Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan steps down
By Imani Moise and Pete Schroeder
(Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co said on Thursday Tim Sloan will resign immediately as chief executive, becoming the second CEO to leave the bank in the fallout of a wide-ranging sales practices scandal.
The board said in a statement it concluded it was best to seek an outside candidate to replace Sloan. The bank's general counsel, C. Allen Parker, one of the few newcomers in the bank's top ranks, will serve as interim chief executive.
The move amounted to an admission that the board erred three years ago by appointing another insider after the previous CEO, John Stumpf, resigned following revelations that Wells Fargo had opened potentially millions of unauthorised consumer accounts. Prior to becoming CEO, Sloan served as chief operating officer and head of the wholesale bank.
In a Thursday conference call, Sloan, 58, said the focus on him had become a distraction inhibiting the bank from moving forward. He said the decision to step down was his and not prompted by any new information about the bank.
As recently as a week ago, the board had reiterated its unanimous support for Sloan.
Board Chair Betsy Duke said the bank has not yet spoken with anyone regard the CEO position. She said the search committee will meet for the first time on Friday.
Critics had accused Sloan, who was part of the management team while the wrongdoing was happening, of being too entrenched in Wells Fargo's culture to change it, even as the bank tried to do just that and move past its scandals.
In March 2018, the U.S. Federal Reserve imposed an unprecedented asset cap on Wells Fargo, barring it from growing its balance sheet until it improved risk management controls. Wells Fargo has said it expects to operate under the cap for the remainder of the year.
It is not yet clear what was the final straw for Sloan. However, the banks primary regulators, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve, criticised the bank in recent weeks. "What happened at Wells Fargo really was a remarkably widespread series of breakdowns really in their risk management apparatus," Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said.
The Fed and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency both declined to comment on Sloan's departure.
As Wells Fargo tried to move on, it got rid of the lofty sales incentives that led to the fake accounts and repaid millions to customers who were improperly charged fees. But reputational issues continued to hang over the bank as it racked up billions in settlements and fines.
Wells Fargo has long prided itself on its homegrown culture. But the bank's insularity proved burdensome in recovering from the scandal.
"The best thing he (Sloan) could do for the company was to retire. In the long run, it is the right move," RBC Capital Markets analyst Gerard Cassidy said.
Sloan had become a perpetual target for politicians who repeatedly called for his removal. U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sherrod Brown recently called for his resignation. Earlier this month, he was grilled by the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee.
Parker, the interim head, joined Wells Fargo from an outside law firm as general counsel in March 2017 to help turn around the bank. At the time he was the only one of 11 top executives who had not been at the bank during the scandal.
Parker will receive an annual base salary of $2 million (£1.5 million), according to filings.
Sloan's departure came two weeks before the fourth-largest U.S. bank by assets was due to report first-quarter results and a month before its annual shareholder meeting.
In 2016, the bank agreed to pay $185 million to the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other agencies, the largest fine of its kind, to settle a sales practice scandal in its consumer retail bank.
Two weeks ago, the bank said Sloan received a 5 percent pay raise for 2018, with base salary of $2.4 million, $14 million in stock awards and a $2 million bonus based on the bank's financial performance.
(Reporting by Imani Moise and Pete Schroeder; additional reporting by David Henry; Editing by Neal Templin, Dan Grebler and Leslie Adler)