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By Kenneth Cline
Mega-mergers have fared poorly
of late. Dick Kovacevich aims to show Wells Fargo is different
by generating real revenue growth.
The emerging view on big bank mergers
is that they don't work. But Richard M. Kovacevich wants
to prove the exception to this rule. The president and
chief executive of Wells Fargo & Co. is determined to
show that a union of two of the nation's largest banks
can indeed generate improved revenue growth. Considering
the poor showing of other recent big deals, this would
be a tremendous achievement indeed.
So far, the November 1998 combination
of Wells and Norwest Corp. has avoided the missteps that
hobbled others. Unlike Bank One Corp. and First Union
Corp., Wells has not damaged its credibility on Wall Street
by repeatedly lowering its earnings projections. Nor has
it faced the kind of investor skepticism that surrounds
Bank of America Corp. and U.S. Bancorp.
Nevertheless, Kovacevich confronts a
special challenge. Unlike some of his rivals, who can
extract major cost savings from mergers within their own
markets, Kovacevich did a long distance deal and thus
is limited in his ability to realize efficiency gains.
The only way he can justify this $32 billion transaction
is by delivering extra revenue growth.
He is counting on cross-selling to help
him succeed where others have failed. During the '90s,
Kovacevich boosted Norwest's ratio of products sold per-customer
to 4.6, twice the industry average. His audacious goal
at Wells is to elevate the consolidated ratio, now at
3.4, up to eight. Such a dramatic surge in cross-selling
is key to generating the revenue growth he needs to declare
the Norwest/Wells merger a success.
There is disagreement, however, whether
cross-selling is always a profitable activity. Beyond
that, Kovacevich faces a number of challenges peculiar
to the Norwest/Wells merger. To minimize integration problems,
he opted for a cautious three-year systems conversion
schedule, which remains two-thirds incomplete. The largest
single piece, California, with its 1,200 branches and
3.5 million retail household customers, won't be done
until yearend, which leaves Wells facing some huge operational
uncertainties.
Nor has Kovacevich completed the cultural
integration of Norwest and Wells, which operated under
starkly different business models. Minneapolis-based Norwest,
Kovacevich's former bank and the acquirer in this transaction,
took a community bank approach focused on relationship
selling. San Francisco-based Wells, by contrast, was known
for its centralized, line-of-business structure and product
sales orientation. Realistically, until these disparate
models are reconciled, Kovacevich can't expect to see
dramatic improvements.
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The industry will be carefully watching.
Kovacevich is known as a master marketer and motivator.
Should this deal disappoint, given his stellar track record,
it would call into question the whole concept of the financial
services conglomerate.
One reason banks have undertaken big
mergers is to provide the broadest possible array of products
and services for their customers in order to wrest back
market share from nonbank competitors. To date, however,
few have capitalized effectively on their enormous resources.
"Banks that have gotten bigger generally have not
gotten better," says analyst Thomas K. Brown, CEO
of money management firm Second Curve Capital in New York.
"The challenge at Wells is to demonstrate growth
within a massive franchise."
Though cognizant of the challenge, Kovacevich
insists that his revenue-generating formula will work.
The edifice of cross-selling must be built on a foundation
of tremendous persistence and discipline, he says. "There
are literally thousands of things we have to do right
to get the revenue. This is not about strategy
it's about execution."
Tortoise
and Hare
Kovacevich is on the hook to deliver.
His targets call for at least 13% annual growth in earnings
per-share, predicated on at least 10% revenue growth.
Wells officially reported a 9% increase in revenues last
year, to $16.8 billion, but Kovacevich admits the core
rate fell closer to 7% after taking out one-time gains
on items like branch divestitures. Given the ground the
old Wells lost in 1997 and 1998, he says, reaching the
10% level will take a few more years. Right now, the company
is relying heavily on venture capital gains to make its
numbers.
That can't last forever. At some point,
the deal flow generated by the high-tech sector will slow
down and Wells will need to make up the difference in
its vast retail operation (42% of earnings). That will
depend on acquiring new customers and selling more products
to each client.
Despite these pressures, Kovacevich
is proceeding at an excruciatingly deliberate pace. He
simply cannot afford to repeat the operational disasters
that have destroyed other mergers. The old Wells' 1997
acquisition of First Interstate Bancorp, for example,
was a textbook case of how not to do a bank merger.
By attempting an unrealistically ambitious
timetable for converting systems only eight months
Wells set itself up for massive customer defections
as it lost track of critical account information. "We
couldn't move the paper," recalls group executive
vice president Terri A. Dial, a veteran of the old Wells
who now runs the California branch system under Kovacevich.
We couldn't process basic checks and deposits."
The debacle drove Wells into Norwest's
embrace. Although the union was portrayed as a merger
of equals and the Wells name is used for the combined
entity, the dominant executives are Kovacevich and chief
operating officer Leslie S. Biller, his long-time lieutenant
from Norwest.
