Wachovia Corporation
Schedule 14A
(Rule 14A-101)
Information Required In Proxy Statement
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE
SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
(AMENDMENT NO. )
Filed by the Registrant þ
Filed by a Party other than the
Registrant o
Check the appropriate box:
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þ Preliminary
Proxy Statement
o Confidential, For Use of
the Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
o Definitive Proxy
Statement
o Definitive Additional
Materials
o Soliciting Material Under
Rule 14a-12
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WACHOVIA CORPORATION
(Name of Registrant as Specified In
Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy
Statement, if other than the Registrant)
PAYMENT OF FILING FEE (Check the appropriate box):
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þ
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No fee required
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(4)
and 0-11.
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
pursuant to Exchange Act
Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and
state how it was determined):
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4)
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials:
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by
Exchange Act
Rule 0-11(a)(2)
and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously. Identify the previous filing by registration
statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its
filing
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1)
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Amount Previously Paid:
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
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March
[ l ], 2007
Dear Stockholder:
On behalf of the board of directors, we are pleased to invite
you to the Annual Meeting of Stockholders in Charlotte, North
Carolina, on Tuesday, April 17, 2007, at
9:30 a.m. The notice of meeting and proxy statement on
the following pages contain information about the meeting.
In addition to the matters contained in this proxy statement, we
will also review operating results for the past year and present
other information concerning Wachovia. The meeting should be
interesting and informative, and we hope you will be able to
attend.
We are again pleased to offer record holders of common stock
(those who hold shares directly registered in their own names
and not in the name of a bank, broker or other nominee) the
option of voting through the telephone or Internet.
In order to ensure your shares are voted at the meeting, please
return the enclosed proxy card at your earliest convenience or
vote through the telephone or Internet. Voting procedures are
described on the proxy card. Every stockholders vote is
important.
Sincerely yours,
G. Kennedy Thompson
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street, Charlotte, North
Carolina 28288
Wachovia
Corporation
301
South College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina 28288
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING
TO BE HELD ON APRIL 17, 2007
March
[ l ], 2007
The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be held at the Charlotte
Convention Center, 501 South College Street, Charlotte,
North Carolina 28202, on Tuesday, April 17, 2007, at
9:30 a.m., to consider the following:
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A Wachovia proposal to elect the eight nominees named in the
attached proxy statement as directors, six nominees to serve as
Class III directors with terms expiring at the 2010 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders, one nominee to serve as a Class II
director with a term expiring at the 2009 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders, and one nominee to serve as a Class I
director with a term expiring at the 2008 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders, in each case until their successors are duly
elected and qualified.
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A Wachovia proposal to amend Wachovias articles of
incorporation to eliminate the provisions classifying the terms
of its board of directors.
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A Wachovia proposal to amend Wachovias articles of
incorporation to provide for majority voting in uncontested
director elections.
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A Wachovia proposal to ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as
auditors for the year 2007.
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A number of stockholder proposals, which management and
Wachovias board of directors oppose.
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Such other business as may properly come before the meeting
or any adjournments.
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Only holders of record of Wachovia common stock on
February 12, 2007, are entitled to notice of and to vote at
the meeting.
By order of the board of directors,
Mark C. Treanor
Secretary
Whether or not you plan to attend, please either return the
enclosed proxy card or vote through the telephone or Internet
voting procedures described on your proxy card, to ensure your
shares are voted at the meeting. Your vote is important, whether
you own a few shares or many.
PROXY
STATEMENT
General
Information
The enclosed proxy card is solicited on behalf of the board of
directors in connection with the Annual Meeting of Stockholders
to be held at the Charlotte Convention Center, 501 South
College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina 28202, on Tuesday,
April 17, 2007, at 9:30 a.m., and at any adjournment,
referred to as the meeting. The proxy may be used
whether or not you attend the meeting. If you are a registered
stockholder (that is, you hold shares directly registered in
your own name), you may also vote by telephone or through the
Internet, by following the instructions described on your proxy
card. If your shares are held in the name of a bank, broker or
other nominee, referred to as street name, you will
receive separate voting instructions with your proxy materials.
Although most brokers and nominees offer telephone and Internet
voting, availability and specific procedures will depend on
their voting arrangements.
This proxy statement, the enclosed proxy card and
Wachovias 2006 Annual Report to Stockholders are being
first mailed to our stockholders on or about March
[ l ], 2007.
The merger of Wachovia Corporation (legacy Wachovia)
and First Union Corporation (legacy First Union) was
effective September 1, 2001. Legacy First Union changed its
name to Wachovia Corporation on the date of the
merger. As the surviving corporate entity in the merger,
information contained in this proxy statement, unless indicated
otherwise, includes information about legacy First Union only.
Whenever we use the Wachovia name in this proxy
statement, we mean the combined company and, before the merger,
legacy First Union, unless indicated otherwise.
Your vote is very important. For this reason, the board of
directors is requesting that you permit your common stock to be
represented at the meeting by the individuals named on the
enclosed proxy card. This proxy statement contains important
information for you to consider when deciding how to vote on the
matters brought before the meeting. Please read it carefully.
ABOUT THE
MEETING
Who Can
Vote
You may vote if you owned Wachovia common stock as of the close
of business on the record date, February 12, 2007. Each
share of Wachovia common stock is entitled to one vote. At the
close of business on February 12, 2007,
[ l ] shares
of Wachovia common stock were outstanding and eligible to vote.
The enclosed proxy card shows the number of shares that you are
entitled to vote. If you own any shares in Wachovias
Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan, the enclosed
proxy includes the number of shares you have in that plan on the
record date for the meeting, as well as the number of shares
directly registered in your name, including those held through
our direct registration service. Your individual vote is
confidential and will not be disclosed to persons other than
those recording the vote or as applicable law may require.
How Do I
Vote
You have four voting options:
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Over the Internet, which we encourage if you have Internet
access, at the address shown on your proxy card;
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By telephone through the number shown on your proxy card;
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By mail by completing, signing, dating and returning the
enclosed proxy card; or
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By attending the meeting and voting your shares in person.
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Even if you plan to attend the meeting, we encourage you to vote
your shares by proxy. If you choose to attend the meeting,
please bring proof of stock ownership and proof of
identification for entrance to the meeting.
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If you hold your Wachovia shares in street name, your ability to
vote by Internet or telephone depends on the voting process of
the bank, broker or other nominee. Please follow their
directions carefully. If you want to vote Wachovia shares that
you hold in street name at the meeting, you must request a legal
proxy from your bank, broker or other nominee that holds your
shares and present that proxy and proof of identification for
entrance to the meeting.
Every vote is important! Please vote your shares promptly.
What Am I
Voting On
There are eight proposals that will be presented for your
consideration at the meeting:
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Electing eight directors;
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Amending Wachovias articles of incorporation to eliminate
the provisions classifying the terms of our board of directors;
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Amending Wachovias articles of incorporation to provide
for majority voting in uncontested director elections;
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Ratifying the appointment of KPMG LLP as Wachovias
auditors for 2007;
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If properly presented, four stockholder proposals:
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Regarding a non-binding stockholder vote ratifying executive
compensation;
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Regarding qualifications of director nominees;
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Regarding reporting political contributions; and
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Regarding separating the offices of Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer.
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The first four proposals have been submitted on behalf of
Wachovias board of directors. The remaining proposals have
been submitted on behalf of certain stockholders. Other business
may be addressed at the meeting if it properly comes before the
meeting. However, we are not aware of any such other business.
Can I
Change My Vote
You may revoke your proxy and change your vote at any time
before the time voting begins on any proposal. You may do this
by either giving our Corporate Secretary written notice of your
revocation, submitting a new signed proxy card with a later
date, voting on a later date by telephone or by the Internet
(only your last telephone or Internet proxy is counted), or by
attending the meeting and voting in person. However, your
attendance at the meeting will not automatically revoke your
proxy; you must specifically revoke your proxy. If your shares
are held in nominee or street name, you should
contact your bank, broker or other nominee regarding the
revocation of proxies or, if you have obtained a legal proxy
from your bank, broker or other nominee giving you the right to
vote your shares, you may change your vote by attending the
meeting and voting in person.
Quorum
Needed To Hold The Meeting
In order to conduct the meeting, a majority of Wachovia shares
entitled to vote must be present in person or by proxy. This is
called a quorum. If you return valid proxy instructions or vote
in person at the meeting, you will be considered part of the
quorum. Abstentions and broker non-votes will be
counted as present and entitled to vote for purposes of
determining a quorum. New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
rules allow banks, brokers or other nominees to vote shares held
by them for a customer on matters that the NYSE determines to be
routine, even though the bank, broker or nominee has not
received instructions from the customer. A broker
non-vote occurs when a bank, broker or other nominee
has not received voting instructions from the customer and the
bank, broker or nominee cannot vote the customers shares
because the matter is not considered routine under NYSE rules.
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Counting
Your Vote
If you provide specific voting instructions, your shares will be
voted as instructed. If you hold shares in your name and sign
and return a proxy card or vote by telephone or Internet without
giving specific voting instructions, your shares will be voted
as recommended by our board of directors. If you hold your
shares in your name and do not return valid proxy instructions
or vote in person at the meeting, your shares will not be voted.
If you hold your Wachovia shares in the name of a bank, broker
or other nominee, and you do not give that nominee instructions
on how you want your shares to be voted, the nominee generally
has the authority to vote your shares on certain
routine matters as described above. At the meeting,
proposals 1, 2, 3 and 4 are deemed routine
which means that the nominee can vote your shares on those
proposals if you do not timely provide instructions for voting
your shares. However, the remaining proposals are deemed
non-routine which means that the nominee cannot vote
your shares on those proposals if you do not timely provide
instructions for voting your shares.
