Thursday, April 30, 2009

Back to sleep

So Bank of America has stripped the Chairman title from CEO Ken Lewis. What an important news cycle story that means...very little. If they really wanted change, then they would have named Lewis chairman and appointed someone new as CEO. There's real default going on here, and as the TGR posted on Monday, it's getting stranger by the day. Newly appointed Chairman and long-time board member Walter Massey isn't a change agent by any measure. They've retained lead director Temple Sloan -- at least for now. Until investor Hugh McColl pipes up with something different then this one remains officially on snooze. Keep hitting the button, folks. It's not worth keeping our eyes open.

Lewis, meanwhile, continues to take actions and speak publicly as if he's the bank's most valuable employee. Here's the latest gem (Wall Street Journal, April 30th): Referring to the deal with Merrill, Mr. Lewis said, "My decision and the board's to go ahead with the merger was not about a selfish desire to keep our jobs," adding, "Every member of this board, including me, would be all right if we had to leave the company."

Someone needs to shake a few screws loose and remind him that he represents the bank's owners and customers. There's a big difference between punching the clock all your life inside an institution and acting in its best interests. But the difference seems lost on CEO ears right now.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

The Public's Bank of America?

Complete insanity is nearing on the subject of the nation's largest bank, Bank of America Corp., and its merger with Merrill Lynch. While Rome continues to burn, we're treated to endless coverage about whether Chairman and CEO Ken Lewis should be canned when the real question should be: Will the combination of Merrill Lynch with BofA produce any combined business value minus the recent earnings Merrill generated on its own? We know it's produced losses in the billions, but realistically, is there any reason why this dysfunctional marriage should last through the honeymoon period?

Answers seem either too obvious to report or foregone to matter. Here are a few reasons why the marriage shouldn't last. Sooner investors and owners (yes, that means you, too, Mr. TreasuryFed) agree on a separation, the better.

1.) Permanently disparate cultures whose rift has only widened to ravine-like status. For crying out loud, when two companies lie to themselves, much less each other, isn't that a good sign they're not supposed to be combined? We won't even go there on bonuses or compensation structure and the lack of required change to address this issue from the outset. The government needs to step up here and finish its own dirty work. If Merrill can't stand on its own then let it fail. Life goes on. Here's a memo to Ken Lewis highlighting the cultural point, which was published late last year: http://povblogger.blogspot.com/2008/09/memo-to-ken-lewis_16.html.

2.) Zero leadership. According to first-hand accounts, Lewis took one for the country by agreeing to the Merrill Lynch deal. Why he didn't fess up to investors sooner will have to be vetted through regulatory and legal channels, which rarely if ever produce a clear, honest answer. The fact that the agency that regulates the SEC said you can't discuss anything publicly must have weighed heavily in the decision. Yet even taking this into account while holding the opposite view -- Lewis didn't want to do the deal but was forced to by the government -- doesn't hold up to his fiduciary responsibility as Chairman and CEO to the board. Particularly not after gobbling up Countrywide. Lewis' primary responsibility is to the owners and customers of Bank of America, not the country's financial system. We won't even attempt to counter-balance this latest string with the forced hand on TARP money. It simply can't all wash one way in the end. And if it does then it's time to rename the company, "The Public's Bank of America."

3.) Anyone seen the BofA board? Investors want Temple Sloan's head when they should be more concerned with abolishing the lead director structure and retaining the Chairman's role with someone who can actually help lead the ship. Lead directors are another monikor for empty suits, especially in situations such as this one when the CEO and Chairman holds such discriminate power. When the structure is wrong, the whole thing is wrong -- no white knight of world leading talent can provide a fix. Not even (Ret.) Army General Tommy Franks (pictured to the left, courtesy of http://www.tommyfranks.com/) who sits on the board with other mere mortals: http://investor.bankofamerica.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=71595&p=irol-govboard.

Finally, who would have thought that a merger between Wells Fargo and Wachovia would turn out better than a combination of BofA and Merrill Lynch? Strange days, indeed. Stay tuned. It's about to get a lot stranger.
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