largest banks in the United States.
Since 2010, the company has owned thenaming rights toEverBank Stadium, under an agreement scheduled to expire in 2024.[2][3][4][5]
While the roots of EverBank stretch back to 1961, the current incarnation was formed in 1994 when Chairman Robert Clements led an investor group in acquiring Jacksonville, Florida–based Alliance Mortgage Company.[6]
In 1998, Alliance Mortgage Company formed First Alliance Bank inJacksonville, Florida.
In 1999, Frank Trotter and partners led an investor group to found EverBank.[7] In April 1999, EverBank acquired the world currency division ofMercantile Bancorporation.[8]
In 2001, First Alliance Bank acquired Marine National Bank, also of Jacksonville, Florida.[9]
On November 5, 2002, First Alliance Bank acquired EverBank.[10]
On February 2, 2004, the company took the name EverBank.[11]
In May 2007, EverBank agreed to acquireNetBank's direct banking andsmall business financing divisions and mortgage servicingportfolio; however, in September 2007, Everbank terminated the agreement, claiming thatNetBank had been unable to comply with provisions regarding certain cash levels due to the2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis.[12] Instead, EverBank acquired $700 million of NetBank's assets.[13]
In May 2008,MetLife acquired the bank'sreverse mortgage division.[14]
In 2009, during the2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis, aclass action lawsuit was filed against EverBank in theSuperior Court of California on behalf of purchasers ofcertificates of deposit denominated inIcelandic Krona from the bank. The lawsuit alleged that EverBank, against the instructions of its customers, closed the accounts at an unreasonable exchange rate, resulting in a loss of much of the purchasers' principal. Judge Richard Seeborg in San Jose granted EverBank summary judgment on all of the lawsuit's claims, finding that EverBank did not act inbad faith and had the discretion to close the accounts due to exposure of approximately $12 million in losses had the currency not recovered. A federal appeals court remanded the case to district court in 2014 to determine if the bank breached the terms and conditions when it returned the value of the accounts to the class members. The case was settled in 2016.[15][16][17]
In February 2010, EverBank acquired Tygris Commercial Finance Group, Inc., a provider of financing for business equipment.[18]
In May 2010, EverBank acquired all the deposits, substantially all of the assets, and certain liabilities of the Bank of Florida from theFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation, bringing its total assets to approximately $11.5 billion.[19]
In February 2012, the bank agreed to acquire the warehouse finance business ofMetLife.[20][21]
In October 2012, EverBank acquired Business Property Lending fromGE Capital for $2.4 billion.[22][23][24]
On June 9, 2017,TIAA acquired the bank; it was later renamed TIAA Bank.[25][26][27][28]
In August 2023, the bank was acquired by funds managed by Stone Point Capital,Warburg Pincus, Reverence Capital Partners,Sixth Street Partners, and Bayview Asset Management; the name was returned to EverBank.[29][30]
Also in August 2023, the bank paid $8.5 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging failure to pay overtime wages; loan officers received an average of $17,000 each and lawyers received $2.8 million in fees.[31][32]