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ITT

ITT also stands for ITT Technical Institute, Institute of Technology, Tallaght and Institute of Technology, Tralee.

ITT, originally International Telephone and Telegraph, was a large conglomerate that owned a variety of businesses during its heyday under Harold Geneen in the 1960s. Like most conglomerates, ITT was forced to sell off the majority of its holdings in the 1970s, and became a shell of its 1960s glory.

The company began as an operator of telephone monopolies outside of the United States, and also purchased a number of European telephony patents. During the Second World War, ITT or its German subsidiaries had arrangements with the Nazi Party. There is a great deal of evidence showing Nazi Involvement during and before World War II. One of the executives, head of the Germany's ITT, may have partially persuaded Henry Ford to cut off supplies to Britain.

During the 1950s ITT decided to become "another RCA", and purchased Philo Farnsworth's television company to break into this new market. In 1951 ITT bought a majority interest in the Kellogg Switchboard & Supply company (founded 1897) and bought the remaining shares the next year. ITT changed the name from Kellogg Switchboard & Supply CO to ITT Kellogg. After merging Federal Telephone and Radio Corporation, into ITT Kellogg and combining manufacturing operations the name was changed again to ITT Telecommunications.

In 1959 Harold Geneen was elected as CEO, and turned the minor building of the 1950s into a major force during the 1960s. At the time a combination of low interest rates and a number of now-questionable accounting and tax laws allowed companies to buy out others with huge loans, known as a leveraged buyout. As long as the company in question had profits that were higher than the interest rate paid on the loans, the conglomerate as a whole appeared to be more profitable because the reporting practices of time allowed them to emphasize their earnings without respect to their outstanding long-term debt.

Under Geneen ITT bought over 300 companies during the 1960s including some hostile takeovers. The deals included well-known businesses such as the Sheraton hotel chain, Wonderbread maker Continental Baking, the insurer Hartford, and Avis Rent-a-Car . ITT also absorbed smaller operations in auto parts, energy, books, semiconductors and cosmetics, even Levittown, Pennsylvania developer Levitt & Sons . In 1963, ITT tried to buy the ABC network for $700 million. But the deal was quashed by federal antitrust regulators who feared the company was growing too powerful.

ITT's sales grew from about $700 million in 1960 to about $8 billion in 1970, and its profit from $29 million to $550 million. However when the higher interest started sapping profits in the late 1960s, the company, and conglomorates generally, started a long fall into obscurity. In ITT's case this was not helped by the public anger due to its influence in elections in the United States and abroad, particularly in the early 1970s. On September 28th, 1973, ITT headquarters in New York City was bombed in protest of ITT's involvement with the September 11 Coup in Chile which saw the overthrow of the democratically elected government headed by Salvador Allende by a military junta led by General Augusto Pinochet.

Journalist Anthony Sampson wrote The Sovereign State of ITT in 1973, using this company to make a broader point about the weakening of the authority of traditional national governments by the multinational corporations.

Geneen's ITT was nevertheless one of the longer lived conglomorates, while the likes of Ling-Temco-Vought and Litton were in serious financial difficulties by the early 1970s and had rid themselves of their CEO's, Geneen managed ITT until 1977. His successor, Rand Araskog, dismantled Geneen's empire, selling off all or part of 250 companies, including the last of ITT's telecommunications businesses.

In 1989, ITT sold all international telecommunications products business to Alcatel. In 1992 Alcatel sold what had formerly been ITT’s customer premises equipment (CPE) business in the US, including its factory in Corinth, Mississippi. to a group of private investors. Initially this new company was known as Cortelco Kellogg . Cortelco continues to manufacture and market what had formerly been ITT’s U.S.-made telephones and related products. The name “Kellogg” has since been dropped. Cortelco used the ITT name on its products under a license from ITT, but this has ceased.

Also in 1989, ITT merged its Long Distance division with Metromedia Long Distance creating Metromedia-ITT. Metromedia-ITT would eventually be aquired by Long Distance Discount Services, Inc. in 1993. LDDS would then change its name to Worldcom in 1995.

In 1995, ITT Corporation split into 3 separate public companies: ITT Corp, ITT Industries (manufacturing and defense contractor businesses) and ITT Hartford (insurance). ITT Corp was acquired in 1997 as is mentioned below. ITT Industries still operates indepedently under this name whereas ITT Hartford has dropped the ITT from its name alltogether.

In 1997 ITT completed a merger with Starwood Hotels and Resorts selling off its non-hotel and resorts business and disposing of their world headquarters at 1330 Avenue of the Americas in New York City. Several former ITT subsidaries are still very active including one which is still a major defense contractor, though it has shed a number of its own internal businesses.

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Last updated: 05-13-2005 07:56:04