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Wikipedia

Wachovia

Wachovia was a diversified financial services company based in Charlotte, North Carolina. Before its acquisition by Wells Fargo and Company in 2008, Wachovia was the fourth-largest bank holding company in the United States, based on total assets.[3] Wachovia provided a broad range of banking, asset management, wealth management, and corporate and investment banking products and services. At its height, it was one of the largest providers of financial services in the United States, operating financial centers in 21 states and Washington, D.C., with locations from Connecticut to Florida and west to California.[4] Wachovia provided global services through more than 40 offices around the world.

Wachovia
TypePublic
NYSE: WB
IndustryFinancial services
FoundedJune 16, 1879; 144 years ago (1879-06-16)
DefunctDecember 31, 2008; 14 years ago (December 31, 2008) (as an independent corporation)
October 15, 2011; 11 years ago (October 15, 2011) (as a brand)
FateAcquired by Wells Fargo[1][2]
HeadquartersCharlotte, North Carolina, U.S.
ProductsBanking, Investments
OwnerWells Fargo
WebsiteArchived official website at the Wayback Machine (archive index)

The acquisition of Wachovia by Wells Fargo was completed on December 31, 2008, after a government-forced sale to avoid Wachovia's failure. The Wachovia brand was absorbed into the Wells Fargo brand in a process that lasted three years.[2] On October 15, 2011, the last Wachovia branches in North Carolina were converted to Wells Fargo.[5]

Business lines

 
One Wells Fargo Center, formerly One Wachovia Center. The former corporate headquarters of Wachovia in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Wachovia was the product of a 2001 merger between the original Wachovia Corporation, based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Charlotte-based First Union Corporation.

The company was organized into four divisions: General Bank (retail, small business, and commercial customers), Wealth Management (high-net-worth, personal trust, and insurance business), Capital Management (asset management, retirement, and retail brokerage services), and Corporate and Investment Bank (capital markets, investment banking, and financial advisory).

It served retail brokerage clients under the name Wachovia Securities nationwide as well as in six Latin American countries, and investment banking clients in selected industries nationwide.[6] In 2009, Wachovia Securities was the first Wachovia business to be converted to the Wells Fargo brand, when the business became Wells Fargo Advisors. Calibre was an independent consultant that was hired by Wachovia for the Family Wealth Group to research managers. The group no longer uses Calibre.[7]

The company's corporate and institutional capital markets and investment banking groups operated under the Wachovia Securities brand, while its asset management group operated under the Evergreen Investments brand until 2010, when the Evergreen fund family merged with Wells Fargo Advantage Funds, and institutional and high-net-worth products merged with Wells Capital Management and its affiliates.

Wachovia's private equity arm operated as Wachovia Capital Partners.[8] Additionally, the asset-based lending group operated as Wachovia Capital Finance.[9]

Origin of corporate name

Wachovia (/wɑːˈkviə/ wah-KOH-vee-ə) has its origins in the Latin form of the Austrian name Wachau.[4] When Moravian settlers arrived in Bethabara, North Carolina, in 1753, they gave this name to the land they acquired, because it resembled the Wachau valley along the Danube River.[4] The area formerly known as Wachovia now makes up most of Forsyth County, and the largest city is now Winston-Salem.

First Union

 
First Union logo.

First Union was founded as Union National Bank on June 2, 1908, a small banking desk in the lobby of a Charlotte hotel by H.M. Victor.

The bank merged with First National Bank and Trust Company of Asheville, North Carolina, in 1958 to become First Union National Bank of North Carolina. First Union Corporation was incorporated in 1967.

By the 1990s, it had grown into a Southern regional powerhouse in a strategy mirroring its longtime rival on Tryon Street in Charlotte, NCNB (later NationsBank and now Bank of America). In 1995, however, it acquired First Fidelity Bancorporation of Newark, New Jersey; at one stroke becoming a major player in the Northeast. Its Northeastern footprint grew even larger in 1998, when it acquired CoreStates Financial Corporation of Philadelphia. One of CoreStates' predecessors, the Bank of North America, had been the first bank proposed, chartered and incorporated in America on December 31, 1781. A former Bank of North America branch in Philadelphia remains in operation today as a Wells Fargo branch

Wachovia

 
The 1986–2002 Legacy Wachovia Logo
 
The first Wachovia Loan And Trust Company Building, located in Winston-Salem.

Wachovia Corporation began on June 16, 1879, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina as the Wachovia National Bank. The bank was co-founded by James Alexander Gray and William Lemly.[10] In 1911, the bank merged with Wachovia Loan and Trust Company, "the largest trust company between Baltimore and New Orleans",[11] which had been founded on June 15, 1893. Wachovia grew to become one of the largest banks in the Southeast partly on the strength of its accounts from the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, which was also headquartered in Winston-Salem.[12] On December 12, 1986, Wachovia purchased First Atlanta. Founded as Atlanta National Bank on September 14, 1865, and later renamed to First National Bank of Atlanta, this institution was the oldest national bank in Atlanta. This purchase made Wachovia one of the few companies with dual headquarters: one in Winston-Salem and one in Atlanta. In 1991, Wachovia entered the South Carolina market by acquiring South Carolina National Corporation,[13] founded as the Bank of Charleston in 1834. In 1998, Wachovia acquired two Virginia-based banks, Jefferson National Bank and Central Fidelity Bank. In 1997, Wachovia acquired both 1st United Bancorp and American Bankshares Inc, giving its first entry into Florida. In 2000, Wachovia made its final purchase, which was Republic Security Bank.

Merger of First Union and Wachovia

On April 16, 2001, First Union announced it would acquire Wachovia, through the exchange of approximately $13.4 billion in First Union stock. First Union offered two of its shares for each Wachovia share outstanding. The announcement was made by Wachovia chairman L.M. "Bud" Baker Jr. and First Union chairman Ken Thompson. Baker would become chairman of the merged bank, while Thompson would become president and CEO.[14] First Union was the acquiring party and nominal survivor, and the merged bank was based in Charlotte and adopted First Union's corporate structure and retained First Union's pre-2001 stock price history. However, as an important part of the merger, the merged bank took Wachovia's name and stock ticker symbol; despite First Union technically being the surviving identity and acquiring party.

This merger was viewed with great surprise by the financial press and security analysts.[15] While Wachovia had been viewed as an acquisition candidate after running into problems with earnings and credit quality in 2000, the suitor shocked analysts as many speculated that Wachovia would be sold to Atlanta-based SunTrust.[16]

The deal was met with skepticism and criticism. Analysts, remembering the problems with the CoreStates acquisition, were concerned about First Union's ability to merge with another large company. Winston-Salem's citizens and politicians suffered a blow to their civic pride because the merged company would be based in Charlotte. The city of Winston-Salem was concerned both by job losses and the loss of stature from losing a major corporate headquarters. First Union was concerned by the potential deposit attrition and customer loss in the city.[17] First Union responded to these concerns by placing the wealth management and Carolinas-region headquarters in Winston-Salem.

On May 14, 2001, SunTrust announced a rival takeover bid for Wachovia, the first hostile takeover attempt in the banking sector in many years. In its effort to make the deal appeal to investors, SunTrust argued that it would provide a smoother transition than First Union and offered a higher cash price for Wachovia stock than First Union.[18]

Wachovia's board of directors rejected SunTrust's offer and supported the merger with First Union. SunTrust continued its hostile takeover attempt, leading to a bitter battle over the summer between SunTrust and First Union.[19] Both banks increased their offers for Wachovia, took out newspaper ads, mailed letters to shareholders, and initiated court battles to challenge each other's takeover bids.[20] On August 3, 2001, Wachovia shareholders approved the First Union deal, rejecting SunTrust's attempts to elect a new board of directors for Wachovia and ending SunTrust's hostile takeover attempt.[21]

Another complication concerned each bank's credit card division. In April 2001, Wachovia had agreed to sell its $8 billion credit card portfolio to Bank One. The cards, which would have still been branded as Wachovia, would have been issued through Bank One's First USA division. First Union had sold its credit card portfolio to MBNA in August 2000.[22] After entering into negotiations, the new Wachovia agreed to buy back its portfolio from Bank One in September 2001 and resell it to MBNA. Wachovia paid Bank One a $350 million termination fee.