What
Vote Is Needed
Directors are elected by a plurality of the votes cast at the
meeting. Plurality means that the nominees receiving
the largest number of votes cast are elected as directors up to
the maximum number of directors who are nominated to be elected
at the meeting. Shares cannot be voted for a greater number of
persons than the number of nominees named in this proxy
statement, and at our meeting the maximum number of directors to
be elected is eight. Shares not voted, whether by marking
ABSTAIN on your proxy card or otherwise, will have
no impact on the election of directors. Unless a properly
executed proxy card is marked WITHHOLD authority as
to any or all nominees, the proxy given will be voted
FOR each of the nominees for director.
In February 2006, our board of directors amended its Corporate
Governance Guidelines to provide for a new policy regarding
director elections. The policy provides that in an uncontested
election, any nominee for director who receives a greater number
of votes withheld for his or her election than votes
for his or her election must promptly tender his or
her resignation to the Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee. The Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee will consider the resignation and recommend
to the board whether to accept or reject it. The board will act
on the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committees recommendation within 90 days following
the date of the stockholders meeting at which the election
occurred, and will promptly disclose its decision, including an
explanation of the process by which the decision was reached
and, if applicable, the reasons for rejecting the tendered
resignation, in a publicly filed SEC filing. Any director
tendering his or her resignation would not participate in the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committees and
the boards deliberations. In deciding whether to accept or
reject any tendered resignation, the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee and the board will
consider all factors they deem relevant, including the reasons,
if known, why stockholders withheld or were
requested to withhold votes from the director, the
directors length of service and qualifications, the
directors contributions to Wachovia, and the current mix
of skills and attributes of the directors on the board. If the
board does not accept a tendered resignation, it may elect to
address the underlying stockholder concerns related to
withheld votes or take any other action it deems
appropriate and in the best interests of Wachovia and its
stockholders. If a majority of the members of the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee received a majority
withheld vote at the same election, then one or more independent
directors who did not receive a majority withheld vote would be
added to the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, or a special committee of independent directors would
be formed to consider resignation offers. This policy will be in
effect for the vote on Proposal 1 at the meeting. If
stockholders approve Proposal 3 at the meeting, the new
majority vote standard would apply in uncontested elections of
directors following the meeting. See Proposal 3.
For Proposal 2, Wachovias articles of incorporation
require that at least 80% of the shares outstanding and entitled
to vote at the meeting must vote in favor of amending the
articles of incorporation to eliminate the provisions
classifying the terms of our board of directors. Abstentions and
votes not cast will have the same effect as votes against
Proposal 2. Therefore, the board urges stockholders to vote
their shares.
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A majority of votes cast at the meeting is required to approve
the remaining proposals, including Proposal 3 to amend our
articles of incorporation to provide for majority voting in
uncontested director elections. Abstentions will not be counted
as votes cast for these proposals. In addition, broker
non-votes will not be counted as votes cast
for Proposals 5-8.
Our
Voting Recommendations
Our board of directors recommends that you vote:
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FOR each of our nominees to the board of directors;
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FOR amending our articles of incorporation to
eliminate the provisions classifying the terms of our board of
directors;
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FOR amending our articles of incorporation to
provide for majority voting in uncontested director elections;
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FOR ratifying KPMG LLP as our auditors;
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AGAINST the stockholder proposal regarding a
non-binding stockholder vote ratifying executive compensation;
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AGAINST the stockholder proposal regarding
qualifications of director nominees;
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AGAINST the stockholder proposal regarding reporting
political contributions; and
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AGAINST the stockholder proposal regarding
separating the offices of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.
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Proxy cards that are timely signed, dated and returned but do
not contain instructions on how you want to vote will be voted
in accordance with our board of directors recommendations.
Voting
Results
The preliminary voting results will be announced at the meeting.
The final voting results will be published in our quarterly
report on
Form 10-Q
for the first quarter of fiscal year 2007.
Cost of
This Proxy Solicitation
Wachovia will pay the costs of the solicitation. We have hired
Georgeson Inc. as proxy solicitors to assist in the proxy
solicitation and tabulation. Their base fee is $22,500, plus
expenses and an additional fee per proxy tabulated. We may also,
upon request, reimburse brokerage firms and other persons
representing beneficial owners of shares for their expenses in
forwarding voting materials to their customers who are
beneficial owners and obtaining their voting instructions. In
addition to Wachovia soliciting proxies by mail, over the
Internet and by the telephone, our board members, officers and
employees may solicit proxies on our behalf, without additional
compensation.
Delivery
of Proxy Materials
To reduce the expenses of delivering duplicate proxy materials
to our stockholders, we are relying upon SEC rules that permit
us to deliver only one proxy statement and annual report to
multiple stockholders who share an address unless we received
contrary instructions from any stockholder at that address. If
you share an address with another stockholder and have received
only one proxy statement and annual report, you may write or
call us as specified below to request a separate copy of these
materials and we will promptly send them to you at no cost to
you. For future meetings, if you hold shares directly registered
in your own name, you may request separate copies of our proxy
statement and annual report, or request that we send only one
set of these materials to you if you are receiving multiple
copies, by contacting us at: Investor Relations, Wachovia
Corporation, 301 South College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0206,
or by telephoning us at
(704) 374-6782.
If your shares are held in the name of a bank, broker, or other
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nominee and you wish to receive separate copies of our proxy
statement and annual report, or request that they send only one
set of these materials to you if you are receiving multiple
copies, please contact the bank, broker or other nominee.
Electronic
Delivery of Proxy Materials
You can also access Wachovias proxy statement and 2006
Annual Report on
Form 10-K,
which includes our annual report to stockholders, via the
Internet at www.wachovia.com under the tab About
WachoviaInvestor Relations. For next years
stockholders meeting, you can help us save significant
printing and mailing expenses by consenting to access the proxy
statement, proxy card and annual report electronically over the
Internet. If you hold your shares in your own name (instead of
through a bank, broker or other nominee), you can choose this
option by following the instructions at the Internet voting
website at http://proxy.georgeson.com, which has been
established for you to vote your shares for the meeting. If you
choose to receive your proxy materials and annual report
electronically, then prior to next years
stockholders meeting you will receive an
e-mail
notification when the proxy materials and annual report are
available for on-line review over the Internet, as well as the
instructions for voting electronically over the Internet. Your
choice for electronic distribution will remain in effect until
you revoke it by sending a written request to: Investor
Relations, Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street,
Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0206.
New SEC rules, which will be in effect for next years
stockholders meeting, also will permit us to deliver your
proxy materials to you electronically over the Internet.
A copy of our 2006 Annual Report on
Form 10-K
will be provided to you without charge (except for exhibits)
upon written request to Wachovia Corporation, Investor
Relations, 301 South College Street, Charlotte, NC
28288-0206.
PROPOSAL 1. ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS
General
Information and Nominees
Our articles of incorporation require Wachovias board of
directors to be divided into three classes. At each annual
meeting of stockholders, you elect the members of one of the
three classes to three-year terms. Our directors determine the
size of the board, but the total number of directors cannot be
fewer than nine or more than 30. For purposes of the meeting,
the number of directors is fixed at 18, with six directors
in Class I, six directors in Class II, and six
directors in Class III.
The terms of the directors serving in Class III will expire
at the meeting and the terms of the directors serving in
Classes I and II will expire at the 2008 and 2009 annual
meetings of stockholders, respectively. Robert J. Brown,
currently a Class III director, will retire as a director
as of the meeting and consequently will not stand for election
at the meeting.
John T. Casteen, III, Maryellen C. Herringer, Joseph
Neubauer, Timothy D. Proctor, Van L. Richey, and Dona Davis
Young are being nominated to serve as directors of
Class III with terms expiring at the 2010 annual meeting of
stockholders. Mr. Richey currently serves as a Class I
director and is moving to Class III to keep the size of
each class as equal as possible. Jerry Gitt is being nominated
to serve as a director in Class II with a term expiring at
the 2009 annual meeting of stockholders, and Ernest S. Rady is
being nominated to serve as a director in Class I with a
term expiring at the 2008 annual meeting of stockholders.
The board, with the assistance of the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee, has conducted an
evaluation of whether Wachovias classified board structure
continues to be in the best interests of Wachovia and its
stockholders. In conducting its evaluation, the board considered
that the general purposes of the classified board are to promote
stability and continuity in leadership on the board and provide
the board with a greater opportunity to protect the interests of
stockholders from abusive takeover tactics in the event of an
unsolicited takeover offer. The board also considered that some
corporate governance experts and institutional stockholders
believe that a classified board reduces accountability to
stockholders because it prevents stockholders from evaluating
all directors on an annual basis. In addition, the board
recognized that the annual election of directors continues to
evolve as a best practice in corporate
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governance. After a careful review, the board has determined
that it would be in the best interests of Wachovia and its
stockholders to take steps to eliminate the classified board.
Accordingly, the board has recommended stockholders approve
Proposal 2 at the meeting, which if adopted would amend
Wachovias articles of incorporation to eliminate the
provisions requiring a classified board of directors. If adopted
at the meeting, Wachovia directors would stand for election
annually, beginning at Wachovias 2008 annual meeting of
stockholders. Approval of Proposal 2 to amend our articles
of incorporation to declassify the board requires the
affirmative vote of at least 80% of Wachovias outstanding
shares of common stock entitled to vote at the meeting. Please
see Proposal 2.
In the event stockholders approve Proposal 2 by the
requisite number of affirmative votes, Wachovias articles
of incorporation will be amended to eliminate the provisions
classifying the terms of the board. In such case, as described
in Proposal 2, it is expected that at the 2008
annual meeting of stockholders, all Wachovia directors,
including those whose terms do not expire at that meeting, will
be nominated to serve a one-year term. In the event stockholders
do not approve Proposal 2 by the requisite number of
affirmative votes, Wachovias articles of incorporation
will remain the same as they currently are and the directors
elected at the meeting will serve for the applicable term for
the Class in which they are nominated.
