Management Turnover as Change Agent

Showing posts with label Lanty Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lanty Smith. Show all posts

Monday, June 2, 2008

Credit Crisis Inks Another Notch - Ken Thompson, CEO, Wachovia

Early in May (see previous blog) Wachovia's WB (NYSE) then CEO and Chairman Ken Thompson was forced to give up his chairmanship after the bank released dismal numbers.  The second shoe has now fallen.  Wachovia's board yesterday forced Thompson to resign his CEO post as well. According to David Mildenberg and Hugh Son of Bloomberg
... the board blamed him for losses that cost the lender more than half its market value in the past year. The stock fell as much as 4 percent.

Chairman Lanty Smith was appointed interim CEO, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said today in a statement that cited " a series of previously disclosed disappointments and setbacks'' for the change. Thompson quit at the board's request, the statement said.
Triangle Business Journal wrote in a story today in which the Jounal quoted Lanty Smith, the new interim CEO,
"no single precipitating event" - such as the disclosure of even wider losses - caused Thompson's ouster.

"... A series of previously disclosed disappointments and setbacks cumulatively have negatively impacted the company and its performance," Smith, 65, said in a prepared statement. "The board believes new leadership will help to revitalize and re-energize Wachovia and enable it to realize its potential. We will move Wachovia steadily ahead as a strong, independent company by continuing to focus first on the needs of our customers."
Under the gun, banks have been fervently trying to split the CEO and Chairmanship positions to try and allay growing unhappiness by shareholders and activists.  We will just have to see if this will be enough for Wachovia's naysayers.  Stay tuned.

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Friday, May 9, 2008

Credit Crisis - Corporate Governance = Splitting of CEO and Chairman, Wachovia

Yesterday, Wachovia WB (NYSE) took the Chairmanship away from Kennedy Thompson the bank's CEO.  The change came shortly after the company's loss was twice as large as expected.   Thompson finds himself in real hot water.  The credit crisis continues to impact the bank. According to a story by David Mildenberg for Bloomberg,
"Ken Thompson is in a very hot seat,'' said Jaime Peters, an analyst at Morningstar Inc.  "People are starting to call for his head the same way that they were calling for Chuck Prince's at Citigroup,'' Peters said, alluding to how Citigroup Inc. replaced CEO Charles O. Prince after posting a record-fourth quarter loss. Morningstar rates Wachovia at three out of five stars, similar to a hold rating, she said.
The bank's lead independent director, Lanty Smith, assumed the chairman's position.  While the change meets with standard governance requirements, I am skeptical it will make a real difference in the running of the bank.   Smith is known as a recent supporter of Thompson. According to story by Rick Rothacker in the Charlotte Observer,
The change elevates a director who has stood behind Thompson in recent weeks -- and who has also faced criticism himself. The shift comes at a critical time for Thompson, the bank's CEO since 2000 and a fixture on the Charlotte civic scene.

Smith has said in recent weeks that Thompson has the board's full backing. The bank said neither was available for comment Thursday. Asked whether the move signaled any change in the board's confidence in Thompson, Phillips-Brown noted that he maintains all of his duties running the company.

In his role as lead independent director, Smith assisted the chairman, approved meeting agendas, served as a liaison between independent directors and ran any meetings in which the chairman wasn't present. Now, as non-executive chairman, he will be in charge of all board matters and preside over its meetings.

Smith has served on the board since 1987, taking the lead director spot in 2000. He is also chairman and CEO of a Raleigh merchant bank. While Thompson has absorbed most of the heat during the bank's recent travails, Smith also has come under attack.
The only good news for Thompson is he is smart enough to read the tea leaves and can be expected to work hard to save himself and the bank.  The splitting of the chairmanship and CEO positions in this situation is just window dressing and should give Thompson more time to save himself.  According to a story in the Atlanta Business Journal,
Nell Minow, co-founder of The Corporate Library, a research firm specializing in corporate governance, said proposals to split the chairman and CEO roles often come up at companies that have encountered problems.

"In companies where the shareholders have lost some confidence, that is one of the go-to strategies for change," she said. "It's a way for shareholders to begin a very important conversation. It gets people's attention.
We will just have to wait and see what happens over the next few months.

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