Page 88 - Flip Banks TG
P. 88

For John Stumpf the question really boils down to:


                        “You fired 5,300 people,” he said at the hearing. “You

                       took 5,300 good Americans and turned them into

                       felons.” It is time, he concluded, to break up the big

                       banks.” (See Case Study ref. 7)


               So, what went wrong at Wells Fargo to wreck a business

               model that had been so successful for so long?


               The answer may simply be the hubris of management.

               Partly, growth by acquisition, where bigger is better and
               success is measured by size. But for Wells Fargo,

               responsibility and accountability were disconnected. A

               simple question is, should the roles of CEO and Chairman be

               held by a single person? The Chairman runs the board and

               the CEO is responsible for strategy. Where are the checks

               and balances?


               Allied to this is the question of setting overly aggressive

               sales targets by senior management with little or no

               knowledge or control of the processes designed to achieve

               management’s objectives.


               However, Wells Fargo is unlikely to grow significantly until

               the asset cap and risk controls placed on it in 2018 by

               regulators are lifted. Indeed, Wells Fargo's poor Q2 in July

               2018, demonstrated how the asset cap and risk

               management procedures ordered by regulators were

               significantly restricting Wells Fargo's growth opportunities.
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