Directors who reach retirement age (70) during their term
in office are to retire from the board at the annual meeting of
stockholders next following their 70th birthday, subject to
the board authorizing the retirement to be deferred when deemed
appropriate.
Should any nominee be unavailable for election by reason of
death or other unexpected occurrence, the enclosed proxy, to the
extent permitted by applicable law, may be voted with
discretionary authority in connection with the nomination by the
board and the election of any substitute nominee. In addition,
the board may reduce the number of directors to be elected at
the meeting.
Proxies, unless indicated to the contrary, will be voted
FOR the election of the six nominees named below as
Class III directors of Wachovia with terms expiring at the
2010 annual meeting of stockholders, FOR the
election of the one nominee named below as a Class II
director of Wachovia with a term expiring at the 2009 annual
meeting of stockholders, and FOR the election of the
one nominee named below as a Class I director of Wachovia
with a term expiring at the 2008 annual meeting of
stockholders.
All of the nominees are currently directors. Listed below are
the names of the eight nominees to serve as directors and the
ten incumbent directors who will be continuing in office
following the meeting, together with: their ages; their
principal occupations during the past five years; any other
directorships they serve with any company with a class of
securities registered under Section 12 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the 1934 Act), or
subject to Section 15(d) of the 1934 Act or any investment
company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940; and
the year during which each was first elected a director of
Wachovia.
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NOMINEES
FOR ELECTION AS CLASS III DIRECTORSTERMS EXPIRING IN
2010
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JOHN T. CASTEEN, III
(63). President of the
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. A director
since 2001.
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MARYELLEN C. HERRINGER
(63).
Attorney-at-law,
Piedmont, California. Previously, Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary, APL Limited, Oakland, California,
an intermodal shipping and rail transportation company, until
1997. Director, ABM Industries Incorporated, Pacific
Gas & Electric Company and PG&E Corporation. A
director since October 2006.
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JOSEPH NEUBAUER
(65). Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer, ARAMARK Holdings Corporation,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a service management company, since
January 2007. Previously, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
ARAMARK Corporation, from September 2004 to January 2007,
Executive Chairman of the Board, from January 2004 to September
2004, and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of ARAMARK
Corporation, prior to January 2004. Director, ARAMARK
Corporation, Federated Department Stores, Inc. and Verizon
Communications, Inc. A director since 1996.
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TIMOTHY D. PROCTOR
(57). General Counsel
of Diageo plc, London, England, a premium spirits, beer and wine
company, since January 2000. A director since November 2006.
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VAN L. RICHEY
(57). President and
Chief Executive Officer, American Cast Iron Pipe Company,
Birmingham, Alabama, a manufacturer of products for the
waterworks, capital goods and energy industries. A director
since 2004.
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DONA DAVIS YOUNG
(53). Chairman (since
April 2003), President (since November 2000) and Chief Executive
Officer (since January 2003) of The Phoenix Companies, Inc.,
Hartford, Connecticut, a provider of wealth management products
and services, and its subsidiary Phoenix Life Insurance Company.
Previously, Chief Operating Officer (February 2001 to January
2003) of The Phoenix Companies, Inc., and President (since
February 2000) and Chief Operating Officer (since February 2001)
of Phoenix Life Insurance Company. Director, Foot Locker, Inc.
and The Phoenix Companies, Inc. A director since 2001.
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NOMINEE
FOR ELECTION AS A CLASS I DIRECTORTERM EXPIRING IN
2008
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ERNEST S. RADY
(69). Chairman of
Dealer Finance business and California banking business,
Wachovia Corporation, since March 1, 2006, Irvine,
California. Principal shareholder, manager and consultant to a
group of companies engaged in real estate management and
development, property and casualty insurance and investment
management through American Assets, Inc. (President and founder)
and Insurance Company of the West (Chairman), Irvine,
California. Previously, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
Westcorp, and Chairman, WFS Financial Inc, Irvine, California,
commercial banking and automobile finance companies, prior to
March 1, 2006. A director since 2006.
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NOMINEE
FOR ELECTION AS A CLASS II DIRECTORTERM EXPIRING IN
2009
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JERRY GITT
(63). Retired, Palm
Desert, California. Previously, First Vice President of Equity
Research, Merrill, Lynch & Company, prior to 2000. A
director since October 2006.
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8
INCUMBENT
CLASS I DIRECTORSTERMS EXPIRING IN 2008
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JOHN D. BAKER, II
(58). President and
Chief Executive Officer, Florida Rock Industries, Inc.,
Jacksonville, Florida, a heavy building materials company.
Director, Florida Rock Industries, Inc. and Patriot
Transportation Holding, Inc. A director since 2001.
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PETER C. BROWNING
(65). Lead Director of
Nucor Corporation, Charlotte, North Carolina, a steel products
manufacturing company, since May 2006. Previously, Non-Executive
Chairman of Nucor Corporation, prior to May 2006 and Dean,
McColl Graduate School of Business, Queens University of
Charlotte, from March 2002 to May 2005. Director, Acuity Brands
Inc., EnPro Industries, Inc., Lowes Companies, Inc., Nucor
Corporation and The Phoenix Companies, Inc. A director since
2001.
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DONALD M. JAMES
(58). Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer, Vulcan Materials Company, Birmingham,
Alabama, a construction materials company. Director, The
Southern Company and Vulcan Materials Company. A director since
2004.
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G. KENNEDY THOMPSON
(56). Chairman (since
February 2003), President (since December 1999) and Chief
Executive Officer (since April 2000), Wachovia Corporation.
Director, Hewlett-Packard Company and Wachovia Preferred Funding
Corp. A director since 1999.
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JOHN C. WHITAKER,
JR. (69). Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Inmar, Inc.,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, an information services company.
A director since 2001.
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INCUMBENT
CLASS II DIRECTORSTERMS EXPIRING IN 2009
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WILLIAM H. GOODWIN,
JR. (66). Chairman and
President, CCA Industries, Inc., Richmond, Virginia, a
diversified holding company. Also, Chairman, Chief Executive
Officer and Chief Operating Officer of The Riverstone Group,
LLC, Richmond, Virginia, a diversified holding company. A
director since 1993.
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ROBERT A. INGRAM
(64). Vice Chairman
Pharmaceuticals, of GlaxoSmithKline, Research Triangle Park,
North Carolina, a pharmaceutical research and development
company, since January 2003. Also, Chairman of the Board, OSI
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Melville, New York, a biotechnology
company, since January 2003, and Chairman of the Board, Valeant
Pharmaceuticals International, Costa Mesa, California, a
specialty pharmaceutical company focused on neurology,
dermatology and infectious disease, since August 2006.
Previously, Chief Operating Officer and President,
Pharmaceutical Operations, of GlaxoSmithKline plc, from December
2000 to January 2003. Director, Allergan, Inc., Edwards
Lifesciences Corporation, Lowes Companies, Inc., OSI
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Valeant Pharmaceuticals International.
A director since 2001.
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MACKEY J. MCDONALD
(60). Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer (and President prior to March 2006), VF
Corporation, Greensboro, North Carolina, an apparel
manufacturer. Director, Hershey Foods Corporation, Tyco
International LTD. (retiring effective March 7, 2007) and
VF Corporation. A director since 1997.
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RUTH G. SHAW
(59). Executive Advisor
to the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Duke Energy
Corporation, one of the largest electric power companies in the
United States, Charlotte, North Carolina, since October 2006.
Previously, Group Executive Public Policy and President, Duke
Nuclear, from April 2006 to October 2006, President (from March
2003 to April 2006) and Chief Executive Officer (from October
2004 to April 2006), Duke Power Company, and Executive Vice
President and Chief Administrative Officer, Duke Energy
Corporation, prior to March 2003. Director, The Dow Chemical
Company. A director since 1990.
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LANTY L. SMITH
(64). Chairman, Soles
Brower Smith & Co., Greensboro, North Carolina, an
investment and merchant banking firm. Also, Chairman, Precision
Fabrics Group, Inc., Greensboro, North Carolina, a manufacturer
of high technology specification textile products. A director
since 1987.
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Board
Matters
Wachovias business is managed under the direction and
oversight of the board of directors. The board appoints
Wachovias Chief Executive Officer and its senior
management team who are responsible for the
day-to-day
conduct of Wachovias business. The boards primary
responsibilities, thereafter, are to oversee management and to
exercise its business judgment to act in good faith and in what
each director reasonably believes to be in the best interests of
Wachovia.
Committee
Structure
The board has established various committees to assist the board
in fulfilling its responsibilities. These committees currently
consist of
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the Executive Committee,
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the Risk Committee,
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the Management Resources & Compensation Committee,
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the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, and
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the Audit Committee.
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Subject to applicable law and regulatory requirements, the board
may establish additional or different committees from time to
time.
The board has adopted written charters for each of the above
committees, and copies of the charters for the Audit, Management
Resources & Compensation, Corporate
Governance & Nominating and Risk Committees are
available on Wachovias website at
www.wachovia.com under the tab About
WachoviaInvestor Relations and then under the
heading Corporate GovernanceBoard Committee
Composition, and are available in print to any stockholder
who requests them by contacting us at: Investor Relations,
Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street, Charlotte, North
Carolina
28288-0206,
or by telephone at
(704) 374-6782.
The following is additional information regarding each of the
boards existing committees:
Executive Committee. The Executive Committee
held one meeting in 2006. The Committee is authorized, between
meetings of the board, to perform all duties and exercise all
authority of the board,
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except for those duties and authorities delegated to other
committees of the board or that are exclusively reserved to the
board by our bylaws or by applicable law. The Executive
Committee is not expected to meet frequently, if at all, and its
primary function would be to consider matters that require
immediate attention. The following directors are the current
members of the Committee: Smith (Chair), Browning, Goodwin,
Ingram, Neubauer, Thompson, Whitaker and Young.
