Robert F. Greenhill (born 1936) is an American businessman widely credited with helping create and pioneer the modern mergers and acquisitions advisory business on Wall Street. [1] [2] He is the founder and chairman of Greenhill & Co., an investment bank headquartered in New York City [1] [3] [4] [5] which since its inception, has advised on transactions valued at close to $3 trillion and now operates in 17 offices globally across North and South America, Europe and the Middle East, and Asia and Australia. In May 2023, Japanese conglomerate Mizuho acquired Greenhill &Co. for $550 million in an all cash transaction [6] .
Greenhill was born in 1936 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. [7] He graduated from Yale University in 1958 with a BA in Philosophy, and he received an MBA from the Harvard Business School (HBS)in 1962, where he was a Baker Scholar, a student graduating with High Distinction have earned academic honors putting them in the top 5% of the graduating class. [2]
He joined investment bank Morgan Stanley in 1962 and became a partner in 1970. [1] [3] In 1972, he was appointed by Frank Petito, then Chairman of Morgan Stanley to create and direct the new mergers and acquisitions department, the first of its kind on Wall Street, during which time he was credited with pioneering the modern investment banking analyst program. [1] [3] [5] In the 1980s, he served on the investment banks' management committee, then from January 1989 to January 1999, he was its Vice Chairman, and from January 1991 to June 1993, its President. [1] [3]
From 1993 to 1996, he left Morgan Stanley to become the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Smith Barney, a subsidiary of the The Travelers Companies, and he served on the board of directors of the latter. [1] [2] [3] [5]
Greenhill suddenly departed in 1996, due to internal company disagreements and went on to found his own investment bank Greenhill & Co. later the same year, which operates solely as an independent advisor and does not provide lending or financial structuring [2] [3] He was its Chief Executive Officer from its creation until 2007, when he retired from the role. [1] [2] [3] Greenhill served as the company's Chairman from 1996 to 2018, and served on the board for over two decades from 1996 to 2021. He has remained Chairman Emeritus and senior adviser to the company after that [8] .
He has served for many years on the board of trustees of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy, known as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) [2] [4] [5] and has been a member of the Kappa Beta Phi society since 1985 [9] .
Robert was married to Gayle (nee Gussett) Greenhill in September 1958 in her hometown of Des Moines, Iowa and they remained married until her death on October 12, 2017. [5] [10] They moved to Boston when Robert attended HBS and then in 1962, moved to New York which became their home town as Robert started his career on Wall Street. They had three children, and instilled into the family their sense of adventure. In 1975, the two were dropped together with four others by an airplane at the Arctic Circle to spent a month travelling north with three canoes for 500 miles without guides from Beechey Lake in Nunavut, Canada on the Back river through to the Arctic Ocean. That trip made them subjects of a DuPont advertisement in 1977 touting Kevlar-skinned canoes. They later took their children on similar trips to the far north. In addition, Robert had a pilot's license with more than 15,000 hours logged in command over 20 years, flying all over the world, often accompanied by his wife, who eventually got her own pilot’s license at age 50. [11]
They were both very involved with the HBS alumni, and their three children and their spouses are all graduates of the school. [12] Greenhill’s many contributions to HBS include service on the School’s Visiting Committee and Centennial Global Business Summit Steering Committee, as well as leading roles in reunion fundraising. In addition to the family’s support for global research, in 1987 Greenhill endowed the Robert F. Greenhill Award, given annually by the HBS Dean to members of the HBS community who contribute to HBS in significant ways. In 2003, HBS named a building on campus "The Greenhill House" (formerly Humphrey House) in their honor, in appreciation of a significant gift, first major gift of its kind, that established the Gayle and Robert F. Greenhill Family Endowment for Global Research that provides permanent funding to support the School’s international research and course development activities. Currently the building provides administrative space for the HBS Global Initiative, which was launched in 1996 to deepen the School’s long-standing focus on international course development and research by facilitating closer ties with companies, academic institutions, and alumni worldwide. [13] In 2009, Greenhill received the HBS Alumni Achievement Award, given to alums who have contributed significantly to their companies and communities. [14]
Greenhill's wife Gayle was a trustee of the International Center of Photography from1985 to 2016, serving as Chair of the Board from 2001 to 2008 [15] and had also served on the New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) photography committee for more than two decades from 1989 to 2013. After her death, Robert donated to MoMa in her memory more than 300 photographs from her collection, intending it to stand as a memorial to a figure with a long commitment to supporting photography. The collection includes works by 103 artists, among them giants of photography, including Frank, Edward Steichen, Diane Arbus, Cindy Sherma, William Eggleston, László Moholy-Nagy, André Kertesz, Charles Sheeler, Imogen Cunningham, In addition to masterworks by established figures, the Greenhills collected a wide variety of documentary and press photography, much of it unattributed. These include many photographs taken during World War II—some by Steichen’s photography corps—and the Korean and Vietnam wars. The Greenhills had a keen interest in exploration, collecting extensively in the areas of early aviation, including photographs of the Wright Brothers’ foundational experiments (1903–1911), and the golden age of Antarctic exploration (1910– 1915), including a comprehensive set of prints by Herbert Ponting documenting Robert F. Scott’s disastrous expedition to the Antarctic. [16]
Edward Jean Steichen was a Luxembourgish American photographer, painter, and curator. He is considered among the most important figures in the history of photography.
