CBRE Group
#565
Rank
$37.36B
Marketcap
United States
Country
Achal Gandhi (Chief Investment Officer)
Adam Bass (Senior Associate)
Summary
CBRE Group is a holding company that conducts all of its operations through its indirect subsidiaries.CBRE Group is a holding company that conducts all of its operations through its indirect subsidiaries. The company is a commercial real estate services firm. As of December 31, 2011, it operated approximately 300 offices worldwide, providing commercial real estate services under the CBRE brand name, investment management services under the CBREGlobal Investors brand name, and development services under the Trammell Crow brand name. CBRE Services, Inc., its direct wholly-owned subsidiary, is also a holding company and is the primary obligor or issuer with respect to most of its long-term indebtedness.
History
1907: Arthur Hastings, who had been with the firm since 1907, was sent to Los Angeles to open the first Coldwell, Cornwell & Banker office outside of San Francisco.
1912: By 1912, much of San Francisco had been rebuilt and the city was again flourishing, as was the firm of Tucker, Lynch & Coldwell.
1914: 1914 – Benjamin Banker joins Coldwell’s as a full partner trading as Coldwell Banker.
1915: Louis Pfau, another fraternity brother from UC-Berkeley who had joined the firm in 1915, was also made a partner, bringing the number to five.
1917: When the United States entered the conflict in 1917, the firm, still known as Tucker, Lynch & Coldwell, embarked on its first non-real estate business venture--growing rice for the war effort on land it purchased in the Sacramento Valley.
1919: The rice farm was a failure, and in 1919, the partners, which then included Albert E. Kerns, vowed never again to invest in a venture outside real estate.
1922: In 1922, Marshall Hale, a San Francisco businessman, purchased the Spring Arcade Building in Los Angeles.
1925: The firm also continued to expand in the San Francisco Bay area, including the company's first office in Oakland, which opened in 1925.
1927: By 1927, the Spring Arcade office was doing so well that Hastings, who had been Coldwell's college fraternity brother at the University of California at Berkeley, was invited to buy into the partnership for $90,000.
1928: By 1928, Coldwell, Cornwell & Banker had opened a second office in Los Angeles.
1929: When the stock market crashed in 1929, plunging the nation into the Great Depression, three of the partners, Coldwell, Cornwall, and Banker, were wealthy men and relatively unaffected.
1933: In 1933, Coldwell, Cornwall & Banker also formed a subsidiary, Home Properties Co., Inc., and purchased 60 acres in the Rancho Santa Anita area of Los Angeles County for $18,000.
1936: 1936 – US name change to Coldwell, Banker and Company.
1938: The Ellis family continuously ran and expanded the firm until 1938.
1939: In 1939, Coldwell, Cornwall & Banker signed an exclusive agreement to originate and service mortgage loans in California for Aetna Life Insurance Company.
1940: Cornwall resigned as partner in 1940, and the company was renamed Coldwell, Banker & Co, which was eventually shortened to Coldwell Banker.
1952: As the firm grew, so did the number of partners, to an even dozen by 1952, when one of the latest, Dan Duggan, finally convinced the others, who ranged in age from 38 to 70, that they needed a written partnership agreement. In 1952, Coldwell, Banker also opened an office in Sacramento, its first new office in 15 years.
1960: Banker, then 75, suffered a heart attack in 1960.
1961: In 1961, the Los Angeles partners asked a longtime client, Al Steffey, of Butler Bros. stores, to review the firm's books.
1963: You're nice idiots, but you're idiots." Coldwell Banker was incorporated on July 1, 1963.
1965: 1965 – Richard Ellis forms Australian partnership.
1967: Banker died two years later, at the age of 80, followed by the passing of Pfau, also 80, and Coldwell, 84, in 1967.
1969: After Coldwell's death, the company formed its first executive committee, but it was not until 1969 that the committee's powers were fully expanded to "manage the business and affairs of the corporation." By then, Coldwell Banker also had expanded to Nevada and Texas. There were other significant developments in 1969.
1971: Coldwell Banker began trading on the New York Stock Exchange in 1971.
1973: By 1973, Coldwell Banker had offices in seven western states and in Atlanta, Georgia.
1980: Revenues for fiscal 1980 topped $300 million. 1980: Coldwell Banker acquires New York commercial real estate firm Sutton & Towne, Inc. 1980 – The US firm opens first office in New York.
1981: In 1981, Coldwell Banker was acquired by Sears.
1982: 1982 – Sears, Roebuck & Co acquires Coldwell Banker Commercial and Residential.
1987: Surveys in 1987 indicated that 30 percent of the public purchased some sort of financial service from the retail giant, compared with 11 percent for American Express.
