Los Angeles Times

Wells’ ‘living will’ approved

After bank’s revisions, FDIC and Fed remove sanctions including on new global businesses.

- By James Rufus Koren

After the bank’s revisions, regulators remove sanctions including on new global businesses.

As Wells Fargo & Co. prepares for a high-stakes annual meeting that could reshuffle its board, regulators on Monday gave the beleaguere­d bank a rare piece of good news, signing off on the company’s so-called living will and lifting restrictio­ns in place since last year.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and Federal Reserve had said in December that the bank did not have an adequate plan to ensure it could be quickly dismantled and sold off — but continue operating — in the event of a bankruptcy.

Regulators specifical­ly said the bank’s living will did not simplify the company’s legal structure and address how the different businesses could independen­tly operate if the parent corporatio­n was not able to provide support services.

In a letter to the company Monday, regulators said the revised plan submitted last last month addressed those concerns and that restrictio­ns placed on the bank in December will now be lifted.

That includes a prohibitio­n on establishi­ng new internatio­nal banking businesses or buying nonbank subsidiari­es, such as wealth management firms. Had the bank’s revised plan failed to get the OK from regulators, the bank could have faced additional sanctions, including caps on the size of certain businesses.

The bank must submit another update to its living will in a few months. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act requires banks to submit these plans in the hopes that they will allow institutio­ns to wind down in an orderly way — and without the need for taxpayerfu­nded bailouts.

“We are pleased with the agencies’ findings and remain committed to sound resolution planning and preparedne­ss as we finalize our July 2017 submission,” the bank said in a statement.

Wells Fargo has faced increased regulatory scrutiny since September, when it agreed to pay $185 million to regulators over its practice of opening accounts for customers without their authorizat­ion.

In a research note Monday afternoon, analysts R. Scott Siefers and Brendan Nosal at investment bank Sandler O’Neill said the approval of the living will addresses one of several questions looming over the bank.

“At the least, this announceme­nt checks off one box on the ‘to do’ list for both the company and its investors,” they wrote. “While it may not have a big impact on the stock, it does eliminate what had become a company-specific uncertaint­y at a time when [Wells Fargo] was already dealing with the aftermath of last year’s account opening scandal.”

Still, other questions remain.

The bank remains under investigat­ion by a handful of state and federal agencies, including the Justice Department and the California attorney general’s office, over unauthoriz­ed accounts. The bank has offered to pay $142 million to settle nearly a dozen consumer lawsuits related to those practices, though attorneys for some customers have dismissed that sum as far too small and say they plan to keep trying to fight the bank in court.

One remaining question — which should be answered at Tuesday’s shareholde­r meeting — is the extent to which Wells Fargo investors blame the company’s board of directors for the accounts scandal.

Investment advisory firms Glass Lewis and Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services have recommende­d that shareholde­rs vote against several Wells Fargo board members, saying they failed to properly oversee the bank. ISS recommende­d voting against 12 of 15 board members, a move the board called “extreme and unpreceden­ted.”

It is a rare recommenda­tion, but one that some investors are following, at least in part.

Both of California’s major public pension funds, the California State Teachers’ Retirement System and the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, voted against nine board members. The two pension funds collective­ly own about 22 million shares, though that represents less than half of 1% of the bank’s shares.

The New York State Common Retirement Fund, which owns more than 13 million Wells Fargo shares, plans to vote against all but the bank’s two newest board members — Karen Peetz and Ronald Sargent, who joined the board this year.

“The systemic breakdown that allowed these abuses to take place demands new leadership,” New York State Comptrolle­r Thomas DiNapoli said in a statement.

Not all shareholde­rs are voting to oust the board, though. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which is the company’s largest shareholde­r and owns about 10% of the stock, has voted in favor of all 15 board members, his assistant confirmed.

Wells Fargo shares rose 65 cents Monday to $53.65.

The living will announceme­nt came after markets closed. Shares rose 20 cents in after-hours trading.

james.koren@latimes.com

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? REGULATORS had said the bank’s living will did not simplify the firm’s legal structure and address how its different businesses could independen­tly operate if the parent firm was not able to provide support services.
Spencer Platt Getty Images REGULATORS had said the bank’s living will did not simplify the firm’s legal structure and address how its different businesses could independen­tly operate if the parent firm was not able to provide support services.

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