On September 4, 2001, First Union and Wachovia officially merged. In order to prevent a repeat of the CoreStates problems, the new Wachovia gradually phased-in the conversion of legacy Wachovia computer systems to First Union systems. The company first began converting systems in the southeast United States where both banks had branches, before moving to First Union's branches in the Northeast, which only had to change their signs to reflect the new company name and logo. This process was completed on August 18, 2003, almost 2 years after the merger.[23]

In comparison to the CoreStates purchase, the acquisition of Wachovia by First Union was considered successful by analysts. The company's deliberate pace of conversion prevented any large-scale customer attrition. In fact, Wachovia was ranked number one in customer satisfaction among major banks by the University of Michigan's annual American Customer Satisfaction Index for every year after the merger.[24]

When Wachovia and First Union merged, Charlotte's One, Two, and Three First Union buildings became One, Two, and Three Wachovia Center (respectively), and the 55-story First Union Financial Center in downtown Miami became the Wachovia Financial Center. The merger also affected the names of the indoor professional sports arenas in Philadelphia and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Formerly known as the First Union Center and the First Union Spectrum (both Philadelphia) and First Union Arena (Wilkes-Barre), they were renamed the Wachovia Center (now known as Wells Fargo Center), Wachovia Spectrum (which was later demolished), and Wachovia Arena at Casey Plaza (now known as Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza), respectively.

Merger and acquisition history

A graphic illustration of the company's major mergers, acquisitions, and historical predecessors, up to the 2001 merger of Wachovia and First Union:

  Wachovia  (merged 2001)
  First Union Corp.  (est. 1908)
First Union Corporation  (Formerly: First Union National Bank)  (est. 1958)

Union National Bank (est. 1908)

First National Bank & Trust

CoreStates Financial (dates to 1781)

  Wachovia Corporation (merged 1986)
Wachovia Bank & Trust (merged 1911)

Wachovia National Bank (Formerly: Bank of Salem(est. 1879)

Wachovia Loan & Trust  (est. 1893)

First Atlanta (Formerly Atlanta National Bank) (est. 1865)

Acquisitions

Between 2001 and 2006, Wachovia bought several other financial services companies in an attempt to become a national bank and comprehensive financial services company.

Merchandise

While First Union was merging into Wachovia, they changed the Wachovia logo to a square with wave like lines, the green color represents First Union while the blue represents the main company. They have also released new merchandise such as t-shirts, and provided other things such as retractable keychains, cups, and coffee mugs to show the success during 2001 to its acquisition by Wells Fargo.

Prudential Securities

Wachovia Securities and the Prudential Securities Division of Prudential Financial, Inc. combined to form Wachovia Securities LLC on July 1, 2003. Wachovia owned a controlling 62% stake, while Prudential Financial retained the remaining 38%.[25] At the time, the new firm had client assets of $532.1 billion, making it the nation's third largest full service retail brokerage firm, based on assets.[25]

Metropolitan West Securities

On October 22, 2003, Wachovia announced it would acquire Metropolitan West Securities, an affiliate company of Metropolitan West Financial.[26] This acquisition added a portfolio of over $50 billion of securities on loan to the Wachovia Global Securities Lending division.

SouthTrust

On November 1, 2004, Wachovia completed the acquisition of Birmingham, Alabama-based SouthTrust Corporation, a transaction valued at $14.3 billion. The merger created the largest bank in the southeast United States, the fourth largest bank in terms of holdings, and the second largest in terms of number of branches. Integration was completed by the end of 2005.[27]

Failed MBNA purchase

In June 2005, Wachovia negotiated to purchase monoline credit card company MBNA. However, the deal fell through when Wachovia balked at MBNA's purchase price. Within a week of the deal's collapse, MBNA entered into an agreement to be purchased by Wachovia's chief rival, Bank of America. Wachovia received $100 million as the result of an agreement Wachovia predecessor First Union made in 2000 when it sold its credit card portfolio to MBNA. This agreement required MBNA to pay this sum if it were ever sold to a competitor. In late 2005 Wachovia announced that it would end its relationship with MBNA and create its own credit card division so that the bank could issue its own Visa cards.

Westcorp

 
Westcorp logo

Westcorp, Western Financial Bank's parent company, WFS Financial Inc. and Wachovia announced a proposed acquisition by Wachovia in September 2005. Westcorp and WFS Financial Inc. shareholders approved the acquisition on Jan. 6, 2006 and on March 1, 2006, the merger was completed. This acquisition made Wachovia the ninth largest auto finance lender in the competitive U.S. auto finance market and provided Wachovia with a small retail and commercial banking presence in Southern California.[28] On February 12, 2007, the former 19 Western Financial Bank branches opened under the Wachovia name. These branches became the launching point for a much larger Wachovia presence in California with the acquisition and integration of World Savings Bank in 2007.

Golden West Financial/World Savings Bank

Wachovia agreed to purchase Golden West Financial for a little under $25.5 billion on May 7, 2006.[29][30] This acquisition gave Wachovia an additional 285-branch network spanning 10 states. Wachovia greatly raised its profile in California, where Golden West held $32 billion in deposits and operated 123 branches.[29]

Golden West, which operated branches under the name World Savings Bank, was the second largest savings and loan in the United States. The business was a small savings and loan in the San Francisco Bay area when it was purchased in 1963 for $4 million by Herbert and Marion Sandler. Golden West specialized in option ARMs loans, marketed under the name "Pick-A-Pay." These loans gave the borrower a choice of payment plans, including the option to defer paying a part of the interest owed, which was then added onto the balance of the loan. In 2006, Golden West Financial was named the "Most Admired Company" in the mortgage services business by Fortune magazine.[31] By the time Wachovia announced its acquisition, Golden West had over $125 billion in assets and 11,600 employees. By October 2, 2006, Wachovia had closed the acquisition of Golden West Financial Corporation. The Sandlers agreed to remain on the board at Wachovia.[29]

The Sandlers sold their firm at the top of the market, saying that they were growing older and wanted to devote themselves to philanthropy. A year earlier, in 2005, World Savings lending had started to slow, after more than quadrupling since 1998. Some current and former Wachovia officials said that the merger was agreed to within days, making it impossible to thoroughly vet the World Savings loan portfolio. They noted that the creditworthiness of World Savings borrowers edged down from 2004 to 2006, while Pick-A-Pay borrowers had credit scores well below the industry average for traditional loans. World Savings lending volume dipped again in 2006 shortly after the sale to Wachovia was initiated. In 2007, after the merger, World Savings, then known as Wachovia Mortgage began to attract more borrowers by taking a step that some regulators[who?] frowned upon, and which the former World Savings management had resisted for years: it allowed borrowers to make monthly payments with an annual interest rate of just 1 percent. While Wachovia Mortgage continued to scrutinize borrowers' ability to manage increased payments, the move to rock-bottom rates lured customers whose financial reliability was more difficult to verify.[32] More than 70% of the Pick-A-Pay loans were made in California, Florida and Arizona, where home prices had declined severely. In 2009 New York Times reporter Floyd Norris called World Savings a "ticking timebomb" that created "zombie homeowners".[33]

While Wachovia Chairman and CEO G. Kennedy "Ken" Thompson had described Golden West as a "crown jewel",[34] investors did not react positively to the deal. Analysts said that Wachovia purchased Golden West at the peak of the US housing boom. Wachovia Mortgage's mortgage-related problems led to Wachovia suffering writedowns and losses that far exceeded the price paid in the acquisition, ending up in the fire-sale of Wachovia to Wells Fargo.[35]

A. G. Edwards

 

On May 31, 2007, Wachovia announced plans to purchase A. G. Edwards for $6.8 billion to create the United States' second largest retail brokerage firm.[36] The acquisition closed on October 1, 2007. In early March 2008 Wachovia began to phase out the AG Edwards brand in favor of a unified Wachovia Securities.

Historical data (2000–2008)

[37]

Wachovia, excluding subsidiaries, was the fourth largest bank at the end of 2008.