Risk Committee. The Risk Committee held six
meetings in 2006. The primary responsibilities of the Risk
Committee are to assist the board in overseeing, and receiving
information regarding, Wachovias policies, procedures and
practices relating to liquidity, interest rate, credit, market
and operational risk. The following directors are the current
members of the Committee: Young (Chair), Goodwin, Herringer,
James, Richey and Whitaker.
Management Resources & Compensation
Committee. The Management Resources &
Compensation Committee (the Compensation Committee)
held eight meetings in 2006. The Compensation Committees
principal responsibilities are described below under the heading
Compensation Discussion & Analysis and
include assisting the board by reviewing, establishing or making
recommendations to the board, as applicable, regarding employee
compensation, administering various employee benefit plans,
acting as the executive compensation committee, evaluating
management resources, including regarding succession planning,
monitoring compliance of our employment and personnel policies
and studying the compensation of directors and recommending
changes when appropriate. The following directors are the
current members of the Compensation Committee: Shaw (Chair),
Brown, Browning, Ingram, McDonald and Proctor. The board has
determined that all of the members of the Compensation Committee
are independent under the NYSE Corporate Governance Listing
Standards, which we refer to as the NYSE rules, and the
boards Director Independence Standards described below.
Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee. The Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee held six meetings in 2006. The Committee
assists the board and management in establishing and maintaining
effective corporate governance practices and procedures,
identifies individuals qualified to become board members, and
recommends to the board the individuals for nomination as
members of the board and its committees. The following directors
are the current members of the Committee: Ingram (Chair),
Browning, Goodwin, McDonald, Neubauer, Shaw and Smith. The board
has determined that all of the members of the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee are independent under
the NYSE rules and the boards Director Independence
Standards.
Audit Committee. The Audit Committee held 14
meetings in 2006. The Committees principal
responsibilities are described below under the heading
Audit Committee Report and include assisting the
board in overseeing Wachovias financial reporting process.
The following directors are the current members of the
Committee: Neubauer (Chair), Baker, Casteen, Gitt and Smith. The
board has determined that all of the members of the Audit
Committee are independent under the NYSE rules, the boards
Director Independence Standards, and applicable SEC rules and
regulations. The board has also determined that at least one
member of the Audit Committee qualifies as an audit committee
financial expert within the meaning of SEC rules and
regulations, and has designated Mr. Neubauer, the Chair of
the Committee, as the audit committee financial expert.
Meetings
and Attendance
The board held 11 meetings in 2006. In 2006, all of the
directors attended at least 75% of the meetings of the board and
the committees on which they served.
Corporate
Governance Policies and Practices
Corporate
Governance Guidelines
Wachovia has developed, and operated under, corporate governance
principles and practices that are designed to maximize long-term
stockholder value, align the interests of the board and
management with those of Wachovias stockholders, and
promote the highest ethical conduct among Wachovias
directors and employees. The board has focused on continuing to
build upon Wachovias strong corporate governance
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practices, and over the years Wachovia has adopted various
corporate governance enhancements. For example, during the past
few years the board has:
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designated a lead independent director;
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increased reliance on stock-based compensation for senior
management and the board;
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adopted stock ownership guidelines for executive officers and
the board;
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adopted a policy in 2006 requiring directors who receive more
votes withheld from their election than
for their election at a meeting of stockholders to
tender their resignation;
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proposed to amend Wachovias articles of incorporation to
remove the requirement of having a classified board, as
described in Proposal 2;
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proposed to amend Wachovias articles of incorporation to
provide for majority voting in uncontested director elections,
as described in Proposal 3; and
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adopted a policy that requires stockholder approval of severance
agreements for executive officers that provide for benefits
above certain limits.
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In April 2003, the board formally adopted written corporate
governance policies, principles and guidelines, known as our
Corporate Governance Guidelines, which reflect many of the
matters mentioned above. The Corporate Governance Guidelines are
not intended to be a static statement of Wachovias
policies, principles and guidelines, but are subject to
continual assessment and refinement as the board may determine
advisable or necessary in view of the best interests of Wachovia
and its stockholders. A copy of the boards Corporate
Governance Guidelines is available on Wachovias website at
www.wachovia.com under the tab About
WachoviaInvestor Relations and then under the
heading Corporate GovernanceCorporate Governance
Guidelines, and is available in print to any stockholder
who requests it by contacting us at: Investor Relations,
Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street, Charlotte, North
Carolina
28288-0206,
or by telephone at
(704) 374-6782.
Highlights of portions of the Corporate Governance Guidelines,
as well as some of Wachovias other corporate governance
policies, practices and procedures are described below.
Director
Independence
As described in the Corporate Governance Guidelines, the board
believes that a substantial majority of the board should consist
of directors who are independent under the NYSE rules, as
determined by the board in its business judgment. As described
below, the board has determined that 17 of the boards
19 current directors and nominees, or approximately 89%,
are independent directors within the meaning of the Director
Independence Standards adopted by the board, the NYSE rules and
the applicable SEC rules and regulations.
The NYSE rules provide that a Wachovia director does not qualify
as independent unless the board of directors affirmatively
determines that the director has no material relationship with
Wachovia (either directly or as a partner, stockholder or
officer of an organization that has a relationship with
Wachovia). The NYSE rules require a board to consider all of the
relevant facts and circumstances in determining the materiality
of a directors relationship with Wachovia and permit the
board to adopt and disclose standards to assist the board in
making determinations of independence. Accordingly, the board
has adopted Director Independence Standards to assist the board
in determining whether a director has a material relationship
with Wachovia. The Director Independence Standards should be
read together with the NYSE rules. The Director Independence
Standards are attached to this proxy statement as
Appendix A and are also available on Wachovias
website at www.wachovia.com under the tab
About WachoviaInvestor Relations and then
under the heading Corporate GovernanceDirector
Independence.
In February 2007, the board, with the assistance of the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee, conducted
an evaluation of director independence, based on the Director
Independence Standards, the NYSE rules and applicable SEC rules
and regulations. In connection with this review, the board
evaluated banking, commercial, charitable, consulting, familial
or other relationships with each director or immediate
13
family member and their related interests and Wachovia and its
subsidiaries, including those relationships described under
Other Matters Relating to Executive Officers and Directors
and Related Party Transactions Policy.
As a result of this evaluation, the board affirmatively
determined that each of Mr. Baker, Mr. Brown,
Mr. Browning, Mr. Casteen, Mr. Gitt,
Mr. Goodwin, Ms. Herringer, Mr. Ingram,
Mr. James, Mr. McDonald, Mr. Neubauer,
Mr. Proctor, Mr. Richey, Dr. Shaw,
Mr. Smith, Mr. Whitaker, and Ms. Young is an
independent director under the Director Independence Standards,
the NYSE rules and the applicable SEC rules and regulations. In
connection with its independence evaluation, the board
considered the following relationships and transactions, as
described by category or type in the Director Independence
Standards:
Customer
Relationships
Wachovia provides in the ordinary course of business lending
and/or other financial services to all of its directors, some of
their immediate family members and their affiliated
organizations, including to former directors who retired as
directors in 2006.
Supplier
or Other Business Relationships
Some entities affiliated with some of our directors or their
immediate family members may provide services to or do business
with Wachovia in the ordinary course of business, including the
following entities:
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ARAMARK Holdings Corporation, where Mr. Neubauer is the
chief executive officer and beneficially owns approximately 9.7%
of the voting securities, is a service management company, and
in 2006, ARAMARK provided food and vending services to Wachovia;
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The Riverstone Group, LLC, where Mr. Goodwin is the chief
executive officer and which is owned by members of
Mr. Goodwins immediate family, is an owner and
operator of, among other things, resort and hospitality
properties, and in 2006, the Riverstone Group, LLC provided
certain hotel, restaurant and meeting services to Wachovia;
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The Greenwood Group, Inc., where Mr. Smith is a director
and beneficially owns approximately 30% of the voting interests,
is a Manpower staffing services franchisee, and in 2006, The
Greenwood Group provided contract-staffing services to Wachovia;
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Bradley Arant Rose & White LLP, where a relative of
Mr. James is a partner, is a large law firm, and in 2006,
Bradley Arant provided legal services to Wachovia. The relative,
however, was not directly involved in providing legal services
to Wachovia other than de minimis services involving an
amount less than $1,000; and
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Duke Energy, the University of Virginia, and the Phoenix
Companies, where Dr. Shaw, Mr. Casteen, and
Ms. Young, respectively, are employed provide services or
may otherwise do business with Wachovia. Duke Energy is one of
the largest electric power companies in the United States and it
provides utility services to Wachovia, the University of
Virginia is one of several educational institutions that
participates in sports marketing sponsorship arrangements with
Wachovia, and Wachovia offers some of the Phoenix
Companies products to its customers.
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Family
Relationships
A relative of Mr. Proctor is employed as a customer
relations manager at Wachovia, but is not an executive officer
or officer required to file reports with the SEC under
Section 16(a) of the 1934 Act, and a relative of
Mr. Whitaker was employed as an investment advisor at
Wachovia, but not an executive officer or Section 16(a)
reporting officer, before retiring from Wachovia in March 2006.
14
Charitable
and Other Relationships
Wachovia directors are non-management directors or trustees of
organizations that may have received charitable contributions
from Wachovia, and Mr. Casteen is employed at an
organization that received contributions from Wachovia that did
not exceed the thresholds described in the Director Independence
Standards. In addition, Wachovia directors are non-management
directors, but not officers or significant equity owners, of
entities that may be customers of Wachovia or otherwise do
business in the ordinary course with Wachovia.
