People Moves
Wells Fargo Shakes Up Board Of Directors

The bank has had its fair share of controversies over the past year.
Wells
Fargo & Company has made several changes to its board of
directors as the firm looks to move on from problems
that have hit the company over the past year.
The board of directors have appointed Elizabeth Duke to succeed
Stephen Sanger as independent chair, effective January 1, 2018.
Sanger will step down at the end of 2017. He will assist the
transition until his retirement, the firm said in a
statement.
Duke served as a member of the board of governors of the Federal
Reserve System from August 2008 to August 2013, where she was
chair of the Federal Reserve’s committee on consumer and
community affairs and a member of its committee on bank
supervision and regulation, committee on bank affairs, and
committee on board affairs.
The firm has also appointed Juan Pujadas, a retired principal of
PricewaterhouseCoopers, as a new independent director, effective
September 1, 2017. Among many senior positions at PwC,
Pujadas was vice chairman of global advisory services of PwC
International, led the US firm’s advisory practice, and led
PwC’s global risk management solutions practice for the
Americas.
Also, the firm has said that Cynthia Milligan, who joined in
1992, and Susan Swenson, who joined in 1998, will retire from the
board at year-end 2017.
Wells Fargo added: “The board expects to name up to three
additional independent directors before the 2018 annual meeting.
The board intends to continue adding new directors while
maintaining an appropriate balance of experience and perspectives
on the board. Although the board’s size may fluctuate in the near
term as it recruits new directors, the board expects that its
size will move over time toward the lower end of its recent
historical range of 14 to 16 directors.”
These appointments come after the appointments earlier this year
of two new independent directors, Karen Peetz and Ronald
Sargent.
The firm also made several changes to the leadership and
composition of key board committees. The changes, effective
September 1, 2017, include: - Risk Committee: Peetz will join and
succeed Enrique Hernandez as chair of the risk committee. Pujadas
and Suzanne Vautrinot also were added as new members, while Lloyd
Dean, Milligan, Federico Peña, and Sanger are rotating off of the
risk committee.
- Governance and Nominating Committee (GNC): Donald James will
join and succeed Sanger as chair of the GNC. Duke also was added
as a new member, and Milligan, Sanger and Swenson are rotating
off of the GNC.
- Corporate Responsibility Committee (CRC): Vautrinot was added
as a new member of the CRC.
- Audit & Examination (A&E) Committee: Sargent was added as a
new member of the A&E Committee, while Vautrinot is rotating
off given her appointment to the risk committee and the
CRC.
These changes come after this publication reported in July that Wells Fargo was taking legal action to take back data mistakenly given to a lawyer, responding to a story saying information from thousands of clients, some of them wealthy, had been disseminated. Also, Family Wealth Report also reported in May that Wells Fargo had put its Chicago private banking office head and two senior executives on leave pending an internal investigation. In October 2016, this publication also reported it had been embroiled in a scandal in which employees created illegal accounts to achieve sales targets.