2007–2009 financial crisis

Exposed to risky loans, such as adjustable rate mortgages acquired during the acquisition of Golden West Financial in 2006, Wachovia began to experience heavy losses in its loan portfolios during the subprime mortgage crisis.[38][39]

In the first quarter of 2007, Wachovia reported $2.3 billion in earnings, including acquisitions and divestitures.[40] However, in the second quarter of 2008, Wachovia reported a much larger than anticipated $8.9 billion loss.[41]

On June 2, 2008, Wachovia chief executive officer Ken Thompson was forced to retire. He had been head of the company since 2000, while it was still known as First Union.[42] The board replaced him on an interim basis with Chairman Lanty Smith. Smith had already replaced Thompson as chairman a month earlier.

On July 9, 2008, Wachovia hired Treasury Undersecretary Bob Steel as chief executive in hopes that his experience would lead the company out of its difficulties.[43]

Government intervention

After Steel took over, he insisted that Wachovia would stay independent. However, its stock price plunged 27 percent on September 26 due to the seizure of Washington Mutual the previous night. On the same day, several businesses and institutional depositors withdrew money from their accounts in order to drop their balances below the $100,000 insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) – an event known in banking circles as a "silent run." Ultimately, Wachovia lost a total of $5 billion in deposits that day—about one percent of the bank's total deposits.[44] The large outflow of deposits attracted the attention of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks. Federal regulators pressured Wachovia to put itself up for sale over the weekend. Had Wachovia failed, it would have been a severe drain on the FDIC's insurance fund due to its size (it operated one of the largest branch networks on the East Coast).[45][46]

As business halted for the weekend, Wachovia was already in FDIC-brokered talks with Citigroup and Wells Fargo; the latter company initially emerged as the frontrunner to acquire the ailing Wachovia's banking operations. Wells Fargo originally backed out of this particular deal due to concerns over Wachovia's commercial loans. With no deal in place as September 28 dawned, regulators were concerned that Wachovia wouldn't have enough short-term funding to open for business the next day. In order to obtain enough liquidity to do business, banks usually depend on short-term loans to each other. However, the markets had been so battered by a credit crisis related to the housing bubble that banks were skittish about making such loans. Under the circumstances, regulators feared that if customers pulled out more money, Wachovia wouldn't have enough liquidity to meet its obligations. This would have resulted in a failure dwarfing that of WaMu.[46]

When FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair got word of Wachovia's situation, she initially decided to handle the situation the same way she handled WaMu a day earlier. Under this scenario, the Comptroller of the Currency would have seized Wachovia's banking assets (Wachovia Bank, N.A. and Wachovia Bank of Delaware, N.A.) and placed them under the receivership of the FDIC who would have then sold the banking assets to the highest bidder. Bair called Steel on September 28 and told him that the FDIC would be auctioning off Wachovia's banking assets. Bair felt this would best protect the small banks. However, several Federal regulators, led by New York Fed President Tim Geithner, felt such a course would be politically unjustifiable so soon after WaMu's seizure.[47]

After a round of mediation between Geithner and Bair, the FDIC declared that Wachovia was "systemically important" to the health of the economy, and thus could not be allowed to fail. It was the first time the FDIC had made such a determination since the passage of a 1991 law allowing the FDIC to handle large bank failures on short notice.[47] Later that night, in an FDIC-brokered deal, Citigroup agreed to buy Wachovia's retail banking operations in an "open bank" transfer of ownership. The transaction would have been facilitated by the FDIC, with the concurrence of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and the Secretary of the Treasury in consultation with the President. The FDIC's open bank assistance procedures normally require the FDIC to find the cheapest way to rescue a failing bank. However, when a bank is deemed "systemically important," the FDIC is allowed to bypass this requirement. Steel had little choice but to agree, and the decision was announced on the morning of September 29, roughly 45 minutes before the markets opened.[46][48][49][50] From this point on, Citigroup became the source of liquidity allowing Wachovia to continue to operate until the acquisition was complete.

In its announcement, the FDIC stressed that Wachovia did not fail and was not placed into receivership. In addition, the FDIC said that the agency would absorb Citigroup's losses above $42 billion; Wachovia's loan portfolio was valued at $312 billion. In exchange for assuming this risk, the FDIC would receive $12 billion in preferred stock and warrants from Citigroup.[48][51][52] The transaction would have been an all-stock transfer, with Wachovia Corporation stockholders to have received stock from Citigroup, valuing Wachovia stock at about one dollar per share for a total transaction value of about $2.16 billion. Citigroup would have also assumed Wachovia's senior and subordinated debt.[51][53] Citigroup intended to sell ten billion dollars of new stock on the open market to recapitalize its purchased banking operations.[51] The proposed closing date for the Wachovia purchase was by the end of the year, 2008.[54]

Wachovia expected to continue as a publicly traded company, retaining its retail brokerage arm, Wachovia Securities and Evergreen mutual funds.[53] At the time, Wachovia Securities had 14,600 financial advisers and managed more than $1 trillion, third in the U.S. after Merrill Lynch and Citigroup's Smith Barney.[51]

The announcement drew some criticism from Wachovia stockholders who felt the dollar-per-share price was too cheap. Some of them planned to try to defeat the deal when it came up for shareholder approval. However, institutional investors such as mutual funds and pension funds controlled 73 percent of Wachovia's stock; individual stockholders would have had to garner a significant amount of support from institutional shareholders to derail the sale. Also, several experts in corporate dealmaking told The Charlotte Observer that such a strategy is very risky since federal regulators helped broker the deal. One financial expert told the Observer that if Wachovia's shareholders voted the deal down, the OCC could have simply seized Wachovia and placed it into the receivership of the FDIC, which would then sell it to Citigroup. Had this happened, the shareholders of Wachovia risked being completely wiped out.[55]

Acquisition by Wells Fargo

 
A Wells Fargo branch in Durham, North Carolina; previously a Wachovia branch until 2011.

Though Citigroup was providing the liquidity that allowed Wachovia to continue to operate, Wells Fargo and Wachovia announced on October 3, 2008, that they had agreed to merge in an all-stock transaction requiring no government involvement. Wells Fargo announced it had agreed to acquire all of Wachovia for $15.1 billion in stock. Wachovia preferred the Wells Fargo deal because it would be worth more than the Citigroup deal and keep all of its businesses intact. Also, there is far less overlap between the banks, as Wells Fargo is dominant in the West and Midwest compared to the redundant footprint of Wachovia and Citibank along the East Coast. Both companies' boards unanimously approved the merger on the night of October 2.[56]

Citigroup explored its legal options and demanded that Wachovia and Wells Fargo cease discussions, claiming that Wells Fargo engaged in "tortious interference" with an exclusivity agreement between Citigroup and Wachovia. That agreement states in part that until October 6, 2008 "Wachovia shall not, and shall not permit any of its subsidiaries or any of its or their respective officers, directors, [...] to [...] take any action to facilitate or encourage the submission of any Acquisition Proposal.".[57][58]

Citigroup convinced Judge Charles E. Ramos of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, New York County to grant a preliminary injunction temporarily blocking the Wells Fargo deal.[59] This ruling was later overturned by Judge James M. McGuire of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Appellate Division, First Department, partly because he believed Ramos did not have the right to rule on the case in Connecticut.[60]

On October 9, 2008, Citigroup abandoned its attempt to purchase Wachovia's banking assets, allowing the Wachovia-Wells Fargo merger to go through. However, Citigroup pursued $60 billion in claims, $20 billion in compensatory and $40 billion in punitive damages, against Wachovia and Wells Fargo for alleged violations of the exclusivity agreement.[61] Wells Fargo settled this dispute with Citigroup Inc. for $100 Million on November 19, 2010.[62] Citigroup may have been pressured by regulators to back out of the deal; Bair endorsed Wells Fargo's bid because it removed the FDIC from the picture. Geithner was furious, claiming that the FDIC's reversal would undermine the government's ability to quickly rescue failing banks. However, Geithner's colleagues at the Fed were not willing to take responsibility for selling Wachovia.[47]

The Federal Reserve unanimously approved the merger with Wells Fargo on October 12, 2008.[63]

The combined company retained the Wells Fargo name, and was based in San Francisco. However, Charlotte remained as the headquarters for the combined company's East Coast banking operations, and Wachovia Securities remained in Charlotte[citation needed]. Three members of the Wachovia board joined the Wells Fargo board. The merger created the largest branch network in the United States.

