By Christina Rexrode 

Bank of America Corp. on Monday said it would give shareholders the chance to vote on the board's decision to give the chairmanship to CEO Brian Moynihan, bowing to shareholder pressure over the controversial move.

The bank's announcement comes two days before the bank's annual meeting and after some shareholders expressed unhappiness about the way the board had given the job to Mr. Moynihan last fall. To do so, board members overrode a 2009 shareholder-passed rule requiring that the two jobs be held by separate people, and also changed the bank's bylaws.

In a Monday letter to shareholders, signed by Mr. Moynihan and the board's lead independent director, Jack Bovender, the bank said "a number of stockholders" had told the bank that they "should have been given the opportunity to vote to ratify the board's bylaw change."

"We appreciate the candor with which stockholders have shared their insights, both in support of the decision and in expressing reservations about the process," Mr. Bovender and Mr. Moynihan wrote.

Bank of America shares gained about 1% in early afternoon trading.

The bank will hold its annual meeting Wednesday in its headquarters city of Charlotte, N.C., but the vote won't be on the ballot. The bank said it will hold the vote before next year's annual meeting. The board already changed the bylaw, so the vote will allow shareholders to either confirm or reject the board's decision.

Fredric Russell, founder and CEO of a Tulsa, Okla., money management firm that bears his name, thinks Mr. Moynihan has done "a fine job" but thought the board overreached in giving him the chairman job without consulting shareholders first.

"Bank of America went too far," said Mr. Russell, whose firm owns 93,500 shares, adding he thought the firm "became arrogant."

Mr. Russell said he plans to vote against the board's move. "It's not an overwhelmingly decisive victory, but it is a victory" for shareholders, Mr. Russell said. "This is a warning to (the bank's officers) to not exceed their grasp."

The bank has previously described Mr. Moynihan's elevation to chairman as a "return to normal," noting that the CEOs of most of the other biggest U.S. banks hold the chairman jobs. The bank has also noted that the 2009 shareholder rule was passed in a different era, under a different CEO and when the bank was in the depths of the financial crisis.

Of the nation's 100 biggest banks, 44 have a separate chairman and CEO, according to CLSA bank analyst Mike Mayo. About 53% of S&P 500 companies combine the roles, according to ISS QuickScore.

Many shareholders who expressed displeasure to the bank were concerned largely about the process that the board went about making the change, and not about Mr. Moynihan's leadership, according to people familiar with the matter. The board made the change without consulting shareholders ahead of time.

Two proxy advisers, Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis, recently recommended that shareholders vote against re-electing Thomas May, who runs the board's corporate governance committee, as a way to send a message about the board's process. ISS also recommended voting against the three other board members on the corporate governance committee, which was influential in giving the chairman job to Mr. Moynihan. Mr. May is a long-time board member. Like Mr. Moynihan, he came to the bank when it bought FleetBoston Financial Corp. in 2004.

"If there is a lesson for BAC shareholders, it is that binding shareholder votes are meaningless in the face of a board that chooses not to abide by them," ISS wrote in a report late last month. The firm also made clear that its move was "not a referendum" on Mr. Moynihan as chairman.

Mr. Moynihan became CEO more than five years ago and has spent the bulk of his tenure working through a mountain of litigation and bad loans that he inherited.

But investors have more recently started to raise questions about the bank's long-term strategy, beyond cost cutting and waiting for interest rates to rise. The bank's first-quarter earnings were far improved from the year before, thanks to a huge drop in legal fees, but missed analysts' expectations. The bank's shares have dropped 9% so far this year, a performance that trails the other biggest U.S. banks.

Some pension-fund investors had pushed last fall for the bank to put such a proposal on the ballot at this year's annual meeting, but without success.

The board stepped up its outreach to shareholders after ISS and Glass Lewis issued their recommendations in late April. The board last week sent around information on Mr. Bovender and the four corporate-governance committee members, as well as reiterating information on recent victories, such as last year's shareholder-dividend increase.

After hearing from shareholders as the annual meeting drew near, Mr. Moynihan decided it was easier to put the matter to a vote, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Write to Christina Rexrode at christina.rexrode@wsj.com

Access Investor Kit for Bank of America Corp.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US0605051046

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Bank of America Charts.
Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Bank of America Charts.