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Ken Lewis Ousted As Bank Of America Chairman

IEVA M. AUGSTUMS and MITCH WEISS   04/29/09 08:19 PM ET   AP

Ken Lewis

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ken Lewis was ousted as chairman of Bank of America Wednesday after shareholders angry about the company's acquisition of Merrill Lynch voted to separate the job from that of chief executive.

Lewis will remain the CEO of the bank, but board member Walter E. Massey, president emeritus of Morehouse College in Atlanta, will become Bank of America Corp.'s chairman. The rebuke from the company's shareholders was a stunning turn of events for Lewis, who a year ago was at the top of the banking industry _ and whose job as CEO is still marked by uncertainty.

Shareholders narrowly voted at the bank's annual meeting Wednesday to split the jobs following months of rancor over the Merrill Lynch & Co. acquisition. After the deal was sealed Jan. 1, Merrill Lynch reported $15 billion in fourth-quarter losses and it was learned that Bank of America had approved the early payout of billions of dollars in bonuses to Merrill Lynch employees.

Lewis, 62, who was chairman and CEO since 2001, has spent much of this year defending his actions _ and did so again during the angry four-hour meeting.

Results of the voting were delayed for several hours, and Bank of America Wednesday evening issued a statement that the board of directors had met, elected Massey as chairman and unanimously voted to keep Lewis as CEO.

The bank said the shareholder proposal to separate the chairman and CEO jobs had passed 50.34 percent to 49.66 percent; it was the only shareholder proposal to be approved. Shareholders re-elected all 18 of Bank of America's directors, including Lewis.

Big investors including California's employee pension fund had called for shareholders to oust Lewis and his fellow directors at the meeting, which was attended by more than 2,000 people.

One of those investors, Michael Garland, director of Value Strategies for CtW Investment Group, praised the ouster of Lewis. His group handles 33 million BofA shares and works with union-affiliated pension funds.

"It's huge," he said. "It's an enormous victory for shareholders."

"We'll have an independent board chairman, and now the CEO will be accountable to a board chaired by an independent director. It's a critical critical first step," Garland said.

At the meeting, Garland openly criticized Lewis, saying bad managment decisions led to a dramatic drop in Bank of America stock.

Jason O'Donnell, a bank analyst with Boenning & Scattergood Inc., said the vote outcome was not entirely surprising.

"It's been building up for a while," he said. "There's been a lot of investor discontent regarding his decision, particularly, to buy Merrill Lynch."

Shareholders lined up early in the gathering to speak, with many hurling criticism at Lewis and the Bank of America board for the government-brokered purchase of Merrill Lynch.

"I find it incredible you didn't have the guts to stand up to the U.S. government," said Judith Koenick of Chevy Chase, Md., who said she lost thousands of dollars when BofA shares plunged after the Merrill Lynch purchase.

The government pressured Bank of America into buying Merrill Lynch during the same weekend in September that another investment bank, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., collapsed, setting off one of the most intense periods of the financial crisis.

Shareholder Gerald Abrams, of Boca Raton, Fla., also had an exchange with Lewis about the deal, asking, "what happened to due diligence" in Bank of America's investigation of Merrill Lynch's finances.

Lewis responded that Bank of America didn't anticipate the worsening credit conditions in the country, which elicited from Abrams, "why do the deal?" Lewis replied that it wasn't in the best interest of shareholders for Bank of America to pull out of the agreement.

Later, Abrams told a reporter, "I listened to Lewis and he came off like a good guy and a knowledgable guy, but I just can't see him staying."

In his remarks, Lewis defended the bank's acquisition of Merrill Lynch and another troubled company, mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp.

Lewis said the companies are providing "the positive counterbalance to our traditional banking businesses, which at this point of the business cycle are under much more stress from rising credit losses."

"Countrywide and Merrill Lynch are two of the most important reasons Bank of America is the most profitable financial services company in the United States so far this year," Lewis said. "Today, I can state without reservation that these acquisitions are not mistakes to be regretted. Both are looking more and more like successes to be celebrated."

The Charlotte-based bank and Lewis have been under intense scrutiny because Bank of America is one of the biggest recipients of government bailout money and because the losses at Merrill Lynch turned out to be much higher than anyone expected.

Shareholders who have been calling for Lewis to resign or be dismissed as chairman and CEO are also irate over the precipitous drop in the company's stock price. Bank of America has fallen 42 percent since the beginning of the year, closing at $8.68, up 53 cents, before the shareholder vote was announced. Shares fell as low as $2.53 in late February.