In filings unsealed two days before the merger approval in a New York federal court, Citigroup argued that its own deal was better for U.S. taxpayers and Wachovia shareholders. It said that it had exposed itself to "substantial economic risk" by stating its intent to rescue Wachovia after less than 72 hours of due diligence. Citigroup had obtained an exclusive agreement in order to protect itself.[64] Wachovia suffered a $23.9 billion loss in the third quarter.[65]

In September 2008, the Internal Revenue Service issued a notice providing tax breaks to companies that acquire troubled banks. According to analysts, these tax breaks were worth billions of dollars to Wells Fargo. Vice Chairman Bill Thomas of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission indicated that these tax breaks may have been a factor in Wells Fargo's decision to purchase Wachovia.[66]

Wells Fargo's purchase of Wachovia closed on December 31, 2008. By the time Wells Fargo completed the acquisition of Wachovia, the byline "A Wells Fargo company" was added to the logo.

Controversies

Identity theft negligence

A May 2007 New York Times article described Wachovia's negligence in screening and taking action against companies linked with identity theft. With stolen identities, the companies used unsigned checks to remove funds from personal Wachovia bank accounts. In total, Wachovia accepted $142 million in unsigned checks from "companies that made unauthorized withdrawals from thousands of accounts", collecting millions of dollars in fees from them. According to Pat Meehan, a U.S. attorney for Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Wachovia received "thousands of warnings that it was processing fraudulent checks, but ignored them".[67]

On April 25, 2008, Wachovia agreed to pay up to $144 million to end the investigation without admitting wrongdoing. The investigation found that Wachovia had failed to conduct suitable due diligence, and that it would have discovered the thefts if it had followed normal procedures. The penalty is one of the largest ever demanded by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.[68]

Latin drug cartel money laundering

In April 2008, the Wall Street Journal reported that federal prosecutors had initiated a probe into Wachovia and other U.S. banks for aiding drug money laundering by Mexican and Colombian money-transfer companies, also known as casas de cambio. These companies help Mexican immigrants in the United States send remittances back to family in Mexico, but it is widely known that they also present a significant money-laundering risk. However, not only is it a "lucrative industry" that is able to charge high fees, but Wachovia also viewed it as a way to gain a foothold in the Hispanic banking market.[69]

In March 2010, Wachovia admitted "serious and systemic" violations of the Bank Secrecy Act that allowed Mexican and Colombian drug cartels[70] to launder $378.4 billion between 2004 and 2007, the "largest violation of the Bank Secrecy Act".[71] It negotiated a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department to resolve criminal charges for willfully failing to set up an effective anti-money-laundering program. It agreed to forfeit $110 million and pay a $50 million fine to the U.S. Treasury.

Reports in Bloomberg Businessweek in June 2010[72] and The Observer in April 2011 shed light on the extent to which Wachovia went to turn a blind eye, including by ignoring the warnings and suspicious activity reports (SARs) of its London-based director of anti-money-laundering.[73]

Chief executive officers

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website (Archive)
  • Yahoo! – Wachovia Corporation Company Profile

