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Sunday, 04/21/2019 9:56:42 AM

Sunday, April 21, 2019 9:56:42 AM

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>>> Warren Buffett urges Wells Fargo to look beyond Wall St for next CEO


Financial Times

by Robert Armstrong, Eric Platt and Oliver Ralph in Omaha

4/7/2019


https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/warren-buffett-urges-wells-fargo-to-look-beyond-wall-st-for-next-ceo/ar-BBVHAvJ#page=2


“They just have to come from someplace [outside Wells] and they shouldn’t come from Wall Street,” Mr Buffett said of the bank’s next leader in an interview with the Financial Times. “They probably shouldn’t come from JPMorgan or Goldman Sachs.”

Wells Fargo’s former chief executive, Tim Sloan, stepped down last month after coming under pressure from both Congress and regulators. He has been replaced by Wells’ general counsel Allen Parker on an interim basis.

The bank has struggled to recover from a fake accounts scandal, in which branch employees, hoping to hit incentives targets, illicitly opened millions of accounts for customers without their consent.

The wrongdoing first emerged in 2016 under the previous chief executive, John Stumpf. But the decision to replace Mr Stumpf that year with Mr Sloan, a 25-year veteran of the bank, antagonised some politicians.

Mr Buffett, who has held shares in Wells since 1989, now prefers the new leader to be an outsider and one who has not worked in investment banking, judging that either would be a red rag in Washington.

“There are plenty of good people to run it [from the Wall Street banks], but they are automatically going to draw the ire of a significant percentage of the Senate and the US House of Representatives, and that’s just not smart,” Mr Buffett said.

Excluding Wall Street bankers would eliminate many of the potential candidates floated by analysts and investors to run the fourth-largest US bank by assets. On that list are former Goldman Sachs executives Gary Cohn and Harvey Schwartz, ex-JPMorgan Chase banker Matt Zames and current JPMorgan chief financial officer Marianne Lake.

One potential candidate from outside Wall Street whose name has been raised by analysts is Bill Demchak, another former JPMorgan executive who is now chief executive of PNC Financial, a Pittsburgh-based bank.

Mr Buffett owns almost 10 per cent of Wells’ shares, worth about $22bn. He believes that the bank’s competitive position remains strong, despite the damage done by the fake accounts scandal that broke over two years ago.

“If you look at Wells, through this whole thing they’re uncovering a whole lot of problems, but they aren’t losing any customers to speak of,” he said. “They are losing the ones in the public sector?.?.?.?but one household out of every three does business with Wells one way or another.” The bank still holds more than $900bn in customer deposits.

Only hours before Mr Sloan announced his intention to depart, Mr Buffett had given the former CEO his support in an interview with CNBC television. Betsy Duke, the bank’s chair, has said the board is only considering external candidates.

On the same day last month that Mr Sloan received a grilling before the House financial services committee, regulators at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued a highly unusual statement saying it was “disappointed” in the bank’s efforts to reform its governance. Two senior Democrats — Maxine Waters, chair of the House financial services committee, and presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren — had both called for Mr Sloan’s departure.

While deposits and assets at Wells have been relatively stable since the scandal , the bank’s once industry-leading growth has slowed. Yet Mr Buffett said: “I don’t care whether they grow [revenues] or not, I care about whether they grow in earnings per share over time.”

Berkshire Hathaway, the investment vehicle Mr Buffett chairs, is also the largest shareholder in US Bancorp, the largest of America’s “regional” banks, with an $80bn market capitalisation. Since two other large regional lenders announced a merger earlier this year, Bancorp has been the subject of speculation that it could embark on a merger, perhaps as a buyer of PNC Financial, which has a $58bn market capitalisation.

Mr Buffett, however, says “I don't like having a bank we own buy another bank”, believing the key to the banking business is avoiding stupid mistakes and that in mergers, “the acquirer usually overpays”.

The full interview with Mr Buffett will be published later this month.

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