Wells Fargo CEO search hobbled by pay limitations:
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[May 11, 2019]
By Jessica DiNapoli and Imani Moise
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co's
hunt for a new CEO is being impeded by limits on how much the bank can
pay its next leader, a person close to the search and several industry
insiders told Reuters.
A handful of top candidates have already said they would not pursue the
job because Wells Fargo is unlikely to meet their pay requirements, said
the person, who spoke about private negotiations on the condition of
anonymity.
Wells Fargo declined to comment on the search process.
The San Francisco-based bank has been looking for a new leader since
March, when Tim Sloan became the second CEO to abruptly depart in the
wake of a sales scandal that has badly bruised the bank's reputation and
crimped its financial performance.
Wells Fargo's CEO pay package has trailed peers in recent years in the
aftermath of a wide-ranging sales practices scandal. Wells Fargo is also
the smallest of the top four retail banks by assets.
The board will likely pay the next CEO $15 million-$20 million a year,
said Robin Ferracone, the chief executive of compensation consultancy
Farient Advisors LLC. That compares with the $25 million that CEOs of
top retail banks earned last year on average.
Wells Fargo may also need to set aside funds to match vested shares a
candidate has at a current employer, compensation consultants and
recruiters said. That could be difficult in an environment where
politicians, regulators and investors are closely scrutinizing Wells
Fargo.
"If you think about the Wells situation, it has a lot of distressed
features to it," Ferracone said.
The banking industry faces special restrictions on compensation that
regulators imposed after the 2007-2009 financial crisis. Relative to
other sectors, a bigger portion of executive pay comes in deferred
stock, and contracts feature clawback provisions, which require money to
be paid back under certain circumstances.
Among peers, Wells Fargo's CEO pay package is at the bottom of the pack.
Sloan's $18.4 million pay package last year compared with $31 million
for JPMorgan Chase & Co's Jamie Dimon, $26.5 million for Bank of America
Corp's Brian Moynihan and $24 million for Citigroup Inc's Michael Corbat.
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A Wells Fargo logo is seen in New York City, U.S. January 10, 2017.
REUTERS/Stephanie Keith/File Photo
Executives in other industries, and even other parts of Wall Street, get paid
significantly more.
Blackstone Group LP CEO Stephen Schwarzman, for instance, earned $69.1 million
last year. Alphabet Inc Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat, a former Morgan
Stanley executive considered a solid candidate for a bank CEO role, earned $47.3
million.
Wells Fargo Chair Betsy Duke has said the board wants to attract the "top talent
in banking." Directors want the next CEO to be an outsider, following critiques
from lawmakers that company veterans are incapable of turning things around.
The board has discussed approaching JPMorgan's finance chief, Marianne Lake, as
well as Citigroup's head of Latin America, Jane Fraser, Reuters previously
reported https://reut.rs/2PvxOo0. They have unvested stock awards worth $18.4
million and $11.2 million, respectively, according to recent filings.
Offering a signing bonus to cover such awards is harder at banks than other
types of companies because of heightened scrutiny on the sector, industry
experts told Reuters.
Last year, UBS Group AG's Andrea Orcel left the Swiss bank to run Banco
Santander SA. But the deal fell apart after Santander refused to pay Orcel $50
million in deferred compensation he accrued at UBS.
There may be even bigger hurdles in Wells Fargo's case because of the sales
scandal that erupted in late 2016. Regulators including the U.S. Federal
Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau are also closely monitoring progress of its operational
overhaul, including executive changes.
The new CEO's pay package is sure to be "very carefully scrutinized," said Evan
Stewart, who litigates compensation disputes as a partner at the law firm Cohen
& Gresser.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli and Imani MoiseEditing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and
Cynthia Osterman)
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