wachovia, this, article, about, financial, services, company, historic, geographic, location, same, name, after, which, bank, named, tract, diversified, financial, services, company, based, charlotte, north, carolina, before, acquisition, wells, fargo, company. This article is about the financial services company For the historic geographic location of the same name after which the bank was named see Wachovia Tract Wachovia was a diversified financial services company based in Charlotte North Carolina Before its acquisition by Wells Fargo and Company in 2008 Wachovia was the fourth largest bank holding company in the United States based on total assets 3 Wachovia provided a broad range of banking asset management wealth management and corporate and investment banking products and services At its height it was one of the largest providers of financial services in the United States operating financial centers in 21 states and Washington D C with locations from Connecticut to Florida and west to California 4 Wachovia provided global services through more than 40 offices around the world WachoviaTypePublicTraded asNYSE WBIndustryFinancial servicesFoundedJune 16 1879 144 years ago 1879 06 16 DefunctDecember 31 2008 14 years ago December 31 2008 as an independent corporation October 15 2011 11 years ago October 15 2011 as a brand FateAcquired by Wells Fargo 1 2 HeadquartersCharlotte North Carolina U S ProductsBanking InvestmentsOwnerWells FargoWebsiteArchived official website at the Wayback Machine archive index The acquisition of Wachovia by Wells Fargo was completed on December 31 2008 after a government forced sale to avoid Wachovia s failure The Wachovia brand was absorbed into the Wells Fargo brand in a process that lasted three years 2 On October 15 2011 the last Wachovia branches in North Carolina were converted to Wells Fargo 5 Contents 1 Business lines 1 1 Origin of corporate name 1 2 First Union 1 3 Wachovia 1 4 Merger of First Union and Wachovia 1 5 Merger and acquisition history 1 6 Acquisitions 1 6 1 Prudential Securities 1 6 2 Metropolitan West Securities 1 6 3 SouthTrust 1 6 4 Failed MBNA purchase 1 6 5 Westcorp 1 6 6 Golden West Financial World Savings Bank 1 6 7 A G Edwards 2 Historical data 2000 2008 3 2007 2009 financial crisis 3 1 Government intervention 4 Acquisition by Wells Fargo 5 Controversies 5 1 Identity theft negligence 5 2 Latin drug cartel money laundering 6 Chief executive officers 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksBusiness lines Edit One Wells Fargo Center formerly One Wachovia Center The former corporate headquarters of Wachovia in Charlotte North Carolina Wachovia was the product of a 2001 merger between the original Wachovia Corporation based in Winston Salem North Carolina and Charlotte based First Union Corporation The company was organized into four divisions General Bank retail small business and commercial customers Wealth Management high net worth personal trust and insurance business Capital Management asset management retirement and retail brokerage services and Corporate and Investment Bank capital markets investment banking and financial advisory It served retail brokerage clients under the name Wachovia Securities nationwide as well as in six Latin American countries and investment banking clients in selected industries nationwide 6 In 2009 Wachovia Securities was the first Wachovia business to be converted to the Wells Fargo brand when the business became Wells Fargo Advisors Calibre was an independent consultant that was hired by Wachovia for the Family Wealth Group to research managers The group no longer uses Calibre 7 The company s corporate and institutional capital markets and investment banking groups operated under the Wachovia Securities brand while its asset management group operated under the Evergreen Investments brand until 2010 when the Evergreen fund family merged with Wells Fargo Advantage Funds and institutional and high net worth products merged with Wells Capital Management and its affiliates Wachovia s private equity arm operated as Wachovia Capital Partners 8 Additionally the asset based lending group operated as Wachovia Capital Finance 9 Origin of corporate name Edit Main article Wachovia Tract Wachovia w ɑː ˈ k oʊ v i e wah KOH vee e has its origins in the Latin form of the Austrian name Wachau 4 When Moravian settlers arrived in Bethabara North Carolina in 1753 they gave this name to the land they acquired because it resembled the Wachau valley along the Danube River 4 The area formerly known as Wachovia now makes up most of Forsyth County and the largest city is now Winston Salem First Union Edit First Union logo Main article First Union First Union was founded as Union National Bank on June 2 1908 a small banking desk in the lobby of a Charlotte hotel by H M Victor The bank merged with First National Bank and Trust Company of Asheville North Carolina in 1958 to become First Union National Bank of North Carolina First Union Corporation was incorporated in 1967 By the 1990s it had grown into a Southern regional powerhouse in a strategy mirroring its longtime rival on Tryon Street in Charlotte NCNB later NationsBank and now Bank of America In 1995 however it acquired First Fidelity Bancorporation of Newark New Jersey at one stroke becoming a major player in the Northeast Its Northeastern footprint grew even larger in 1998 when it acquired CoreStates Financial Corporation of Philadelphia One of CoreStates predecessors the Bank of North America had been the first bank proposed chartered and incorporated in America on December 31 1781 A former Bank of North America branch in Philadelphia remains in operation today as a Wells Fargo branch Wachovia Edit The 1986 2002 Legacy Wachovia Logo The first Wachovia Loan And Trust Company Building located in Winston Salem Wachovia Corporation began on June 16 1879 in Winston Salem North Carolina as the Wachovia National Bank The bank was co founded by James Alexander Gray and William Lemly 10 In 1911 the bank merged with Wachovia Loan and Trust Company the largest trust company between Baltimore and New Orleans 11 which had been founded on June 15 1893 Wachovia grew to become one of the largest banks in the Southeast partly on the strength of its accounts from the R J Reynolds Tobacco Company which was also headquartered in Winston Salem 12 On December 12 1986 Wachovia purchased First Atlanta Founded as Atlanta National Bank on September 14 1865 and later renamed to First National Bank of Atlanta this institution was the oldest national bank in Atlanta This purchase made Wachovia one of the few companies with dual headquarters one in Winston Salem and one in Atlanta In 1991 Wachovia entered the South Carolina market by acquiring South Carolina National Corporation 13 founded as the Bank of Charleston in 1834 In 1998 Wachovia acquired two Virginia based banks Jefferson National Bank and Central Fidelity Bank In 1997 Wachovia acquired both 1st United Bancorp and American Bankshares Inc giving its first entry into Florida In 2000 Wachovia made its final purchase which was Republic Security Bank Merger of First Union and Wachovia Edit On April 16 2001 First Union announced it would acquire Wachovia through the exchange of approximately 13 4 billion in First Union stock First Union offered two of its shares for each Wachovia share outstanding The announcement was made by Wachovia chairman L M Bud Baker Jr and First Union chairman Ken Thompson Baker would become chairman of the merged bank while Thompson would become president and CEO 14 First Union was the acquiring party and nominal survivor and the merged bank was based in Charlotte and adopted First Union s corporate structure and retained First Union s pre 2001 stock price history However as an important part of the merger the merged bank took Wachovia s name and stock ticker symbol despite First Union technically being the surviving identity and acquiring party This merger was viewed with great surprise by the financial press and security analysts 15 While Wachovia had been viewed as an acquisition candidate after running into problems with earnings and credit quality in 2000 the suitor shocked analysts as many speculated that Wachovia would be sold to Atlanta based SunTrust 16 The deal was met with skepticism and criticism Analysts remembering the problems with the CoreStates acquisition were concerned about First Union s ability to merge with another large company Winston Salem s citizens and politicians suffered a blow to their civic pride because the merged company would be based in Charlotte The city of Winston Salem was concerned both by job losses and the loss of stature from losing a major corporate headquarters First Union was concerned by the potential deposit attrition and customer loss in the city 17 First Union responded to these concerns by placing the wealth management and Carolinas region headquarters in Winston Salem On May 14 2001 SunTrust announced a rival takeover bid for Wachovia the first hostile takeover attempt in the banking sector in many years In its effort to make the deal appeal to investors SunTrust argued that it would provide a smoother transition than First Union and offered a higher cash price for Wachovia stock than First Union 18 Wachovia s board of directors rejected SunTrust s offer and supported the merger with First Union SunTrust continued its hostile takeover attempt leading to a bitter battle over the summer between SunTrust and First Union 19 Both banks increased their offers for Wachovia took out newspaper ads mailed letters to shareholders and initiated court battles to challenge each other s takeover bids 20 On August 3 2001 Wachovia shareholders approved the First Union deal rejecting SunTrust s attempts to elect a new board of directors for Wachovia and ending SunTrust s hostile takeover attempt 21 Another complication concerned each bank s credit card division In April 2001 Wachovia had agreed to sell its 8 billion credit card portfolio to Bank One The cards which would have still been branded as Wachovia would have been issued through Bank One s First USA division First Union had sold its credit card portfolio to MBNA in August 2000 22 After entering into negotiations the new Wachovia agreed to buy back its portfolio from Bank One in September 2001 and resell it to MBNA Wachovia paid Bank One a 350 million termination fee On September 4 2001 First Union and Wachovia officially merged In order to prevent a repeat of the CoreStates problems the new Wachovia gradually phased in the conversion of legacy Wachovia computer systems to