The board determined pursuant to the Director Independence
Standards and the NYSE rules that each of the above
relationships was not material. In particular, in connection
with considering the supplier and other business relationships
described above, the amounts paid by Wachovia to each of the
above entities did not approach the 2% of consolidated gross
revenue threshold contained in the Director Independence
Standards and the NYSE rules, and in each case the amounts
involved were less than 0.5% of the consolidated gross revenues
of the entity, except for payments to Bradley Arant, which were
less than 1% of the law firms consolidated gross revenues.
The board determined pursuant to the Director Independence
Standards that these relationships were not material to Wachovia
or the other entity and that none of the above directors or, to
the extent applicable, their immediate family members had a
direct or indirect material interest in the relationships or
transactions with these entities.
The board also determined that Mr. Thompson and
Mr. Rady are not independent because each is a Wachovia
employee.
Lead
Independent Director
The board has long recognized the importance of independent
leadership on the board, as evidenced by its designation of a
lead independent director in 2000. As provided in the Corporate
Governance Guidelines, the independent directors elect the lead
independent director, and in February 2007, the independent
directors elected Mr. Smith to continue in his role as the
boards lead independent director. The duties and
responsibilities of the lead independent director include the
following:
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assisting the Chairman of the Board with board-related matters,
including approving board meeting agendas, board meeting
schedules and various information sent to the board;
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serving as the principal liaison between the independent
directors and the Chairman of the Board;
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presiding at any meetings of the non-employee directors or
independent directors or at any meetings of the board at which
the Chairman of the Board is not present; and
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any other duties or responsibilities that may be requested by
the independent directors or the Chairman of the Board,
including, as the lead independent director deems appropriate,
calling any meetings of the non-employee directors or
independent directors or meeting with any of Wachovias
executive officers, stockholders or other constituents.
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Executive
Sessions
The Corporate Governance Guidelines provide that the
non-management directors will meet in regularly scheduled
executive sessions (no management or directors who are also
members of management present) at least three times each year.
The lead independent director, Mr. Smith, presides at the
executive sessions. Four of these executive sessions were held
in 2006, including at least one session where only the
independent directors were present. The Corporate Governance
Guidelines also provide that the board will meet in executive
sessions with the Chief Executive Officer at least two times
each year to discuss strategic or other key issues regarding
Wachovia, and may contact the Chief Executive Officer at any
other time to discuss Wachovias business.
15
Director
Nomination Process
The Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee is
responsible for identifying individuals qualified to become
board members and for recommending to the board the individuals
for nomination as members of the board. In furtherance of the
boards Corporate Governance Guidelines, the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee and the board expect
to create a board that will demonstrate objectivity and the
highest degree of integrity on an individual and collective
basis. In evaluating current members and new candidates, the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee considers
the needs of the board and Wachovia in light of the current mix
of director skills and attributes. In addition to requiring that
each director possess unquestionable integrity and character,
the Corporate Governance & Nominating Committees
evaluation of director candidates includes an assessment of
issues and factors regarding an individuals education,
business experience, accounting and financial expertise, age,
diversity, reputation, civic and community relationships, and
knowledge and experience in matters impacting financial
institutions such as Wachovia. The Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee also takes into
consideration the boards policies outlined in its
Corporate Governance Guidelines, including those relating to the
boards retirement policy, the ability of directors to
devote adequate time to board and committee matters, and the
boards belief that a substantial majority of the board
should consist of independent directors. When the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee is considering
current board members for nomination for reelection, the
Committee also considers prior board and committee contributions
and performance, as well as meeting attendance records.
The Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee may
seek the input of the other members of the board and management
in identifying and attracting director candidates that are
consistent with the criteria outlined above. In addition, the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee may use the
services of consultants or a search firm, although it has not
done so in the past. Each of Mr. Gitt and
Ms. Herringer, who are standing for election by Wachovia
stockholders for the first time at the meeting, are former
directors of Golden West Financial Corporation who were
recommend by Golden West and appointed to the board following
the Golden West merger. Mr. Proctor, who also is standing
for election by Wachovia stockholders for the first time at the
meeting, was identified and recommended by the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee.
The Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee will
consider recommendations by Wachovia stockholders of qualified
director candidates for possible nomination by the board.
Stockholders may recommend qualified director candidates by
writing to Wachovias Corporate Secretary, at our offices
at 301 South College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013.
Submissions should include information regarding a
candidates background, qualifications, experience, and
willingness to serve as a director. Based on a preliminary
assessment of a candidates qualifications, the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee may conduct
interviews with the candidate and request additional information
from the candidate. The Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee uses the same process for evaluating all
nominees, including those recommended by stockholders.
In addition, Wachovias bylaws contain specific conditions
under which persons may be nominated directly by stockholders
for election as directors at an annual meeting of stockholders.
The provisions include the condition that stockholders comply
with the advance notice time frame requirements described under
Other Stockholder Matters.
Communications
with Directors
The board has established a process for stockholders and other
interested parties to communicate directly with the lead
independent director or with the non-management directors
individually or as a group. Any stockholder or other interested
party who desires to contact one or more of Wachovias
non-management directors, including the boards lead
independent director, may send a letter to the following address:
Board of Directors (or lead independent director or name of
individual director)
c/o Corporate Secretary
Wachovia Corporation
301 South College Street
Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013
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All such communications will be forwarded to the appropriate
director or directors specified in such communications as soon
as practicable.
In addition, as provided on Wachovias website at
www.wachovia.com under the tab About
Wachovia Investor Relations and then under the
heading Corporate Governance Contact Wachovias
Directors, any stockholder or interested party who has any
concerns or complaints relating to accounting, internal
accounting controls or auditing matters, may contact the Audit
Committee by writing to the following address:
Wachovia Audit Committee
c/o Corporate Secretary
Wachovia Corporation
301 South College Street
Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013
Annual
Meeting Policy
Directors are expected to attend Wachovias annual meeting
of stockholders. In furtherance of this policy, Wachovias
board usually holds one of its regularly scheduled board
meetings on the same day as the annual stockholders
meeting. In 2006, all but one member of the board attended the
annual meeting of stockholders.
Code
of Conduct & Ethics
Wachovia has had a written code of conduct for many years. The
code, which applies to Wachovias directors and employees,
including our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer
and Principal Accounting Officer, includes guidelines relating
to the ethical handling of actual or potential conflicts of
interest, compliance with laws, accurate financial reporting,
and procedures for promoting compliance with, and reporting
violations of, the code. The Code of Conduct & Ethics
is available on Wachovias website at
www.wachovia.com under the tab About
WachoviaInvestor Relations and then under the
heading Corporate GovernanceCode of
Conduct & Ethics, and is available in print to
any stockholder who requests it by contacting us at: Investor
Relations, Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street,
Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0206,
or by telephone at
(704) 374-6782.
Wachovia intends to post any amendments to or waivers of its
Code of Conduct & Ethics (to the extent applicable to
Wachovias Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer
or Principal Accounting Officer) at this location on our website.
Stock
Ownership Requirements
Our board has adopted a common stock ownership policy for
members of the board and our executive officers. This policy
requires our executive officers to own shares of common stock
having a value equal to five times base salary in the case of
our CEO and Chairman, and four times base salary for all other
executive officers. In addition, all of these executives are
required to retain ownership of at least 75% of any common stock
acquired by them through our stock compensation plans, after
taxes and transaction costs. Each of our directors must own
common stock or common stock equivalents having a value equal to
at least five times the annual cash retainer, which is currently
$70,000. In 2005, Wachovia expanded our stock ownership policy
to the level of management that reports directly to our
executive officers, who must own shares of common stock having a
value equal to two times base salary, and have three years to
meet this requirement. These ownership levels will be calculated
annually and executive officers and directors have three years
to meet the minimum level. Our board believes this stock
ownership policy substantially enhances stockholder value by
materially aligning managements interest with those of
stockholders. See also Security Ownership of
Management.
Compensation
of Directors
[to be included in Definitive Proxy Statement]
17
Audit
Committee Report
As detailed in its charter, the role of the Audit Committee is
to assist the board in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities
regarding the following:
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the integrity of Wachovias financial statements, including
matters relating to its internal controls;
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the qualification and independence of Wachovias
independent auditors;
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the performance of Wachovias internal auditors and the
independent auditors; and
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Wachovias compliance with legal and regulatory
requirements.
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Management is responsible for the preparation and presentation
of Wachovias financial statements and its overall
financial reporting process and, with the assistance of
Wachovias internal auditors, for maintaining appropriate
internal controls and procedures that provide for compliance
with accounting standards and applicable laws. The independent
auditors are responsible for planning and carrying out a proper
audit of Wachovias financial statements, expressing an
opinion as to their conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles and annually auditing managements
assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over
financial reporting. Members of the Audit Committee are not
professionally engaged in the practice of auditing or accounting
and are not full-time employees of Wachovia.
In the performance of its oversight function, the Audit
Committee, among other things, reviewed and discussed the
audited financial statements with management and the independent
auditors. Management has represented, and the independent
auditors have confirmed, to the Audit Committee that the
financial statements were prepared in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles. The Audit Committee has also
discussed with the independent auditors the matters required to
be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61,
Communications with Audit Committees, as currently in
effect. In addition, the Audit Committee has received the
written disclosures and the letter from the independent auditors
required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1,
Independence Discussions with Audit Committees, as
currently in effect, has considered whether the provision of
non-audit services by the independent auditors to Wachovia is
compatible with maintaining the auditors independence, and
has discussed with the auditors the auditors independence.
Based upon the review and discussions described in this report,
and subject to the limitations on the role and responsibilities
of the Audit Committee referred to above and in the Audit
Committees charter, the Audit Committee recommended to the
board that the audited financial statements be included in
Wachovias Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2006, to be filed with the
SEC.
