One of the biggest pension funds in the US is going after Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan
Mastagni declined to identify the shareholders with which the pension fund has spoken.
As shareholder opposition grows to Bank of America's plan to let Moynihan simultaneously occupy chairman and CEO roles, more voices on both sides of the argument have sought to be heard.
Already, shareholder advisory services including Glass Lewis have told clients it does not support Bank of America's decision. CalSTRS emerged of Moynihan's leadership consolidation plan, joined by pension CalPERS and CtW, an investment fund operating on the behalf of other pension clients.
Christina Rexrode and Joann S. Lublin at The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Trillium Asset Management has voted against the proposal, and that Korea Investment Corp., South Korea's sovereign-wealth fund, also plans to vote against it.
Some bank officials have been telling investors the vote could go either way, according to the report.
Moynihan has his supporters too. They include Warren Buffett. Buffett, who is a non-voting stakeholder in Bank of America through a preferred stock and warrants deal, said on Sept. 2 through a spokeswoman that he is "100% in support of Mr. Moynihan."We reached out to Bank of America for a comment and will update this article when they respond.
The bank has previously said that it views the push to consolidate its leadership as a step toward aligning itself with marketplace standards, and not as a deviation from sensible governance.