1989: The next major milestone occurred in 1989 when employees and others acquired the company's operations from Sears to form CB Commercial. In 1989, Sears sold Coldwell Banker's commercial unit to a management-led buyout group including The Carlyle Group for approximately $300 million.
1990: Insignia had been founded in December 1990 by Andrew Farkas, then just 30 years old.
1991: Although it was easily the country's largest commercial broker, it had a negative net worth of $56 million in mid-1991. 1991 – Company changes name to CB Commercial.
1992: In 1992, the company was rocked further when a jury in Orlando, Florida awarded $8.5 million to the former owner of an office complex who accused CB Commercial, his leasing agent, of fraud for negotiating a lease for his largest tenant with another office complex.
1994: By 1994, CB Commercial had revenues of $452 million and a net profit of barely $4 million.
1996: One strong challenge was expected to come from Coldwell Banker Corp., purchased in 1996 by HFS, Inc., which also owned Century 21 and several motel and car-rental chains. 1996 – CB Commercial completes initial public offering. In 1996, the company became a public company via an initial public offering, raising approximately $80 million.
1997: In 1997, the company acquired Koll Real Estate Services for $145 million.
1998: London-based Hiller Parker May & Rowden was acquired by CBRE later in 1998. In 1998, CB Commercial merged with Richard Ellis International (REI) Limited and changed its name to CB Richard Ellis.
1999: 1999: Japanese operations are merged with Ikoma Corporation; Sweden's Profit Group and Chile's LirAntunez Propiedades are acquired.
2000: By 2000, CBRE had revenues of $1.3 billion.
2001: In 2001, CB Richard Ellis was acquired in a leveraged buyout by an investment group led by Blum Capital in an $800 million transaction.
2003: In 2003, the company acquired Insignia Financial Group for $415 million.
2004: In June 2004, CBRE began trading on the New York Stock Exchange. On June 10, 2004, CB Richard Ellis once again became a public company via an initial public offering. According to statistics by Real Capital Analytics, in 2004 CBRE led the United States market for commercial property sales with a 15.8 percent share. The company sold $28 billion worth of property in the United States alone in 2004.
2005: 2005 – CBRE debuts on the Fortune 1000 list.
2006: In late 2006, CBRE merged with Trammell Crow Company in a transaction valued at $2.2 billion.
2011: 2011 – For the tenth year running CBRE voted as the premier global brand in real estate by the 2011 Lipsey Company Brand survey. In 2011, the company acquired the real estate investment business of ING Group for $940 million. In 2011, the company changed its name to CBRE Group Inc.
2013: In 2013 the company acquired Norland Managed Services, a facilities, energy and project management provider in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
2015: 2015 – In 2015, CBRE was ranked #2 (out of 500 companies) in financial growth and performance by Barron’s. In 2015 the company acquired Global Workplace Solutions from Johnson Controls.
2018: CBRE UKRAINE WON THE V EE REAL ESTATE FORUM & PROJECT AWARD 2018 AND BECAME THE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT COMPANY OF THE YEAR 2018 record year for European real estate investment In 2018, the company acquired FacilitySource.
2019: In 2019, the group acquired the London developer Telford Homes.
2020: 12.11.2020 Hybrid Office: At the Crossroads of Digital and Physical 10.08.2020 CBRE Ukraine has successfully represented interests of the Regus company in a lease agreement with Avenue 53 Business Center 12.05.2020 Record investment volumes in Europe for Q1 2020 as impact of Covid-19 awaits to be seen
2021: In July 2021, CBRE paid £960 million for a 60% stake in the UK multidisciplinary professional services firm Turner & Townsend.
Mission
To be the best in the business by ensuring our clients and customers always receive the best service.
Vision
Deliver superior outcomes for occupiers, residents and the communities in which we build. Deliver market-leading financial returns to our investment partners. Attract and retain top talent by upholding an entrepreneurial and rewarding work environment.
Key Team
Beth F. Cobert (Board Member)
Adam G. Cummings (SVP & Practice Leader-Mall Tenant Representation)
Brandon Bridges Boze (Chairman)
Adam Sklaver (First Vice President)
Cameron Flint (Board Member)
Adrian Baker (President, APAC Real Estate Division and CIO)
Charles Crerand (Board Member)
Ajdin Nadarevic (Vice President)
Charlie Coyne (Board Member)
Al Von Stein (Board Member)
Christian M. Perry (Board Member)
Alecia Rivera (Client Services Coordinator)
Christopher Bosworth (Board Member)
Allan Price (Vice President-Retail Transactions & Investments)
Robert E. Sulentic (President and Chief Executive Officer)
Al Von Stein (Board Member)
Benjamin Lehrer (Board Member)
Recognition and Awards
References
Achal Gandhi (Chief Investment Officer)
Adam Bass (Senior Associate)