First Union systems The company first began converting systems in the southeast United States where both banks had branches before moving to First Union s branches in the Northeast which only had to change their signs to reflect the new company name and logo This process was completed on August 18 2003 almost 2 years after the merger 23 In comparison to the CoreStates purchase the acquisition of Wachovia by First Union was considered successful by analysts The company s deliberate pace of conversion prevented any large scale customer attrition In fact Wachovia was ranked number one in customer satisfaction among major banks by the University of Michigan s annual American Customer Satisfaction Index for every year after the merger 24 When Wachovia and First Union merged Charlotte s One Two and Three First Union buildings became One Two and Three Wachovia Center respectively and the 55 story First Union Financial Center in downtown Miami became the Wachovia Financial Center The merger also affected the names of the indoor professional sports arenas in Philadelphia and Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania Formerly known as the First Union Center and the First Union Spectrum both Philadelphia and First Union Arena Wilkes Barre they were renamed the Wachovia Center now known as Wells Fargo Center Wachovia Spectrum which was later demolished and Wachovia Arena at Casey Plaza now known as Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza respectively Merger and acquisition history Edit A graphic illustration of the company s major mergers acquisitions and historical predecessors up to the 2001 merger of Wachovia and First Union Wachovia merged 2001 First Union Corp est 1908 First Union Corporation Formerly First Union National Bank est 1958 Union National Bank est 1908 First National Bank amp TrustCoreStates Financial dates to 1781 Wachovia Corporation merged 1986 Wachovia Bank amp Trust merged 1911 Wachovia National Bank Formerly Bank of Salem est 1879 Wachovia Loan amp Trust est 1893 First Atlanta Formerly Atlanta National Bank est 1865 Acquisitions Edit Between 2001 and 2006 Wachovia bought several other financial services companies in an attempt to become a national bank and comprehensive financial services company MerchandiseWhile First Union was merging into Wachovia they changed the Wachovia logo to a square with wave like lines the green color represents First Union while the blue represents the main company They have also released new merchandise such as t shirts and provided other things such as retractable keychains cups and coffee mugs to show the success during 2001 to its acquisition by Wells Fargo Prudential Securities Edit Wachovia Securities and the Prudential Securities Division of Prudential Financial Inc combined to form Wachovia Securities LLC on July 1 2003 Wachovia owned a controlling 62 stake while Prudential Financial retained the remaining 38 25 At the time the new firm had client assets of 532 1 billion making it the nation s third largest full service retail brokerage firm based on assets 25 Metropolitan West Securities Edit On October 22 2003 Wachovia announced it would acquire Metropolitan West Securities an affiliate company of Metropolitan West Financial 26 This acquisition added a portfolio of over 50 billion of securities on loan to the Wachovia Global Securities Lending division SouthTrust Edit On November 1 2004 Wachovia completed the acquisition of Birmingham Alabama based SouthTrust Corporation a transaction valued at 14 3 billion The merger created the largest bank in the southeast United States the fourth largest bank in terms of holdings and the second largest in terms of number of branches Integration was completed by the end of 2005 27 Failed MBNA purchase Edit In June 2005 Wachovia negotiated to purchase monoline credit card company MBNA However the deal fell through when Wachovia balked at MBNA s purchase price Within a week of the deal s collapse MBNA entered into an agreement to be purchased by Wachovia s chief rival Bank of America Wachovia received 100 million as the result of an agreement Wachovia predecessor First Union made in 2000 when it sold its credit card portfolio to MBNA This agreement required MBNA to pay this sum if it were ever sold to a competitor In late 2005 Wachovia announced that it would end its relationship with MBNA and create its own credit card division so that the bank could issue its own Visa cards Westcorp Edit Westcorp logoWestcorp Western Financial Bank s parent company WFS Financial Inc and Wachovia announced a proposed acquisition by Wachovia in September 2005 Westcorp and WFS Financial Inc shareholders approved the acquisition on Jan 6 2006 and on March 1 2006 the merger was completed This acquisition made Wachovia the ninth largest auto finance lender in the competitive U S auto finance market and provided Wachovia with a small retail and commercial banking presence in Southern California 28 On February 12 2007 the former 19 Western Financial Bank branches opened under the Wachovia name These branches became the launching point for a much larger Wachovia presence in California with the acquisition and integration of World Savings Bank in 2007 Golden West Financial World Savings Bank Edit Wachovia agreed to purchase Golden West Financial for a little under 25 5 billion on May 7 2006 29 30 This acquisition gave Wachovia an additional 285 branch network spanning 10 states Wachovia greatly raised its profile in California where Golden West held 32 billion in deposits and operated 123 branches 29 Golden West which operated branches under the name World Savings Bank was the second largest savings and loan in the United States The business was a small savings and loan in the San Francisco Bay area when it was purchased in 1963 for 4 million by Herbert and Marion Sandler Golden West specialized in option ARMs loans marketed under the name Pick A Pay These loans gave the borrower a choice of payment plans including the option to defer paying a part of the interest owed which was then added onto the balance of the loan In 2006 Golden West Financial was named the Most Admired Company in the mortgage services business by Fortune magazine 31 By the time Wachovia announced its acquisition Golden West had over 125 billion in assets and 11 600 employees By October 2 2006 Wachovia had closed the acquisition of Golden West Financial Corporation The Sandlers agreed to remain on the board at Wachovia 29 The Sandlers sold their firm at the top of the market saying that they were growing older and wanted to devote themselves to philanthropy A year earlier in 2005 World Savings lending had started to slow after more than quadrupling since 1998 Some current and former Wachovia officials said that the merger was agreed to within days making it impossible to thoroughly vet the World Savings loan portfolio They noted that the creditworthiness of World Savings borrowers edged down from 2004 to 2006 while Pick A Pay borrowers had credit scores well below the industry average for traditional loans World Savings lending volume dipped again in 2006 shortly after the sale to Wachovia was initiated In 2007 after the merger World Savings then known as Wachovia Mortgage began to attract more borrowers by taking a step that some regulators who frowned upon and which the former World Savings management had resisted for years it allowed borrowers to make monthly payments with an annual interest rate of just 1 percent While Wachovia Mortgage continued to scrutinize borrowers ability to manage increased payments the move to rock bottom rates lured customers whose financial reliability was more difficult to verify 32 More than 70 of the Pick A Pay loans were made in California Florida and Arizona where home prices had declined severely In 2009 New York Times reporter Floyd Norris called World Savings a ticking timebomb that created zombie homeowners 33 While Wachovia Chairman and CEO G Kennedy Ken Thompson had described Golden West as a crown jewel 34 investors did not react positively to the deal Analysts said that Wachovia purchased Golden West at the peak of the US housing boom Wachovia Mortgage s mortgage related problems led to Wachovia suffering writedowns and losses that far exceeded the price paid in the acquisition ending up in the fire sale of Wachovia to Wells Fargo 35 A G Edwards Edit On May 31 2007 Wachovia announced plans to purchase A G Edwards for 6 8 billion to create the United States second largest retail brokerage firm 36 The acquisition closed on October 1 2007 In early March 2008 Wachovia began to phase out the AG Edwards brand in favor of a unified Wachovia Securities Historical data 2000 2008 Edit Asset amp Liability Asset Liability Net Income 37 Wachovia excluding subsidiaries was the fourth largest bank at the end of 2008 2007 2009 financial crisis EditExposed to risky loans such as adjustable rate mortgages acquired during the acquisition of Golden West Financial in 2006 Wachovia began to experience heavy losses in its loan portfolios during the subprime mortgage crisis 38 39 In the first quarter of 2007 Wachovia reported 2 3 billion in earnings including acquisitions and divestitures 40 However in the second quarter of 2008 Wachovia reported a much larger than anticipated 8 9 billion loss 41 On June 2 2008 Wachovia chief executive officer Ken Thompson was forced to retire He had been head of the company since 2000 while it was still known as First Union 42 The board replaced him on an interim basis with Chairman Lanty Smith Smith had already replaced Thompson as chairman a month earlier On July 9 2008 Wachovia hired Treasury Undersecretary Bob Steel as chief executive in hopes that his experience would lead the company out of its difficulties 43 Government intervention Edit After Steel took over he insisted that Wachovia would stay independent However its stock price plunged 27 percent on September 26 due to the seizure of Washington Mutual the previous night On the same day several businesses and institutional depositors withdrew money from their accounts in order to drop their balances below the 100 000 insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation FDIC an event known in banking circles as a silent run Ultimately Wachovia lost a total of 5 billion in deposits that day about one percent of the bank s total deposits 44 The large outflow of deposits attracted the attention of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency which regulates national banks Federal regulators pressured Wachovia to put itself up for sale over the weekend Had