WSJ: Bank of America Ponders Retreat
Today's Wall Street Journal offers the story "Bank of America Ponders Retreat." It discusses a BofA emergency plan for retrenchment that would include further branch shrinkage than currently-expected reductions.
Today’s Wall Street Journal offers the story “Bank of America Ponders Retreat.” It discusses a BofA emergency plan for retrenchment that would include further branch shrinkage than currently-expected reductions.
From the WSJ: ” The company already has signaled that it plans to get rid of 750 of its 5,700 branches in the next few years. About $60 billion of the bank’s roughly $1 trillion in deposits are scattered across 310 geographic areas with a population of less than 500,000 each, according to research firm FIG Partners. “These small, seemingly irrelevant cities could be quite meaningful for another small bank,” the firm said in a recent report.
Of course, the bank’s problems are much bigger than its sprawling branch network. It paid top-dollar for bottom feeder mortgage firm Countrywide (still a mess) and then-failing Merrill Lynch (now apparently a bright spot). CEO Brian Moynihan inherited these and myriad other problems created by the relentless growth goals of predecessors Hugh McColl and Ken Lewis. The WSJ aptly refers to their efforts as based on some sort of “manifest destiny” world-view. I agree with that analysis, but would add that manifest destiny turned out to be McColl and Lewis’s hubris.
Meanwhile, over at his New York Times blog, economist Simon Johnson notes that the “left” and the “right” could get together by supporting structural reforms to bank size– including the “hard cap” on bank deposit size proposed in the 2010 Safe Banking Act and floor amendment from Senators Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and Ted Kaufman (DE). Simon Johnson says we need structural reforms because conduct remedies to bank practices haven’t worked and won’t work:
“The way to cut our Gordian financial knot is simple — force the big banks to become smaller. Small banks and other financial institutions can be allowed to fail, unencumbered by any kind of government bailout. MF Global failed recently with about $40 billion in total assets; the shock waves did not bring on global panic.”
Topics
Authors
Ed Mierzwinski
Senior Director, Federal Consumer Program, PIRG
Ed oversees U.S. PIRG’s federal consumer program, helping to lead national efforts to improve consumer credit reporting laws, identity theft protections, product safety regulations and more. Ed is co-founder and continuing leader of the coalition, Americans For Financial Reform, which fought for the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, including as its centerpiece the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. He was awarded the Consumer Federation of America's Esther Peterson Consumer Service Award in 2006, Privacy International's Brandeis Award in 2003, and numerous annual "Top Lobbyist" awards from The Hill and other outlets. Ed lives in Virginia, and on weekends he enjoys biking with friends on the many local bicycle trails.