Bank of America
must allow shareholders to vote on a proposal that calls for the
company to consider spinning off its investment banking business, after
U.S. regulators told the bank it cannot exclude the proposal from its
corporate ballot.
The March 17 decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission, seen by Reuters Wednesday, marks a victory for Bartlett Naylor, a Bank of America shareholder who works for the non-profit Public Citizen.
It also represents a reversal for the SEC, which last year rejected nearly
identical resolutions filed by Naylor at Bank of America, as well as JP Morgan Chase and Citigroup. It also has rejected similar plans by other groups in the past.
Bank spokesman Lawrence Grayson said the bank "will respond to the proposal in our proxy statement. We do not believe that creating a separate subcommittee on shareholder value is necessary."
The March 17 decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission, seen by Reuters Wednesday, marks a victory for Bartlett Naylor, a Bank of America shareholder who works for the non-profit Public Citizen.
It also represents a reversal for the SEC, which last year rejected nearly
identical resolutions filed by Naylor at Bank of America, as well as JP Morgan Chase and Citigroup. It also has rejected similar plans by other groups in the past.
Bank spokesman Lawrence Grayson said the bank "will respond to the proposal in our proxy statement. We do not believe that creating a separate subcommittee on shareholder value is necessary."
He said the board "focuses on shareholder value and
regularly analyzes these issues. We have reduced the size of the company
by hundreds of billions of dollars as we have streamlined and
simplified our business model."
Earlier this month, the SEC rejected a bid by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to block a proposal by the AFL-CIO seeking disclosure of so-called "golden parachutes" executives can earn if they leave for a government job.
Naylor's shareholder resolution calls for the Bank of America board to consider appointing a committee of independent directors to develop a plan for divesting all of its "non-core" banking activities.
Read MoreBank sector now regulated by 'hypotheticals': Bove
In his supporting statement, Naylor said the plan was inspired by the 2007-2009 financial crisis in which the government bailed out mega banks due to soured mortgages and risky derivatives bets.
He said the 2010 Dodd-Frank law did not go far enough to end "too-big-to-fail," and he fears shaky investments and underwriting could put depositors' money at risk in another meltdown.
The SEC has been shaking things up this proxy season. In January, the agency backed off a ruling concerning a dispute between Whole Foods Market and shareholder James McRitchie.
McRitchie was seeking to allow groups of shareholders who collectively owned 3 percent of Whole Foods stock to nominate their own directors on the company's proxy.
Whole Foods sought to exclude McRitchie's proposal, saying it could do so because of an SEC rule that lets companies exclude a plan if it "directly conflicts" with a proposal by management.
The SEC staff initially ruled in the company's favor. But on Jan. 16, the SEC said it had "reconsidered its position" and would express no views on Whole Foods, and would revisit its rules on conflicting shareholder proposals.
Shareholder rights proponents lauded that decision, while trade groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce complained.
Earlier this month, the SEC rejected a bid by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to block a proposal by the AFL-CIO seeking disclosure of so-called "golden parachutes" executives can earn if they leave for a government job.
Naylor's shareholder resolution calls for the Bank of America board to consider appointing a committee of independent directors to develop a plan for divesting all of its "non-core" banking activities.
Read MoreBank sector now regulated by 'hypotheticals': Bove
In his supporting statement, Naylor said the plan was inspired by the 2007-2009 financial crisis in which the government bailed out mega banks due to soured mortgages and risky derivatives bets.
He said the 2010 Dodd-Frank law did not go far enough to end "too-big-to-fail," and he fears shaky investments and underwriting could put depositors' money at risk in another meltdown.
The SEC has been shaking things up this proxy season. In January, the agency backed off a ruling concerning a dispute between Whole Foods Market and shareholder James McRitchie.
McRitchie was seeking to allow groups of shareholders who collectively owned 3 percent of Whole Foods stock to nominate their own directors on the company's proxy.
Whole Foods sought to exclude McRitchie's proposal, saying it could do so because of an SEC rule that lets companies exclude a plan if it "directly conflicts" with a proposal by management.
The SEC staff initially ruled in the company's favor. But on Jan. 16, the SEC said it had "reconsidered its position" and would express no views on Whole Foods, and would revisit its rules on conflicting shareholder proposals.
Shareholder rights proponents lauded that decision, while trade groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce complained.
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