Joseph Neubauer,
Chair
John D. Baker, II
John T. Casteen, III
Jerry Gitt
Lanty L. Smith
18
Security
Ownership of Management
The following table shows the number of shares of common stock
and common stock equivalents beneficially owned as of
February 12, 2007, by each nominee for director, each
incumbent director, the executive officers named in the summary
compensation table, and all directors and executive officers as
a group. Unless otherwise indicated, each of the named
individuals and each member of the group has sole voting power
and sole investment power with respect to the shares shown. The
number of shares beneficially owned, as that term is defined by
Rule 13d-3
under the 1934 Act, by all directors, nominees and executive
officers as a group totals approximately
[ l ]%
of the outstanding common stock as of February 12, 2007.
|
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Name of
Individual
|
|
Common
Stock (2)
|
|
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John D. Baker, II (1)
|
|
|
54,720
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Robert J. Brown (4)
|
|
|
23,419
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|
Peter C. Browning (1)
|
|
|
27,840
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|
David M. Carroll (3)
|
|
|
964,215
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|
John T. Casteen, III
|
|
|
29,725
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|
Stephen E.
Cummings (1) (3)
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|
|
478,424
|
|
Jean E. Davis (3)
|
|
|
786,656
|
|
Jerry Gitt
|
|
|
1,863
|
|
William H. Goodwin, Jr.
|
|
|
1,110,402
|
|
Maryellen C. Herringer (1)
|
|
|
17,850
|
|
Robert A. Ingram
|
|
|
40,946
|
|
Donald M. James (3)
|
|
|
29,043
|
|
Benjamin P.
Jenkins, III (1) (3)
|
|
|
1,572,243
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|
Robert P. Kelly (1) (3)
|
|
|
34,847
|
|
Wallace D.
Malone, Jr. (1) (3)
|
|
|
7,575,008
|
|
Mackey J. McDonald
|
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|
43,571
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Joseph Neubauer
|
|
|
50,353
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Timothy D. Proctor
|
|
|
1,423
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|
Ernest S. Rady (3) (5)
|
|
|
35,858,649
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Van L. Richey (3)
|
|
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28,617
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|
Ruth G. Shaw (1)
|
|
|
42,173
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|
Lanty L. Smith
|
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|
127,430
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|
G. Kennedy
Thompson (1) (3)
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|
|
3,762,178
|
|
John C. Whitaker, Jr.
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|
52,623
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|
Thomas J. Wurtz (3) (5)
|
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|
253,338
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|
Dona Davis Young (1)
|
|
|
34,138
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|
All directors, nominees, Named
Officers and executive officers as a group (31 persons)
|
|
|
55,153,722
|
|
|
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(1) |
|
The foregoing directors, nominees and named executive officers
have sole voting and investment power over the shares of common
stock beneficially owned by them on February 12, 2007,
except for the following shares over which the directors,
nominees and named executive officers share voting
and/or
investment power: Mr. Baker: 11,630 shares;
Mr. Browning: 3,500 shares; Mr. Cummings:
2,400 shares; Ms. Herringer: 3,900 shares;
Mr. Jenkins: 37,200 shares; Mr. Kelly:
11,573 shares; Mr. Malone: 1,098,653 shares;
Dr. Shaw: 700 shares; Mr. Thompson:
42,726 shares; and Ms. Young: 6,873 shares. |
|
(2) |
|
The amounts reported include the number of units of common stock
equivalents held by directors, as of February 12, 2007,
under deferred compensation arrangements, rounded down to the
nearest whole share, as follows: Mr. Baker:
22,761 units; Mr. Brown: 21,432 units;
Mr. Browning: 23,937 units; Mr. Casteen:
23,346 units; Mr. Gitt: 1,338 units;
Mr. Goodwin: 54,402 units; Ms. Herringer:
1,338 units; Mr. Ingram: 36,546 units;
Mr. James: 8,413 units; Mr. McDonald:
41,141 units; Mr. Neubauer: 42,025 units;
Mr. Proctor: 1,423 units; Mr. Richey:
9,937 units; Dr. Shaw: 40,473 units;
Mr. Smith: 94,430 units; Mr. Whitaker:
40,082 units; Ms. Young: 27,264 units; and all
directors as a group: 490,288 units. These units will be
paid in cash, based on the fair market value of the common stock
at |
19
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the time of payment, which would generally occur following
retirement as a director. There are no voting rights with
respect to these units. In addition, the following directors own
shares of Wachovia Dividend Equalization Preferred shares as of
February 12, 2007, which securities do not have voting
rights at the meeting: Mr. Rady: 4,400 shares; and
Ms. Young: 2,000 shares. See Corporate
Governance Policies and PracticesCompensation of
Directors. |
|
(3) |
|
Included in the shares set forth above are the following shares
held under certain of Wachovias employee benefit plans,
including options exercisable on February 12, 2007, or
within 60 days thereafter, by each of the following named
executive officers and by all of the directors and all of our
executive officers as a group: Mr. Carroll:
785,219 shares; Mr. Cummings: 305,267 shares;
Ms. Davis: 657,824 shares; Mr. James:
2,670 shares; Mr. Jenkins: 1,338,654 shares;
Mr. Kelly: 3,062 shares; Mr. Malone:
4,677,883 shares; Mr. Rady: 138,320 shares;
Mr. Richey: 2,670 shares; Mr. Thompson:
3,062,127 shares; Mr. Wurtz: 182,404 shares; and
members of the group (including the foregoing):
12,786,331 shares. Non-employee directors are not eligible
to participate in any of Wachovias stock option or other
employee benefit plans. Messrs. James and Richey were
granted options pursuant to SouthTrust Corporation stock option
plans, which Wachovia assumed in that merger. |
|
(4) |
|
Mr. Brown is retiring as a director as of the meeting but
was a director as of the record date for the meeting. |
|
(5) |
|
Of the shares owned by Mr. Rady and certain entities that
he controls, 11,328,301 of such shares have been pledged as
security in lending transactions in the ordinary course of
business for those entities. Of the shares owned by
Mr. Wurtz, 27,941 of such shares are subject to pledge in a
securities brokerage account. |
Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
We are not aware of any stockholder who was the beneficial owner
of more than 5% of the outstanding shares of common stock on the
record date, except for Barclays Global Investors, NA and
affiliated entities, 45 Fremont Street, San Francisco,
California 94104, bank and investment advisors that, based on a
Schedule 13G filed with the SEC, were the holders of
106,626,899 shares of common stock as of December 31,
2006, or approximately 5.6% of the outstanding shares of common
stock as of such date. The Barclays entities indicated that they
hold such shares for accounts under Barclays discretionary
management and not for their own account. The Barclays entities
also indicated that they have sole voting power with respect to
93,326,113 of such shares and sole dispositive power over all of
them.
Executive
Compensation
[to be included in Definitive Proxy Statement]
20
Compensation
Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
The current members of the Compensation Committee are
Messrs. Brown, Browning, Ingram, McDonald, Proctor and
Dr. Shaw, none of whom is, or has been, an officer or
employee of Wachovia. See Other Matters Relating to
Executive Officers and Directors and Related Party Transactions
Policy.
Compensation
Discussion & Analysis
[to be included in Definitive Proxy Statement]
Compensation
Committee Report
The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed with
Wachovia management the Compensation Discussion &
Analysis presented in this proxy statement. Based on that
review and discussion with Wachovia management, the Compensation
Committee recommended to the Wachovia board of directors that
the Compensation Discussion & Analysis be included in
Wachovias 2006 Annual Report on
Form 10-K
(as incorporated by reference to this proxy statement).
Ruth G. Shaw,
Chair
Robert J. Brown
Peter C. Browning
Robert A. Ingram
Mackey J. McDonald
Timothy D. Proctor
21
Performance
Graph
The following graph compares (i) the yearly change in the
cumulative total stockholder return on Wachovia common stock
with (ii) the cumulative return of the Standard &
Poors 500 Stock Index (S&P 500), and the
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. Bank Stock Index
(BKX). The graph assumes that the value of an
investment in Wachovia common stock and in each index was $100
on December 31, 2001, and that all dividends were
reinvested. The performance shown in the graph represents past
performance and should not be considered an indication of future
performance.
The S&P 500 and the BKX are market-capitalization-weighted
indices, meaning that companies with a higher market value count
for more in the indices. The BKX includes the 24 bank holding
companies with the largest market capitalizations in the U.S.
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December 31,
|
|
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2001
|
|
2002
|
|
2003
|
|
2004
|
|
2005
|
|
2006
|
Wachovia
|
|
$
|
100.00
|
|
|
|
119.52
|
|
|
|
157.56
|
|
|
|
184.03
|
|
|
|
191.93
|
|
|
|
214.98
|
|
S&P 500
|
|
|
100.00
|
|
|
|
77.90
|
|
|
|
100.24
|
|
|
|
111.15
|
|
|
|
116.61
|
|
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135.02
|
|
BKX
|
|
|
100.00
|
|
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|
89.33
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|
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120.08
|
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132.41
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136.62
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159.87
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|
Other
Matters Relating to Executive Officers and Directors and Related
Party Transactions Policy
Our executive officers and directors (including their immediate
family members and organizations with which they are affiliated)
are customers of ours and, in some cases, have lending
relationships with Wachovias banking subsidiaries. In
managements opinion, the lending relationships with these
directors and officers were made in the ordinary course of
business and on substantially the same terms, including interest
rates, collateral and repayment terms, as those prevailing at
the time for comparable transactions with other customers not
related to Wachovia and do not involve more than normal
collection risk or present other unfavorable features. In
addition to these lending relationships, some directors and
their affiliated organizations provide services or otherwise do
business with Wachovia and its affiliated entities, and we in
turn provide services, including retail brokerage, investment
banking and other financial services, or otherwise do business
with the directors and their organizations, in each case in the
ordinary course of business and on substantially the same terms
as those prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with
other nonaffiliated persons. See Corporate Governance
Policies and PracticesDirector Independence. During
2006, Wachovia engaged in transactions in the ordinary course of
business with Barclays Bank plc and certain of its affiliated
entities. Barclays Bank plc is the ultimate parent company of
Barclays Global Investors, NA, which together with affiliated
entities, beneficially owned more than 5% of the outstanding
shares of Wachovia common stock as of December 31, 2006.