Lewis said, "I know the Merrill deal has played a role in the decline of our stock price. But I do not believe it is solely responsible for its decline." He said every major commercial bank in the country is under pressure.

Some analysts believe that if Lewis might eventually be forced out altogether.

Gary Townsend, chief executive officer of Hill-Townsend Capital LLC, noted that Wachovia's chairman and CEO roles were split last year after shareholders were upset about the performance of that Charlotte-based bank, which has since been sold to Wells Fargo & Co.

Just weeks after former Wachovia CEO Ken Thompson was stripped of his title as chairman, he was forced out as chief executive as well. Stripping Lewis of his role as chairman "can result in significant, rapid changes, depending on what happens the rest of the year," Townsend added.

O'Donnell, noting that Wachovia had an ill-fated purchase, mortgage lender Golden West Financial Corp., also likened Thompson's situation to Lewis'.

"I think the Golden West debacle is one that's a pretty good analogy for this scenario," O'Donnell said. "Clearly, Thompson was put under a lot of pressure to step down as a result of that acquisition and pretty much that is what we are seeing here with Lewis and his Merrill Lynch deal."

On Tuesday, the California Public Employees' Retirement System said it would vote against re-electing all 18 Bank of America board members, including Lewis. CalPERS, the largest U.S. public pension fund, holds about one-third of 1 percent the bank's outstanding shares.

Massey has been on the Bank of America board since 1998. He served as president of Morehouse from 1995 to 2007 and has also served on boards of big corporations including McDonald's Corp. and Delta Air Lines Inc.

Lewis's total compensation, according to Associated Press calculations, fell 56 percent to $9 million in 2008 versus $20.4 million in 2007. Bank of America didn't pay Lewis or any of its other top executives a bonus last year, like most major U.S. banks, saying its 2008 financial results didn't meet its expectations.

The bank posted a $2.39 billion loss for the three months ended in December, but earned $2.56 billion after preferred dividends for all of 2008, down from $14.80 billion in fiscal 2007.

Bank of America has received $45 billion in government aid as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, and additional guarantees backing hundreds of billions more in risky investments after it took over Merrill Lynch in January.

_____

AP Business Writer Stephen Bernard in New York contributed to this report.

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ken Lewis was ousted as chairman of Bank of America Wednesday after shareholders angry about the company's acquisition of Merrill Lynch voted to separate the job from that of c...
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ken Lewis was ousted as chairman of Bank of America Wednesday after shareholders angry about the company's acquisition of Merrill Lynch voted to separate the job from that of c...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
11:30 AM on 05/01/2009
My BOA credit card's interest rate almost doubled on my last statement. I immediatly paid off the balance and will think long and hard before I use it again. I own my home and my car outright and have a credit rateing of almost 800. Let's not forget that BOA and many other credit card companies have been issuing cards to anyone with a warm body. Now they want my tax dollars and crazy interest rates to pay for the sum total of all their bad decisions. It ain't gonna happen. I thought that the stimulus money was supposed to free up credit, not cover up loses.
03:10 AM on 05/01/2009
Wow, who did this guy piss off? Usually big failures like him are rewarded with more power and money.
12:18 AM on 05/05/2009
He pissed off the stockholders who lost thousands of dollars when the stock dropped down to single digits. You don't mess around with people's retirement money and that's what it boiled down to. Thousands of dollars were lost and who knows how long it'll be before it goes back up to its original price? People are usually so complacent but the opportunity was there for payback and they paid Lewis back with their vote against electing him as Chairman of the Board. Now Ken won't have the ability to do as he pleases. He'll have to answer for all his decisions.
02:58 AM on 05/01/2009
When is someone going to finish the job and remove him from being the CEO?
Everyone knows that his hands are as dirty as some of the others out there.
01:46 AM on 05/01/2009
Aww... The fox no longer guards the henhouse. How novel. This should be the RULE period. Corporate governance is a joke.
11:09 PM on 04/30/2009
Ken Lewis is the bank industry's Rick Wagoner. As pointed out on www.ProudlyMadeInAmerica.com, Rick Wagoner killed GM. Ken Lewis almost did the same at BoA. Bad management is in all industries. Shareholders want results this year, this quarter, so that short term goals at the expense of long term stability are what gets done.