James Dixon Robinson III was an American businessman best known for his position as the chief executive officer of American Express Co. from 1977 until his retirement in 1993.
Georges Frédéric Doriot was a French-American known for his prolific careers in military, academics, business and education.
Jaime Augusto Miranda Zóbel de Ayala, also known as Jaime Augusto Zóbel, is a Filipino businessman from the prominent Zóbel de Ayala family. He currently serves as the chairman of Ayala Corporation since 2016. He succeeded his father, Jaime Zóbel de Ayala, as the company's president and CEO in 1994. He was the company's chairman and CEO from 2006 to 2021.
Adebayo "Bayo" O. Ogunlesi is a Nigerian lawyer and investment banker. He is currently chairman and managing partner at the private equity firm Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP). Ogunlesi was the former head of global investment banking at Credit Suisse First Boston before being promoted to chief client officer and executive vice chairman.
John Hector McArthur was a Canadian-American organizational theorist. He served as Professor of Business Administration and the 7th Dean of the Harvard Business School (1980–1995).
Mark E. Kingdon is a hedge fund manager and president of Kingdon Capital Management, a US investment management company with ~$623 million in assets under management.
Stephen Gerard Pagliuca is an American private equity investor, co-chairman of Bain Capital, and co-owner of the Boston Celtics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and Atalanta of Italian Serie A association football league.
Harvard Business School (HBS) is the graduate business school of Harvard University, a private Ivy League research university. Located in Allston, Massachusetts, HBS owns Harvard Business Publishing, which publishes business books, leadership articles, case studies, and Harvard Business Review, a monthly academic business magazine. It is also home to the Baker Library/Bloomberg Center, the school's primary library.
Karen Gordon Mills is an American businessperson and former government official who served as the 23rd Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). She was nominated by President-elect Barack Obama on December 19, 2008, confirmed unanimously by the Senate on April 2, 2009, and sworn in on April 6, 2009. During her tenure, her office was elevated to the rank of Cabinet-level officer, expanding her power on policy decisions and granting her inclusion in the President's cabinet meetings. On February 11, 2013, she announced her resignation as Administrator and left the post on September 1, 2013.
Paul E. Tierney, Jr. is a business professor at Columbia University, a fund manager, and a venture capitalist at Aperture Venture Partners, and Fidus Partners. His investments have included stakes in the parent of United Airlines, US healthcare companies, and businesses in underdeveloped markets including Subsaharan Africa. He was named Chair of the Board of Advisors for Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) by Lisa Anderson, dean.
Clemmie Dixon Spangler Jr. was an American billionaire businessman, and the owner of National Gypsum. On the Forbes 2016 list of the world's billionaires, he was ranked #722 with a net worth of US$2.4 billion. He was president of the University of North Carolina from 1986 to 1997.
Mizuho Americas was established on July 1, 2016 as a US bank holding company, as the American corporate and investment banking arm of the Tokyo-based Mizuho Financial Group.
Greenhill & Co., Inc. is an American investment banking advisory firm founded in 1996 in New York by Robert F. Greenhill. The firm provides advice on significant mergers, acquisitions, restructurings, financings, and capital raisings to leading corporations, partnerships, institutions and governments across a number of industries. Since its inception, Greenhill has advised on transactions valued at close to $3 trillion.
Alex Behring is a Brazilian billionaire businessman. He is a co-founder and managing partner of 3G Capital, a global investment firm known for its investments in Anheuser-Busch InBev, Restaurant Brands International, Kraft Heinz, and Hunter Douglas. As of March 2024, Forbes estimated his net worth at US$6.2 billion.
Robert Steven Kaplan served as the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas from 2015 until 2021 and is a long-time Goldman Sachs executive, where he currently serves as vice chairman.
Joseph B. Fuller is an American academic and management consultant. He is the co-founder of the Monitor Group, now known as Monitor Deloitte. He is a professor of management practice at the Harvard Business School, Faculty Co-Director at the Project on Workforce at Harvard, and serves as chair of the Board of Trustees of Western Governors University. He has authored business cases about many companies, including Saudi Aramco and DaVita Inc. He has published research about dividend policy, income inequality in the United States and the skills gap.
Wendell P. Weeks is an American businessman, the chairman, CEO, and president of Corning Inc.
Christopher John Kempczinski is an American business executive, and the president, chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of McDonald's Corporation.