Los Angeles Times

Wells board still gets pass for fail

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page, or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

The bank’s board members are “getting off too easy,” columnist Michael Hiltzik writes.

On the surface, the Federal Reserve seemed really to lay the hammer on Wells Fargo & Co. for its accounts scandal and serial wrongdoing. In a sentence handed down Feb. 2, the Fed placed a cap on the bank’s future asset growth; the bank announced the departure of four unidentifi­ed directors, presumably at the regulator’s urging.

Investors certainly thought the punishment was harsh. Wells Fargo stock was battered to a 9.2% loss in Monday’s trading on the New York Stock Exchange. As my colleagues Jim Puzzangher­a and James Rufus Koren reported, that was twice the loss suffered by the broad market on a bad day.

Yet former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers is correct to assert that the board members are “getting off too easy,” as the headline on his Washington Post op-ed had it Tuesday. Summers noted that the four directors being ushered off the board have not yet been identified. They may not be named until the bank issues the proxy statement for its 2018 annual meeting, probably in mid-March.

The bank calls this process “refreshmen­t” of the board, which may be the least refreshing use of the term “refreshmen­t” in business history.

“My question,” Summers wrote: “Why aren’t the directors who are leaving being named and asked to resign effective immediatel­y with an element of humiliatio­n?”

That’s a good question, but it doesn’t go far enough. We’d ask why only four directors are being dropped. And why is CEO Timothy Sloan, whose tenure with Wells Fargo goes back 30 years and included management responsibi­lities during the scandal, keeping his job? A new broom can sweep clean only if it’s genuinely new, but the board and top management at Wells Fargo will keep some very old bristles around.

Let’s quickly recap this bank’s history of scandal. In a practice first reported by the Los Angeles Times in 2013, bank employees opened bogus accounts for customers for years, evidently to meet brutal productivi­ty goals imposed from above. In September 2016, the bank agreed to pay $185 million to regulators for that offense. Since then, the bank has acknowledg­ed a host of other wrongs, including charging auto-loan customers for car insurance they did not need and charging improper fees to some mortgage borrowers.

Fed officials understood, in principle, where the blame rested. As part of the punishment, Michael Gibson, the Fed’s director of supervisio­n and regulation, issued letters of chastiseme­nt to former Chairman and Chief Executive John Stumpf, former director and interim Chairman Stephen Sanger and the board as a whole.

Gibson told Stumpf that he provided “ineffectiv­e oversight” of practices he knew had “motivated compliance violations and improper practices.” Sanger was flayed for the “many pervasive and serious compliance and conduct failures ongoing during your tenure as lead independen­t director.” The board was told that its derelictio­n “contribute­d in material ways to the substantia­l harm suffered by WFC’s customers.”

These are strong rebukes. Yet the bank still seems reluctant to undertake a full-scale houseclean­ing. Five directors, including Sanger, retired in 2017, and six new independen­t directors have been elected.

Yet there are seven holdovers from Wells Fargo’s wretched past; it’s unclear whether the four who will be leaving this year are members of this cadre because Wells is keeping their names to itself. Three will be leaving before the bank’s annual meeting in April, and the fourth by the end of the year.

The directors’ culpabilit­y for Wells Fargo’s misdeeds has never been in question. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) last June called on then Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen to remove all 12 who had been in place between May 2011 and July 2015, the period in which the fake accounts scandal was occurring. Of that dozen, nine are still on the board, including some with more than 10 years of inattentiv­e service.

For handy reference, they are: business executive Enrique Hernandez Jr. (service since 2003); Dignity Health CEO Lloyd H. Dean (2005); BlackBerry CEO John Chen (2006); Florida businessma­n John D. Baker II (2009); former Vulcan CEO Donald M. James (2009); former Energy and Transporta­tion Secretary Federico Peña (2011); former Deloitte CEO James Quigley (2013); former Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke (2015); and businesswo­man Suzanne Vautrinot (2015). The bank plainly thinks highly of the last two — it has named Duke its new chairwoman and boasts of having placed Vautrinot on the board’s all-important risk committee.

Summers observes that Wells Fargo’s kid-gloves treatment of its departing directors, whoever they are, is utterly inconsiste­nt with acknowledg­ing their failure in their duties. “A trader or credit officer as extravagan­tly malfeasant would not be granted a dignified exit,” he wrote. “I find it hard to understand why regulators are so reluctant to foist public accountabi­lity on the individual­s in responsibl­e leadership positions when companies do the wrong thing.”

He’s right. In a world where the people truly in charge were subjected to punishment consistent with that meted out to the drones on the firing line who typically take the blame and pay the consequenc­es, the bank and the Federal Reserve would make examples of all these people. Instead, they’ve been allowed to keep their prestigiou­s posts, lauded for their experience and perspicaci­ty, and paid lavishly — the nine collected an average of more than $372,000 for their board service in 2016, the latest year disclosed.

Given the depth of their failure, they should have been forced out long ago. Since that didn’t happen — and won’t happen even with the coming “refreshmen­t” — the only conclusion to draw is that, for all the apparent severity of its punishment, Wells Fargo still hasn’t come to grips with its scandal.

 ?? Alex Edelman TNS ?? CEO Timothy Sloan, a longtime Wells Fargo veteran, is keeping his job, as are several board members.
Alex Edelman TNS CEO Timothy Sloan, a longtime Wells Fargo veteran, is keeping his job, as are several board members.
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