BlackFacts Details

Pugh, Mary E. (1959- )

Mary E. Pugh, founder of Pugh Capital Management, a successful investment firm in Seattle, was the first black woman and youngest person to be named Senior Vice President at Washington Mutual Savings Bank. Born to a Boeing engineer father and real estate agent mother, Pugh’s family lived a relatively comfortable lifestyle. She attended Lakeside School in Seattle and graduated from Yale University in 1981 with a B.A. in economics.  

In 1981, Pugh returned to Seattle and became an investment analyst for Washington Mutual Savings Bank. Throughout the decade, she successfully bought, sold, and managed hundreds of millions of dollars of securities for the savings and loan and in 1989, at the age of 29, she became the youngest person to be named a Senior Vice President at Washington Mutual.  She took the post as Washington Mutual was becoming the largest savings and loans association in the nation. As Senior Vice President, Pugh managed the company’s $1.2 billion portfolio of trust assets.

In 1991, Pugh founded her own institutional investment firm, Pugh Capital Management Inc., along with business partner, Scott Greiwe. Washington Mutual became her first client where she managed five million dollars of assets for its employee-pension fund. By 1995 Pugh Capital managed $75 million for ten clients that included the University of Washington, the Young Women’s Christian Association (YMCA), and the Seattle Times. In 1999 the firm was awarded the $200 million Boeing pension assets account.   

During this time Pugh returned to Washington Mutual as a member of its Board of Directors where she chaired the finance committee. However in the midst of a nationwide economic collapse in 2008, Washington Mutual lost billions of dollars and became the largest bank to fail in United States history. Pugh was among the directors whom shareholders blamed for the massive losses because of her position as chair of the finance committee. On April 15, 2008, Pugh resigned under pressure with the expectation that she would have not been