Wachovia failed it would have been a severe drain on the FDIC s insurance fund due to its size it operated one of the largest branch networks on the East Coast 45 46 As business halted for the weekend Wachovia was already in FDIC brokered talks with Citigroup and Wells Fargo the latter company initially emerged as the frontrunner to acquire the ailing Wachovia s banking operations Wells Fargo originally backed out of this particular deal due to concerns over Wachovia s commercial loans With no deal in place as September 28 dawned regulators were concerned that Wachovia wouldn t have enough short term funding to open for business the next day In order to obtain enough liquidity to do business banks usually depend on short term loans to each other However the markets had been so battered by a credit crisis related to the housing bubble that banks were skittish about making such loans Under the circumstances regulators feared that if customers pulled out more money Wachovia wouldn t have enough liquidity to meet its obligations This would have resulted in a failure dwarfing that of WaMu 46 When FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair got word of Wachovia s situation she initially decided to handle the situation the same way she handled WaMu a day earlier Under this scenario the Comptroller of the Currency would have seized Wachovia s banking assets Wachovia Bank N A and Wachovia Bank of Delaware N A and placed them under the receivership of the FDIC who would have then sold the banking assets to the highest bidder Bair called Steel on September 28 and told him that the FDIC would be auctioning off Wachovia s banking assets Bair felt this would best protect the small banks However several Federal regulators led by New York Fed President Tim Geithner felt such a course would be politically unjustifiable so soon after WaMu s seizure 47 After a round of mediation between Geithner and Bair the FDIC declared that Wachovia was systemically important to the health of the economy and thus could not be allowed to fail It was the first time the FDIC had made such a determination since the passage of a 1991 law allowing the FDIC to handle large bank failures on short notice 47 Later that night in an FDIC brokered deal Citigroup agreed to buy Wachovia s retail banking operations in an open bank transfer of ownership The transaction would have been facilitated by the FDIC with the concurrence of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and the Secretary of the Treasury in consultation with the President The FDIC s open bank assistance procedures normally require the FDIC to find the cheapest way to rescue a failing bank However when a bank is deemed systemically important the FDIC is allowed to bypass this requirement Steel had little choice but to agree and the decision was announced on the morning of September 29 roughly 45 minutes before the markets opened 46 48 49 50 From this point on Citigroup became the source of liquidity allowing Wachovia to continue to operate until the acquisition was complete In its announcement the FDIC stressed that Wachovia did not fail and was not placed into receivership In addition the FDIC said that the agency would absorb Citigroup s losses above 42 billion Wachovia s loan portfolio was valued at 312 billion In exchange for assuming this risk the FDIC would receive 12 billion in preferred stock and warrants from Citigroup 48 51 52 The transaction would have been an all stock transfer with Wachovia Corporation stockholders to have received stock from Citigroup valuing Wachovia stock at about one dollar per share for a total transaction value of about 2 16 billion Citigroup would have also assumed Wachovia s senior and subordinated debt 51 53 Citigroup intended to sell ten billion dollars of new stock on the open market to recapitalize its purchased banking operations 51 The proposed closing date for the Wachovia purchase was by the end of the year 2008 54 Wachovia expected to continue as a publicly traded company retaining its retail brokerage arm Wachovia Securities and Evergreen mutual funds 53 At the time Wachovia Securities had 14 600 financial advisers and managed more than 1 trillion third in the U S after Merrill Lynch and Citigroup s Smith Barney 51 The announcement drew some criticism from Wachovia stockholders who felt the dollar per share price was too cheap Some of them planned to try to defeat the deal when it came up for shareholder approval However institutional investors such as mutual funds and pension funds controlled 73 percent of Wachovia s stock individual stockholders would have had to garner a significant amount of support from institutional shareholders to derail the sale Also several experts in corporate dealmaking told The Charlotte Observer that such a strategy is very risky since federal regulators helped broker the deal One financial expert told the Observer that if Wachovia s shareholders voted the deal down the OCC could have simply seized Wachovia and placed it into the receivership of the FDIC which would then sell it to Citigroup Had this happened the shareholders of Wachovia risked being completely wiped out 55 Acquisition by Wells Fargo Edit A Wells Fargo branch in Durham North Carolina previously a Wachovia branch until 2011 Though Citigroup was providing the liquidity that allowed Wachovia to continue to operate Wells Fargo and Wachovia announced on October 3 2008 that they had agreed to merge in an all stock transaction requiring no government involvement Wells Fargo announced it had agreed to acquire all of Wachovia for 15 1 billion in stock Wachovia preferred the Wells Fargo deal because it would be worth more than the Citigroup deal and keep all of its businesses intact Also there is far less overlap between the banks as Wells Fargo is dominant in the West and Midwest compared to the redundant footprint of Wachovia and Citibank along the East Coast Both companies boards unanimously approved the merger on the night of October 2 56 Citigroup explored its legal options and demanded that Wachovia and Wells Fargo cease discussions claiming that Wells Fargo engaged in tortious interference with an exclusivity agreement between Citigroup and Wachovia That agreement states in part that until October 6 2008 Wachovia shall not and shall not permit any of its subsidiaries or any of its or their respective officers directors to take any action to facilitate or encourage the submission of any Acquisition Proposal 57 58 Citigroup convinced Judge Charles E Ramos of the Supreme Court of the State of New York New York County to grant a preliminary injunction temporarily blocking the Wells Fargo deal 59 This ruling was later overturned by Judge James M McGuire of the Supreme Court of the State of New York Appellate Division First Department partly because he believed Ramos did not have the right to rule on the case in Connecticut 60 On October 9 2008 Citigroup abandoned its attempt to purchase Wachovia s banking assets allowing the Wachovia Wells Fargo merger to go through However Citigroup pursued 60 billion in claims 20 billion in compensatory and 40 billion in punitive damages against Wachovia and Wells Fargo for alleged violations of the exclusivity agreement 61 Wells Fargo settled this dispute with Citigroup Inc for 100 Million on November 19 2010 62 Citigroup may have been pressured by regulators to back out of the deal Bair endorsed Wells Fargo s bid because it removed the FDIC from the picture Geithner was furious claiming that the FDIC s reversal would undermine the government s ability to quickly rescue failing banks However Geithner s colleagues at the Fed were not willing to take responsibility for selling Wachovia 47 The Federal Reserve unanimously approved the merger with Wells Fargo on October 12 2008 63 The combined company retained the Wells Fargo name and was based in San Francisco However Charlotte remained as the headquarters for the combined company s East Coast banking operations and Wachovia Securities remained in Charlotte citation needed Three members of the Wachovia board joined the Wells Fargo board The merger created the largest branch network in the United States In filings unsealed two days before the merger approval in a New York federal court Citigroup argued that its own deal was better for U S taxpayers and Wachovia shareholders It said that it had exposed itself to substantial economic risk by stating its intent to rescue Wachovia after less than 72 hours of due diligence Citigroup had obtained an exclusive agreement in order to protect itself 64 Wachovia suffered a 23 9 billion loss in the third quarter 65 In September 2008 the Internal Revenue Service issued a notice providing tax breaks to companies that acquire troubled banks According to analysts these tax breaks were worth billions of dollars to Wells Fargo Vice Chairman Bill Thomas of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission indicated that these tax breaks may have been a factor in Wells Fargo s decision to purchase Wachovia 66 Wells Fargo s purchase of Wachovia closed on December 31 2008 By the time Wells Fargo completed the acquisition of Wachovia the byline A Wells Fargo company was added to the logo Controversies EditIdentity theft negligence Edit A May 2007 New York Times article described Wachovia s negligence in screening and taking action against companies linked with identity theft With stolen identities the companies used unsigned checks to remove funds from personal Wachovia bank accounts In total Wachovia accepted 142 million in unsigned checks from companies that made unauthorized withdrawals from thousands of accounts collecting millions of dollars in fees from them According to Pat Meehan a U S attorney for Eastern District of Pennsylvania Wachovia received thousands of warnings that it was processing fraudulent checks but ignored them 67 On April 25 2008 Wachovia agreed to pay up to 144 million to end the investigation without admitting wrongdoing The investigation found that Wachovia had failed to conduct suitable due diligence and that it would have discovered the thefts if it had followed normal procedures The penalty is one of the largest ever demanded by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency 68 Latin drug cartel money laundering Edit In April 2008 the Wall Street Journal reported that federal prosecutors had initiated a probe into Wachovia and other U S banks for aiding drug money laundering by Mexican and Colombian money transfer companies also known as casas de cambio These companies help Mexican immigrants in the United States send