By the time companies like GM start to crumble, people like Wagoner have their $100 Million in bonuses already in the bank.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
anastasiabeaverhousen
Time wounds all heels
10:23 PM on 04/30/2009
One has to know the history of the NationsBank and BofA deal to understand the delicious irony of having the California pension organizations being instrumental in the ousting of Lewis.

SO MANY Californians lost their jobs when the NationsBank gang hoodwinked BofA into a "merger".

I love the smell of schandenfreude in the morning, afternoon and evening.......
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LemonMeringue
Happy Birthday, Steve Jobs - Feb. 24th
09:19 PM on 04/30/2009
Anyone who wants to understand how money and banking work and what happened to the American economy can watch this stupid-simple explanation in 47 minutes:

http://www.filmsforaction.org/film/?Film=247&Title=Money_As_Debt
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LemonMeringue
Happy Birthday, Steve Jobs - Feb. 24th
09:18 PM on 04/30/2009
David Rockefeller, at the 1991 Baden-Baden meeting of the Bilderberg Group

We are grateful to the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time magazine and other great publications, whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost forty years."(He went on to explain:)'It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national auto determination practiced in past centuries.
12:30 AM on 05/01/2009
Sounds like a good idea.
08:22 PM on 04/30/2009
Peter Principle in action... way too late.

http://www.pufferfishblog.com/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
07:27 PM on 04/30/2009
Why did BofA buy Merrill? Answer JPM+Goldman+Paulson+Geithner+FED Forced Deal on BofA!

Merrill=Ev!1=Created and pumped up the Internet Strategy Fund, sold to investors, loss of 90%!
Merrill=Created US Mortgage Backed Securities
Merrill=Gave B rating to Enron while gave rating C to companies like MSFT and INTC
Merrill=Paid themselves $3.7 billions when its company was collapsing at the taxpayer cost
Merrill=Backed ENRON, Worldcom, and many fraudulent companies
Lewis=Went along with buying the D0G!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
06:40 PM on 04/30/2009
Banking industry grew from 10% of our Economic Profits to 40% by manufacturing Toxic Debts.

Now it must shrink back to its support role in a Production and Service Economy and automate its many mathematical and database functions to become a slim and trim service oriented industry!

Why is Geithner trying to fight this important trend by pumping up the Zombie Banks? Let them downsize and automate like they should be doing!
04:36 PM on 04/30/2009
Ouch! He's been "demoted" from Chairman to President AND CEO!!

Now that's what I call tough oversight!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
super
06:38 PM on 04/30/2009
No, he's been relieved of his Chairman of the Board role.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
02:43 PM on 04/30/2009
Why CEO? What does he have that thousands of lesser paid people don't have?
04:34 PM on 04/30/2009
I think this is just a smoke screen by the Board of Directors. Independent outisde director? You've got to be kidding. that is the farthest thing from reality. The directors are and corporate management are incestuous. They merely pat each other on the back and keep raising each other's salaries, stock options and bonuses! The only way this would have been had any meaning is if the Executive Management was fired along with the board of directors!
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04:38 PM on 04/30/2009
Well its simple Joe.

First you shame a person by demoting them to a "perceived lessor post" because if you fired them, then you would have to according to their employment agreement, pay severance which would hit the news. AND

Second, you demote them to a lessor public position hoping that they would resign as part of the humility factor as a resignation prevents further media backlash as you left on your own accord and not through any fault of the institution. AND

Third, the bank does not go through any embarrassing probes as part of an investigation against itself further diminishing the value of shareholder's stock; as I am one of the shareholders AND

THEN......You simply Re-Brand the image into a new shell; Walter A. Massey to my knowledge would become the first African-American Chair of a major bank the size of BofA. No less-than-major task as blacks are historically discriminated in the bank loan process as to my knowledge less than 1.6 percent of black business applicants are approved nationwide, even with financing, excellent credit, and collateral. Banks have been able to get away with such travesties as their is no real regulatory requirement for them to keep information on the applications they throw away or keep or allow through the mill sort of speak; even before Wall St. went bust. www.mbda.gov

Hope this insight helps.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
02:03 PM on 04/30/2009
What about fraud charges? What about releasing the names of the bonus recipients?
01:42 PM on 04/30/2009
That will teach Ken! The sign in front of his office will have to be changed to a mere CEO. The real hero of the meeting was the shareholder who complained that all the bank employees (who filled the hall with the appropriate cheers, urging the team on) made it harder for the l shareholders to have a voice.