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Home > News
Shareholders Question Impact
of Bank of America – FleetBoston Merger
BOSTON, Dec. 15, 2003 -- The
Federal Reserve’s public comment period on Bank of America’s
acquisition of FleetBoston ends today, but shareholders still have questions.
Socially-responsible investment managers and religious investors today
announced they have filed shareholder resolutions at both FleetBoston
and Bank of America requesting detailed information on the impact the
merger will have on communities around the nation, and especially here
in New England.
“It is hard to overstate
the impact this merger will have on the banking sector,” said Lauren
Compere of Boston Common Asset Management, which is the primary filer
of both resolutions. “We’re talking about a $47 billion takeover
and a new company with combined assets of almost $1 trillion. Prudent
investors need to know how community investments, jobs, and even philanthropic
giving will change.”
The resolutions call for reporting
on “director and executive compensation, community reinvestment
activities, employment levels and philanthropic commitment for communities
in which Fleet is based.”
Fleet subsidiary First Community
Bank has received national acclaim for its approach to serving multicultural
and multilingual customers. Investors want to know if these sorts of innovative
institutions will be lost in the merger, or if Bank of America intends
to leverage its new assets to strengthen its community banking.
Investors also have significant
“bread-and-butter” concerns. Former Fleet chief Terrence Murray
may see a $35 million payoff from the merger, and current Chairman Charles
Gifford could gain over $30 million. Meanwhile, Fleet employees face job
losses to facilitate the merger’s $1.6 billion in estimated cost
savings. Those job losses will hit back-end employees, the lowest-paid
and least well-equipped to deal with layoffs.
Joining Boston Common Asset
Management is a broad-based coalition of SRI investors including The Brethren
Benefit Trust, Inc., The Fund for the Center for Community Change, The
Community Church of New York, Ethical Funds, Inc, Missionary Oblates of
Mary Immaculate, New York Yearly Meeting Religious Society of Friends,
and Trillium Asset Management. All are affiliated with the Interfaith
Center on Corporate Responsibility, a thirty-year-old coalition of faith-based
institutions with combined assets worth an estimated $100 billion.
“Fleet has been a leader,”
Ms. Compere said, “in everything from volunteerism to community
re-investment. If we lose that leadership, that is a blow to Boston, and
to the banking sector generally.”
Fleet’s $25 million in
annual philanthropic gifts make it one of the New England region’s
most generous donors, supporting economic opportunity, youth development,
and public education. In 2002, 22,000 Fleet employees used paid volunteer
days to perform 120,000 hours of community service.
“This is a justice issue,”
said Seamus Finn of the Missionary Oblates. “Justice for the communities
Fleet serves, and justice for the employees who have made Fleet a leader
in corporate citizenship. This is the largest merger in Boston history.
Clearly, shareholders have a lot of questions.”
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CONTACT:
Lauren Compere, Chief Administrative Officer, Boston Common Asset Management,
(617) 720-5557
Dan Rosan, Program Director, Access to Capital, Interfaith Center on Corporate
Responsibility, 212-870-2317
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