remittances back to family in Mexico but it is widely known that they also present a significant money laundering risk However not only is it a lucrative industry that is able to charge high fees but Wachovia also viewed it as a way to gain a foothold in the Hispanic banking market 69 In March 2010 Wachovia admitted serious and systemic violations of the Bank Secrecy Act that allowed Mexican and Colombian drug cartels 70 to launder 378 4 billion between 2004 and 2007 the largest violation of the Bank Secrecy Act 71 It negotiated a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department to resolve criminal charges for willfully failing to set up an effective anti money laundering program It agreed to forfeit 110 million and pay a 50 million fine to the U S Treasury Reports in Bloomberg Businessweek in June 2010 72 and The Observer in April 2011 shed light on the extent to which Wachovia went to turn a blind eye including by ignoring the warnings and suspicious activity reports SARs of its London based director of anti money laundering 73 Chief executive officers EditG Kennedy Thompson 2001 2008 Robert K Steel 2008See also Edit United States portal Companies portalBank of BaltimoreReferences Edit Mukunda Gautam Persistence Is Overrated Why Learning Is The Hallmark Of Great Crisis Leadership Forbes Retrieved 2020 06 30 a b Wells Fargo Completes Wachovia Purchase Wells Fargo 2008 12 31 Retrieved 2009 01 01 Alvarez Scott G 1 September 2010 The Acquisition of Wachovia Corporation by Wells Fargo amp Company Testimony Before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Washington D C Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved 6 February 2018 a b c Wachovia Company Facts Wachovia 2007 04 16 Retrieved 2007 06 14 O Daniel Adam 2011 10 15 Farewell to Wachovia The transition to Wells Fargo Charlotte Business Journal Wachovia Securities Archived from the original on 2011 03 13 Retrieved 2010 03 27 Calibre Wealth Management Wachovia 2009 01 01 Retrieved 2009 01 01 Wachovia Capital Partners Becomes Independent Private Equity Firm Pamlico Capital Businesswire com Retrieved 5 November 2017 Wells Fargo News Releases Archived from the original on 2014 04 06 Retrieved 2010 03 27 Wells Fargo History Services Our History Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2011 06 02 Craver Richard 2013 05 08 Better bigger and greater Winston Salem Journal p A1 Burrough Bryan 2003 Barbarians at the Gate HarperCollins p 40 ISBN 9780060536350 Answers The Most Trusted Place for Answering Life s Questions Answers com Retrieved 5 November 2017 Paul Nowell U S bank giant looms Associated Press via theMontreal Gazette April 17 2001 D7 Big Banking Merger Investors Beware The Motley Fool 2001 04 16 Archived from the original on 2009 11 06 Retrieved 2009 05 12 THE MARKETS Market Place First Union Pursues Wachovia Making Offer of 13 1 Billion The New York Times 2001 04 17 Retrieved 2010 05 27 Wachovia and First Union announce Winston Salem as base for the new Wachovia s Wealth Management Business permanent dead link Wachovia press release August 30 2001 Atlas Riva D 2001 05 15 SunTrust Makes Bid for Wachovia Criticizing First Union s Offer The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Atlas Riva D 2001 06 01 Market Place First Union s Bid for Wachovia Gains Momentum The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Rivals Waging A Media War Over Wachovia The New York Times 2001 07 21 Retrieved 2010 05 27 Atlas Riva D 2001 08 04 Wachovia Says Takeover Vote Went Its Way The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Atlas Riva D 2001 05 02 THE MARKETS Market Place Questions over the sale of a credit card operation cloud a deal to merge banks The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Wachovia Completes Merger Integration On Schedule Under Budget With Added Convenience For Customers Press release Wachovia Corporation 2003 08 18 Archived from the original on 2007 10 22 Retrieved 2007 10 14 Scores By Industry chart American Customer Satisfaction Index Retrieved 2007 08 06 a b Wachovia Corp and Prudential Financial Inc Complete Combination of Brokerage Units Press release Wachovia Corporation 2003 07 01 Archived from the original on 2007 10 22 Retrieved 2007 10 14 Wachovia Announces Agreement To Acquire Metropolitan West Securities LLC Press release Wachovia Corporation 2003 10 22 Archived from the original on 2007 10 22 Retrieved 2007 10 14 Wachovia Completes SouthTrust Merger Integration Press release Wachovia Corporation 2005 12 05 Archived from the original on 2007 10 22 Retrieved 2007 10 14 Wachovia Completes Merger With Westcorp and WFS Financial Inc Press release Wachovia Corporation 2006 03 01 Archived from the original on 2007 10 22 Retrieved 2007 10 14 a b c Wachovia acquires Golden West Financial Associated Press 2006 05 08 Retrieved 2007 07 18 Wachovia To Acquire Golden West Financial Nation s Most Admired and 2nd Largest Savings Institution Press release Wachovia Corporation 2006 05 07 Archived from the original on 2007 08 08 Retrieved 2007 07 18 Fortune America s Most Admired Companies 2006 CNNMoney com Retrieved 2007 07 18 Moss Michael Fabrikant Geraldine 2008 12 25 Once Trusted Mortgage Pioneers Now Scrutinized The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Norris Floyd 2009 05 15 A Bank Is Survived by Its Loans The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 Wachovia Golden West Wasn t Golden Archived from the original on 2008 10 08 Retrieved 2010 05 14 Moore Heidi N 2008 07 22 Wachovia Golden West Another Deal From Hell The Wall Street Journal Wachovia to buy A G Edwards for 6 8B CNNMoney com 2007 05 31 dead link Site Maintenance Moneyeconomics com Retrieved 5 November 2017 Wachovia dealt to Citigroup after 129 years as independent Winston Salem Journal 2008 09 30 Wachovia reportedly in talks with three suitors Dow Jones Retrieved 2009 05 01 Wachovia Earns 2 30 Billion EPS Up 10 to 1 20 in 1st Quarter 2007 Press release Archived from the original on 2007 05 01 Retrieved 2007 04 26 Wachovia Details 2nd Quarter Loss Outlines Initiatives to Preserve and Generate Capital Protect Strong Liquidity and Reduce Risk Press release Archived from the original on 2008 07 24 Retrieved 2008 07 22 IEVA M AUGSTUMS AP Business Writer 2008 06 02 Wachovia board forces out CEO Ken Thompson Yahoo News CHARLOTTE N C Archived from the original on 2008 06 05 Retrieved 2008 06 02 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Wachovia names Treasury undersecretary new CEO USA Today 2008 07 09 Retrieved 2010 05 27 Rothacker Rick 5 billion withdrawn in one day in silent run The Charlotte Observer 2008 10 11 St Onge Peter Stunningly swift fall for Wachovia The Charlotte Observer 2008 09 30 a b c Rothacker Rick and Kerry Hall Wachovia faced a silent bank run The Charlotte Observer 2008 10 02 a b c Geithner Has Blown His Top With Regulators Before Wall Street Journal 2009 08 04 a b Citigroup Inc to Acquire Banking Operations of Wachovia FDIC Federal Reserve and Treasury Agree to Provide Open Bank Assistance to Protect Depositors Press Releases Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 2008 09 29 Retrieved 2008 09 29 Wachovia Announces Bank Subsidiary Divestitures to Citigroup Wachovia Corporation to become a focused leader in retail brokerage and asset management Wachovia Press Release 2008 09 29 Retrieved 2008 09 29 Financial Times 2008 09 29 Citi to acquire Wachovia Financial Times LONDON UK Retrieved 2008 09 29 a b c d Dickson Steve David Mildenberg 2008 09 29 Citigroup Agrees to Buy Wachovia s Banking Business Update6 Bloomberg com Bloomberg LLC Retrieved 2008 09 29 Dash Eric 2008 09 30 Citigroup Buys Bank Operations of Wachovia The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 27 a b Dash Eric Andrew Ross Sorkin 2008 09 29 Citigroup Buys Bank Operations of Wachovia The New York Times Retrieved 2008 09 29 Citi and Wachovia Reach Agreement in Principle for Citi to Acquire Wachovia s Banking Operations in An FDIC Assisted Transaction Press Room CitiGroup 2008 09 29 Archived from the original on 2008 10 02 Retrieved 2008 09 29 Rexrode Christina and Jen Aronoff Shareholders talk of fighting Citi deal The Charlotte Observer 2008 10 02 WELLS FARGO WACHOVIA AGREE TO MERGE PDF Wells Fargo 2008 10 03 Retrieved 2008 10 03 permanent dead link Wachovia Citigroup Exclusivity Agreement PDF The New York Times 2008 10 03 Retrieved 2008 10 05 Dash Eric 2008 10 03 Wells Fargo in a Deal to Buy All of Wachovia The New York Times Retrieved 2008 10 03 Dash Eric Jonathan D Glater 2008 10 04 Citigroup Says Judge s Order Suspends Wachovia Deal The New York Times Dash Eric 2008 10 06 Weekend Legal Frenzy Between Citigroup and Wells Fargo for Wachovia The New York Times Retrieved 2008 10 06 Wells Fargo plans to buy Wachovia Citi ends talks AP Yahoo 2008 10 09 Retrieved 2008 10 10 dead link Citi and Wells Fargo Announce Settlement Wells Fargo 2010 11 19 Archived from the original on 2014 04 06 Retrieved 2011 01 28 FRB Press Release Approval of proposal by Wells Fargo amp Company to acquire Wachovia Corporation Federal Reserve Board 2008 10 12 Retrieved 2008 10 12 Filings outline demise of Citi Wachovia deal Dash Eric 2008 10 22 Wachovia Reports 23 9 Billion Loss for Third Quarter The New York Times Retrieved 2008 10 22 Mildenberg David 2010 09 01 Wachovia Rescue Relied on Usurpation of Tax Law Thomas Says Bloomberg Duhigg Charles 20 May 2007 Corporate Profits From Data Sold to Thieves New York Times Retrieved 6 February 2018 Charles Duhigg 26 April 2008 Big Fine Set for Wachovia to End Case New York Times Retrieved 6 February 2018 Evan Perez Glenn R Simpson 26 April 2008 Wachovia Is Under Scrutiny In Latin Drug Money Probe Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 6 February 2018 Retrieved 6 February 2018 Voreacos David Wachovia to Pay 160 to End Money Laundering Probe Businessweek Archived from the original on March 23 2010 Sanati Cyrus 29 June 2010 Money Laundering The Drug Problem at Banks New York Times Retrieved 6 February 2018 Michael Smith 28 June 2010 Banks Financing Mexico Gangs Admitted in Wells Fargo Deal Bloomberg Businessweek Retrieved 1 September 2010 Vulliamy Ed 2 April 2012 How a big US bank laundered billions from Mexico s murderous drug gangs The Guardian Retrieved 6 February 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wachovia Bank Official website Archive Yahoo Wachovia Corporation Company Profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wachovia amp oldid 1170410398, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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