The two are willing to take things slow
in order to get it right. From start to finish, the systems
conversion will take three years with the biggest chunk,
California, left to the last. Kovacevich says he "doesn't
understand the logic of trying to do it faster."
But his approach goes against the grain of recent industry
practice, which has been to engineer increasingly rapid
integrations in deference to Wall Street.
As an out-of-market deal, Norwest/Wells
would be expected to generate modest cost savings anyway.
But revenue synergies provide the underlying rationale
for Kovacevich says. "It was the differences between
the two companies that provided the rationale for joining
forces, not the similarities."
For that reason, Kovacevich has taken
a "pick the best of each" approach to integration.
Transition teams, composed of representatives from both
sides, spent a year analyzing which systems and practices
should be retained. Kovacevich admits that this method
is difficult and slow but insists it's worthwhile. "It's
a little like the race between the tortoise and the hare,"
he says. "It takes longer when you try to bring people
together in a unified culture, but you win in the end."
Dueling
Business Models
Much has been made of the cultural differences
between the old Wells and the old Norwest. In shorthand
form, this is usually described as a contrast between
"high touch" (Norwest) and "high tech" (Wells).
Kovacevich argues that the real difference is in business
models.
Wells, predominately a California-based,
urban-oriented bank before the First Interstate acquisition,
employed a line-of-business organizational structure to
deliver a streamlined product menu at the lowest possible
cost. Its distribution system embodied one of the industry's
most aggressive attempts to substitute alternative delivery
(supermarket branches and ATMs) for more expensive full-service
branches.
Norwest, by contrast, employed a decentralized
(and more costly) community bank-style distribution system
designed to serve customers within a relationship context.
The underlying philosophy was account consolidation, or
capturing as much of a customer's business as possible.
The Norwest relationship approach is
unquestionably pervading the new Wells. Two of the five
regional presidents in California are from Norwest. Although
line-of-business structures are being retained for certain
products, like small business loans and home equity lines,
the retail branch system has adopted a more geography-centered
organizational structure with a more diversified product
menu. Customers of the old Wells, who were used to relying
on that bank for a few basic services, like checking accounts
and small business loans, will now be cross-sold insurance,
mortgages and mutual funds.
This cross-selling process will be aided
by the introduction of Norwest's computerized customer
profiling system, which allows branch employees to engage
in consultative selling with customers and refer them
to specialists who handle nonbank products. Dial's employees
are currently using a version of this program. But they
will have to enter the information manually, on paper,
until system conversions are completed.
Also coming to California by yearend
is Norwest's portfolio management account, which captures
on one statement a customer's banking, brokerage and trust
relationships. Like the customer profiling system, this
product will enable Wells employees to engage in Norwest-style
relationship banking.
No
Longer Lean
The downside is higher expenses. The
old Wells was famous for its lean-and-mean cost structure,
which helped make that institution one of the industry's
most profitable in the mid-90s. Credit Suisse First Boston
analyst Michael Mayo estimates the old Wells was 15% more
efficient overall than Norwest.
But the spare staffing models at Wells
also contributed to its failure to handle customer service
problems during the integration of First Interstate. To
repair some of that damage, Kovacevich added branches
and put additional sales staff in existing branches. Dial,
for example, has increased the sales staff in her California
branches by an average of half a full-time employee per
branch.
True to his concept of taking the best
of both, Kovacevich is also trying to instill some Wells-style
efficiency in the old Norwest branches. But doing this
without harming cross-sell ratios will be a challenge.
Wells' efficiency ratio meanwhile, which measures operating
expense as a percentage of operating income, was hovering
at 57% in the first quarter. Without committing itself
to a timetable, the company has said it wants to get the
ratio down to the mid- to low-50s.
Kovacevich himself is mindful of the
need to control expenses. But his bias is clearly to focus
on sales, noting that the efficiency ratio depends on
the denominator (revenue) as well as the numerator (cost).
"Improving your ratio on cost alone doesn't work
over time," he says. "A better way to improve
it is to grow revenues faster than expenses."
Meanwhile, down in the trenches, Wells
managers are trying to reconcile the competing demands
of sales gains and cost containment. "Having a strong
sales culture, from my point of view, is not enough,"
Dial says. "You have to really manage the cost side
of the equation. I'd argue there is some place in the
middle where you lower your distribution cost by selling
more on a per-square foot basis."
Like all the other challenges facing
Wells, this will require effective execution on the front
lines. There's always a point at which the top strategist
must rely on his troops to implement the plan. The careful
approach Kovacevich has taken to merging the two companies,
his avoidance of demoralizing, slash-and-burn tactics,
increases the likelihood that Wells employees will rally
to the cause.
Kovacevich, in fact, identifies this
as the major differentiating factor in banking today,
now that products are commoditized and capital and technology
can be accessed by all. "You gain competitive advantage,"
he says, "through your ability to implement."
Mr. Cline is senior
editor of Banking Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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