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Wells Fargo pushed by nuns to address the bank's ethical lapses

The group, led by the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility and including about 20 religious organizations as well as state officials from Rhode Island and Connecticut, said Tuesday they would withdraw a shareholder proposal on the issue following the bank's decision. They had sought to put it to a vote at the lender's annual meeting in April.

Sister Nora Nash, of the Aston-based Sister of St. Francis, helped lead a shareholder proposal to review Wells Fargo’s business practices.
Sister Nora Nash, of the Aston-based Sister of St. Francis, helped lead a shareholder proposal to review Wells Fargo’s business practices.Read moreICCR

Wells Fargo & Co. agreed to publicly report on the root causes that led to a rash of ethical lapses in recent years, a group of investors said.

The group, led by the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility and including about 20 religious organizations as well as state officials from Rhode Island and Connecticut, said Tuesday they would withdraw a shareholder proposal on the issue following the bank's decision. They had sought to put it to a vote at the lender's annual meeting in April.

"They were in a culture where they believed their vision and values have carried them for the past 30 years and were continuing to carry them," said Sister Nora Nash, who oversees retirement funds for Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia, which led the proposal. "Obviously, there was tremendous risk in their culture, and we need to take a serious look at the code of ethics, accountability, and really look at the needs of the customer and community."

Ancel Martinez, a spokesman for the San Francisco-based bank, declined to comment.

The investors asked Wells Fargo to produce evidence that its incentive programs are aligned with clients' interests. They also asked the lender to report on how it is strengthening risk management and controls to prevent such lapses. The company agreed to produce the report by year-end, they said.

‘First step’

"This is a first step toward changing the culture at Wells Fargo that harmed a lot of customers and shareholders," said Seth Magaziner, the Rhode Island treasurer who oversees the state's public pension fund.

Wells Fargo has yet to put behind it 18 months of scandal in its retail-banking business, where employees under pressure to meet aggressive sales goals may have opened millions of accounts in customers' names without permission. The bank has said it's facing at least three major probes, including one by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Separately, Wells Fargo agreed this week to put a shareholder proposal on its proxy ballot from the New York State Common Retirement Fund that seeks more information about employee incentives beyond its executive officers, according to correspondence with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.