See Security Ownership of
22
Certain Beneficial Owners. Such transactions were on
substantially the same terms as those prevailing at the time for
comparable transactions with unrelated third parties and such
transactions were effected prior to Wachovias adoption of
the related party transactions policy described below.
Wachovias Code of Conduct & Ethics and the
boards Corporate Governance Guidelines provide guidance
for addressing actual or potential conflicts of interests
matters, including those that may arise from transactions and
relationships between Wachovia and its executive officers or
directors. In order to provide further clarity and guidance on
these matters, the board recently adopted a written policy
regarding the review and approval of related party transactions,
including those described above and under Corporate
Governance Policies and PracticesDirector
Independence. The policy generally provides that the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee will review
and approve in advance, or will ratify, all related party
transactions between Wachovia and Wachovias directors,
executive officers, and persons known by Wachovia to own more
than 5% of Wachovias common stock, and any of their
immediate family members. Related party transactions include
transactions or relationship involving Wachovia and amounts in
excess of $120,000 and in which the above related parties have a
direct or indirect material interest. Under the policy, the
failure to approve a related party transaction in advance would
not invalidate the transaction or violate the policy as long as
it is submitted to the Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee for review and ratification as promptly as
practicable after entering into the transaction.
Wachovia has various procedures in place to identify potential
related party transactions, and the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee works with management
and Wachovias Legal Division in reviewing and considering
whether any identified transactions or relationships are covered
by the policy. Under the policy, some ordinary course
transactions or relationships are not required to be reviewed,
approved or ratified by the Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee, including transactions or relationships
where the related party serves solely as a non-management
director or trustee and ordinary course customer relationships
such as the banking and lending relationships described above.
Wachovia has other policies and procedures in place to ensure
compliance with applicable bank regulatory requirements
regarding those banking and lending relationships. In
determining whether to approve or ratify a transaction or
relationship that is covered by the policy, the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee considers, among
other things,
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the identity of the parties involved in the transaction or
relationship;
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the business purpose and rationale of the transaction or
relationship;
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|
the terms of the transaction, including whether those terms are
fair to Wachovia and are substantially comparable with the terms
of transactions or relationships with nonaffiliated persons;
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|
whether the transaction or relationship would impair the
directors independence; and
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|
the extent that the transaction or relationship would present an
improper conflict of interest, taking into account the size of
the transaction, the overall financial position of the related
party, the nature of the related partys interest and the
significance of the transaction or relationship to Wachovia.
|
A copy of the policy is available on Wachovias website at
www.wachovia.com under the tab About
WachoviaInvestor Relations and then under the
heading Corporate GovernanceRelated Party
Transactions Policy.
Section 16(a)
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
Section 16(a) of the 1934 Act requires the directors
and executive officers subject to that Section to file reports
with the SEC and the NYSE relating to their ownership of
Wachovia common stock and Dividend Equalization Preferred shares
and any changes in that ownership. To our knowledge, based
solely on a review of copies of the reports that we received and
written representations from the individuals required to file
the reports, during the year ended December 31, 2006, all
Section 16(a) reports applicable to
23
directors and executive officers were filed on a timely basis,
except as set forth in prior proxy statements and except for a
late filing by: Ernest S. Rady, a director, relating to the
exercise of 16,999 stock options in December 2006. In the
situation noted above, the failure to file a timely report was
inadvertent and promptly corrected after discovery of the
reporting obligation.
|
|
PROPOSAL 2.
|
PROPOSAL TO
AMEND WACHOVIAS ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION TO
ELIMINATE THE PROVISIONS CLASSIFYING THE TERMS OF THE BOARD OF
DIRECTORS
|
The North Carolina Business Corporation Act provides that,
unless specified in a corporations articles of
incorporation or bylaws, directors serve one-year terms between
annual meetings of stockholders. Wachovias articles of
incorporation currently provide that Wachovias board of
directors will be divided into three classes, each class to be
as nearly equal in number as possible to each other class, with
directors in each class serving staggered three-year terms. At
each annual meeting of stockholders, only one class of directors
are chosen by the stockholders for a term of three years to
succeed those directors whose term expires at that meeting. The
articles of incorporation also provide, as permitted by North
Carolina law, that the affirmative vote of not less than 80% of
the outstanding shares of capital stock entitled to vote in the
election of directors, voting together as a single class, is
required to amend or repeal our classified board.
As previously referenced in Proposal 1, our board, with the
assistance of the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, has conducted an evaluation of whether
Wachovias classified board structure continues to be in
the best interests of Wachovia and its stockholders. In
conducting its evaluation, the board considered that the general
purposes of the classified board are to promote stability and
continuity in leadership on the board and provide the board with
a greater opportunity to protect the interests of stockholders
from abusive takeover tactics in the event of an unsolicited
takeover offer. The board also considered that some corporate
governance experts and institutional stockholders believe that a
classified board reduces accountability to stockholders because
it prevents stockholders from evaluating all directors on an
annual basis. In addition, the board recognized that the annual
election of directors continues to evolve as a best
practice in corporate governance. After a careful review,
the board has determined that it would be in the best interests
of Wachovia and its stockholders to take steps to eliminate the
classified board.
Attached as Appendix B to this proxy statement is
Section 7 of our articles of incorporation as we propose to
amend it. Appendix B is incorporated herein by
reference and stockholders are encouraged to read
Appendix B in its entirety.
If this proposal is adopted, Wachovia would amend our articles
of incorporation as provided in Appendix B to
eliminate the provisions requiring a classified board of
directors. By removing these provisions, the term of directors
will be governed by North Carolina law, which as mentioned above
provides for one-year terms. If adopted at the meeting, Wachovia
directors would stand for election annually, beginning at
Wachovias 2008 annual meeting of stockholders. Under North
Carolina law, all directors, including those directors elected
at this 2007 annual meeting of stockholders, would continue to
serve the remainder of their terms. However, the terms of
Class I directors expire at the 2008 annual meeting of
stockholders, and in order to facilitate the immediate
transition from classified terms to annual terms, the directors
in classes II and III are expected to tender their
resignations, and be reappointed by the board prior to the 2008
annual meeting of stockholders, so that all directors will be
elected for a one-year term at that meeting. If Proposal 2
is approved by stockholders, the board will adopt conforming
amendments to Wachovias bylaws regarding declassifying the
board.
Approval of Proposal 2 to amend our articles of
incorporation to declassify the board requires the affirmative
vote of at least 80% of the outstanding shares of Wachovia
common stock entitled to vote at the meeting. If this proposal
does not receive the required number of votes in favor,
Wachovias articles of incorporation will not be amended
and our directors will continue to serve three-year terms as our
articles of incorporation currently provide.
24
If approved, this amendment will become effective upon the
filing of articles of amendment to Wachovias articles of
incorporation with the Secretary of State of North Carolina.
Wachovia would make this filing promptly after approval of the
proposal at the meeting.
Wachovias board of directors have determined that the
proposal to amend our articles of incorporation to eliminate the
provisions classifying the terms of our board is in
Wachovias and our stockholders best interests.
Accordingly, Wachovias board has approved this amendment
and recommends that Wachovia stockholders approve this amendment
by voting FOR this proposal.
The board recommends that stockholders vote FOR
this proposal. Approval of this proposal requires the
affirmative vote of 80% of the shares entitled to vote at the
meeting. Abstentions and votes not cast will have the same
effect as votes against this proposal. Therefore, your vote is
important and we urge you to vote FOR this
proposal.
|
|
PROPOSAL 3.
|
PROPOSAL TO
AMEND WACHOVIAS ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION TO PROVIDE
FOR MAJORITY VOTING IN UNCONTESTED DIRECTOR ELECTIONS
|
The board of directors recommends that stockholders approve an
amendment to Wachovias articles of incorporation to
provide for majority voting in uncontested director elections.
The North Carolina Business Corporation Act provides that,
unless specified otherwise in a companys articles of
incorporation, a director is elected by a plurality of the votes
cast. Wachovias articles of incorporation do not specify
any voting standard required in director elections and,
therefore, Wachovias directors are elected by plurality
vote. Plurality voting means that the nominees
receiving the largest number of affirmative votes cast are
elected directors up to the maximum number of directors to be
elected, regardless of the number of withheld votes
or whether affirmative votes constitute a majority of the votes
cast.
In February 2006, our board of directors amended its Corporate
Governance Guidelines to provide for a policy regarding majority
voting in the election of directors. The policy provides that in
an uncontested election (i.e., an election where the only
nominees are those proposed by the board), a nominee for
director who receives a greater number of votes
withheld for his or her election than votes
for his or her election must promptly tender his or
her resignation to the Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee. The Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committee will consider the resignation and recommend
to the board whether to accept or reject it. The board, with the
recommendation of the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, then must accept or reject the resignation within
90 days following the stockholders meeting and must
explain its decision in a publicly available SEC filing.
At the time of adopting the director resignation policy, the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee and the
board recognized that the majority vote standard was an evolving
concept. The Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee and the board have continued to monitor best practices
in this area, and recently many public companies have amended
their charter or bylaws to provide for straight majority voting
rather than the current plurality standard. The board, with the
assistance of the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, has engaged in a further evaluation of the majority
vote standard and, after careful consideration, believes it is
in the best interests of Wachovia and its stockholders to
enhance Wachovias majority vote standard by amending
Wachovias articles of incorporation to provide for
majority voting in uncontested director elections.
