Los Angeles Times

Reform is sought at troubled bank

- By James Rufus Koren

One of California’s massive public pension funds and an L.A. investment firm are pushing for a board shakeup and possible sale of embattled Banc of California following the resignatio­n of its chief executive and chairman this week.

In a Jan. 24 regulatory filing, the California State Teachers’ Retirement System and Legion Partners said the board of the Irvine bank has done a poor job of overseeing the fast-growing institutio­n, signing off on deals that benefited bank insiders and the family members of now-former CEO Steven Sugarman.

Those deals raise questions about whether the board has been “making decisions for the benefit of insiders rather than for the benefit of all stockholde­rs,” CalSTRS and Legion wrote in the Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

Bradley Vizi, a managing director at Legion, said the

bank appears to be a healthy institutio­n but that a lack of “adult supervisio­n” has depressed the bank’s share price and harmed shareholde­rs.

“It’s the fastest-growing bank in the country, but it trades at half the valuation of its peers,” Vizi said. “It’s no wonder why. The bank demonstrat­es some of the worst corporate governance I’ve ever invested in. The folks that have been at the helm have been asleep at the wheel.”

The filing indicates that the hedge fund and CalSTRS plan to actively lobby the company to add more independen­t directors to its board, pursue a possible sale and make it easier for shareholde­rs to change the company’s bylaws.

Specifical­ly, they want to be able to amend the bylaws with a majority vote of shareholde­rs. Now, amendments require support from 80% of shareholde­rs, which Legion and CalSTRS say gives shareholde­rs only “a façade of control over the company.”

They say they tried to work with the company before this week’s filing but that the bank had not responded to them. “It’s been total radio silence,” Vizi said.

In an emailed statement, Banc of California spokesman Ian Campbell said Wednesday that the board will “carefully consider shareholde­rs’ input” and is willing to meet with Legion to discuss the firm’s concerns.

Campbell also said the bank is conducting a “comprehens­ive review of bank governance, including policies to restrict related-party transactio­ns in the future.”

Sugarman declined to comment through a spokesman.

The investors’ demands come at a tumultuous time for Banc of California, which has grown rapidly over the last few years and recently sought to raise its profile with a $100-million stadium naming-rights deal with the Los Angeles Football Club, an MLS expansion team.

However, the deal prompted questions about the bank’s penchant for insider transactio­ns because the team is part owned by Sugarman’s brother, Jason. The bank has also faced scrutiny over apparent ties between insiders and Jason Galanis, a local financier who pleaded guilty to securities fraud charges last summer.

On Monday, the bank reported that it is being investigat­ed by the SEC over its public response to allegation­s that Galanis may have secretly controlled the bank.

The bank in October issued a news release stating that members of the board of directors were leading an internal investigat­ion into the Galanis matter when in fact company management was in charge of the inquiry. The company also did not disclose in its October statement that the law firm hired to investigat­e the allegation­s had previously represente­d the bank as well as Sugarman himself.

The bank announced Sugarman’s resignatio­n Monday, the same day it reported the SEC investigat­ion and acknowledg­ed inaccuraci­es in the news release.

The bank said that another investigat­ion, this one handled by an outside law firm, was almost complete and had found no evidence that the bank broke any laws or that Galanis had any control over the bank.

Legion and CalSTRS don’t mention Galanis in their filing, instead focusing on insider transactio­ns that they say have gone unchecked by the board.

In an interview, Vizi and Legion analyst Justin Albert listed a handful of deals — all of them gleaned from Banc of California’s regulatory filings — that Vizi said straddle the line between unethical and simply not looking good.

For instance, the bank in September 2013 acquired asset management firm Palisades Group. Jason Sugarman, the former bank CEO’s brother, was an advisor to Palisades and was paid more than $1.3 million by the firm between 2013 and 2015, according to the bank’s SEC filings.

A month after acquiring Palisades, the bank acquired mortgage lending firm CS Financial, a firm controlled by former bank board member Jeffrey Seabold and partly owned by Sugarman’s father, brother and sister in-law.

“The related-party transactio­ns and the lack of sound judgement seems pervasive,” Vizi said.

In its filing, Legion reported that it owns 6.3% of Banc of California’s shares, making it the bank’s secondlarg­est active shareholde­r behind PL Capital Advisors, an investment firm that has also complained about the bank’s corporate governance. CalSTRS, the nation’s second-largest public pension fund, is one of Legion’s investors and also directly owns about 100,000 Banc of California shares.

Legion and the pension fund have worked together on shareholde­r campaigns before, jointly pushing for changes at clothing company Perry Ellis.

Banc of California shares closed at $14.95 on Wednesday, down about 5%.

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