Our board, based on the recommendation of the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committee, proposes to amend
Wachovias articles of incorporation to provide that a
nominee for director in an uncontested election will be elected
to the board of directors if the votes cast for such
nominees election exceed the votes cast against such
nominees election. The amendment provides that an
uncontested election is where (i) no stockholder has
submitted to Wachovias secretary a notice of an intent to
nominate a candidate for election at a stockholders
meeting in accordance with the advance notice procedures
described in Wachovias bylaws or (ii) if a notice has
been submitted, it has been withdrawn in writing on or before
the tenth day preceding the date that Wachovia first mails its
notice of the stockholders meeting. In all director
elections other than uncontested elections, directors will be
elected by a plurality of the votes cast at the
stockholders meeting.
25
Under North Carolina law, if an incumbent director is not
re-elected at an annual meeting of stockholders, then, even
though his or her term has expired, the incumbent director
continues to serve in office as a holdover director
until his or her successor is elected or until there is a
decrease in the number of directors. North Carolina law further
provides that if the stockholders fail to elect the full
authorized number of directors, the board of directors may fill
the vacancy by electing a successor. In addition,
Wachovias articles of incorporation authorize the board to
reduce the size of the board to no fewer than nine directors.
Accordingly, to address holdover situations the amendment to
Wachovias articles of incorporation also provides that if
a director fails to receive the required majority vote, the
board may decrease the number of directors, fill any vacancy, or
take other appropriate action.
If Proposal 3 is approved, the board is expected to amend
its Corporate Governance Guidelines to modify its existing
director resignation policy in order to make it consistent with
North Carolina law. Directors would no longer be required to
tender their resignation if they fail to receive the required
majority vote since the board can unilaterally address a
holdover situation. Rather, the revised provision would provide
that in the event an incumbent director fails to receive the
required majority vote for election, the board of directors may
decrease the number of directors, fill any vacancy, or take
other appropriate action, taking into account the recommendation
of the Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee. The
board would act on the Corporate Governance &
Nominating Committees recommendation within 90 days
following the date of the stockholders meeting at which
the election occurred, and would promptly disclose its decision
in a
Form 8-K
filed with the SEC. In addition, the provision would provide
that to the extent practicable and as permitted by North
Carolina law, any director who fails to receive the required
majority vote would not participate in the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committees recommendation
or the boards consideration of the matter. If stockholders
approve Proposal 3, the board also will approve conforming
amendments to Wachovias bylaws regarding the election of
directors.
Approval of Proposal 3 to amend our articles of
incorporation to provide for majority voting in uncontested
director elections requires the affirmative vote of a majority
of the votes cast on Proposal 3 at the meeting. If the
proposed amendment is approved, a new paragraph 12 will be
added to Wachovias articles of incorporation, as described
in the attached Appendix C to this proxy statement.
Appendix C is incorporated herein by reference and
stockholders are encouraged to read Appendix C in
its entirety.
If approved, this amendment will become effective upon the
filing of articles of amendment to Wachovias articles of
incorporation with the Secretary of State of North Carolina.
Wachovia would make this filing promptly after approval of the
proposal at the meeting. The new majority vote standard would
then be applicable to the election of directors at the 2008
annual meeting of stockholders.
Wachovias board of directors has determined that the
proposal to amend our articles of incorporation to provide for
majority voting in uncontested director elections is in
Wachovias and our stockholders best interests.
Accordingly, Wachovias board has approved this amendment
and recommends that Wachovia stockholders approve this amendment
by voting FOR this proposal.
The board recommends that stockholders vote FOR
this proposal. Approval of this proposal requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on
Proposal 3 at the meeting. Proxies, unless indicated to the
contrary, will be voted FOR this proposal.
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PROPOSAL 4.
|
PROPOSAL TO
RATIFY THE APPOINTMENT OF AUDITORS
|
The Audit Committee of the board has appointed KPMG LLP as
Wachovias auditors for the year 2007 and, in accordance
with established policy, that appointment is being submitted to
stockholders for ratification. In the event the appointment is
not ratified by a majority of votes cast, in person or by proxy,
it is anticipated that no change in auditors would be made for
the current year because of the difficulty and expense of making
any change so long after the beginning of the current year, but
that vote would be considered in connection with the
auditors appointment for 2008.
KPMG LLP were our auditors for the year ended December 31,
2006, and a representative of the firm is expected to attend the
meeting, respond to appropriate questions and, if the
representative desires, which is not now anticipated, make a
statement.
26
The following table sets forth the aggregate fees for
professional services provided by KPMG LLP to Wachovia for the
calendar years 2006 and 2005.
FEES PAID
TO INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
Audit Fees (1)
|
|
$
|
21,260,660
|
|
|
|
17,123,875
|
|
Audit-Related Fees (2)
|
|
|
7,034,986
|
|
|
|
6,660,637
|
|
Tax Fees (3)
|
|
|
3,680,131
|
|
|
|
4,429,903
|
|
All Other Fees (4)
|
|
|
19,747
|
|
|
|
555,355
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Fees
|
|
$
|
31,995,524
|
|
|
|
28,769,770
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
These are fees paid for professional services rendered for the
audit of Wachovias annual consolidated financial
statements and internal controls, for the reviews of the
consolidated financial statements included in Wachovias
quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q,
and for services normally provided in connection with statutory
or regulatory filings or engagements. |
|
(2) |
|
These are fees paid for assurance and related services that were
reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of
our consolidated financial statements and that are not reported
under Audit Fees above, including fees relating to
audits of financial statements of employee benefit plans and
certain subsidiaries, internal control reports, and internal
control related services. |
|
(3) |
|
These are fees paid for professional services rendered for tax
compliance, tax planning, and tax advice. For 2006 and 2005, tax
fees included tax compliance fees of approximately
$3.4 million and $2.8 million, respectively. |
|
(4) |
|
These are fees paid for permissible work performed by KPMG LLP
that does not meet the above categories, consisting of risk
management services, merger integration assistance, forensic
services and business process reviews. |
Audit
Committee Pre-Approval of Audit and Permissible Non-Audit
Services
Our Audit Committee pre-approves all audit, audit-related and
non-audit services provided by our independent auditors, KPMG
LLP, prior to the engagement of KPMG LLP with respect to those
services. Generally, prior to or at the beginning of each year,
Wachovias management submits to the Audit Committee
detailed information regarding the specific audit, audit-related
and permissible non-audit services with respect to which it
recommends the Committee engage the independent auditors to
provide for the fiscal year. Management discusses the services
with the Audit Committee, including the rationale for using our
independent auditors for non-audit services, including tax
services, and whether the provision of those non-audit services
by KPMG LLP is compatible with maintaining the auditors
independence. Thereafter, any additional audit, audit-related or
non-audit services that arise and that were not submitted to the
Audit Committee for pre-approval at the beginning of the year
are also similarly submitted to the Audit Committee for
pre-approval. The Audit Committee has delegated to the Chair of
the Audit Committee the authority to pre-approve the engagement
of the independent auditors when the entire Committee is unable
to do so. All such pre-approvals are then reported to the entire
Committee at the next Committee meeting.
In the Matter of KPMG LLP Certain Auditor Independence
Issues. As Wachovia has disclosed in our 2006
Annual Report on
Form 10-K,
the Securities and Exchange Commission has requested Wachovia to
produce certain information concerning any agreements or
understandings by which Wachovia referred clients to KPMG LLP
during the period January 1, 1997 to November 2003 in
connection with an inquiry regarding the independence of KPMG
LLP as Wachovias outside auditors during such period.
Wachovia is continuing to cooperate with the SEC in its inquiry,
which is being conducted pursuant to a formal order of
investigation entered by the SEC on October 21, 2003.
Wachovia believes the SECs inquiry relates to certain tax
services offered to Wachovia customers by KPMG LLP during the
period from 1997 to early 2002 and whether these activities
might have caused KPMG LLP not to be independent
from Wachovia, as defined by applicable accounting and SEC
regulations requiring auditors of an SEC-reporting company
27
to be independent of the company. Wachovia
and/or KPMG
LLP received fees in connection with a small number of personal
financial consulting transactions related to these services.
KPMG LLP has confirmed to Wachovia that during all periods
covered by the SECs inquiry, including the present, KPMG
LLP was and is independent from Wachovia under
applicable accounting and SEC regulations. The Audit Committee
carefully considered all available relevant information about
this matter, including during its discussions regarding the
auditors independence described in Audit Committee
Report, when making its determination to appoint KPMG LLP
as our auditors for 2007.
See also Proposal 1Audit Committee Report.
The board recommends that stockholders vote FOR
this proposal. Proxies, unless indicated to the contrary, will
be voted FOR this proposal.
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|
PROPOSAL 5.
|
A
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING NON-BINDING STOCKHOLDER VOTE
RATIFYING EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
|
The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
Pension Plan, of 1625 L Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20036, an
owner of 12,403 shares of Wachovia common stock, has
advised Wachovia that it intends to present the following
proposal and supporting statement at the meeting. In accordance
with applicable proxy regulations, the proposal and supporting
statement, that are presented as received by Wachovia and for
which Wachovia and our board accept no responsibility, are set
forth below.
RESOLVED, that stockholders of Wachovia Corporation
(Wachovia) urge the board of directors to adopt a
policy that Wachovia stockholders be given the opportunity at
each annual meeting of stockholders to vote on an advisory
resolution, to be proposed by Companys management, to
ratify the compensation of the named executive officers
(NEOs) set forth in the proxy statements
Summary Compensation Table (the SCT) and the
accompanying narrative disclosure of material factors provided
to understand the SCT (but not the Compensation Discussion and
Analysis). The proposal submitted to shareholders should make
clear that the vote is non-binding and would not affect any
compensation paid or awarded to any NEO.
SUPPORTING
STATEMENT
In our view, senior executive compensation at Wachovia has not
always been structured in ways that best serve
stockholders interests. For example, in 2005 Chairman and
CEO G. Kennedy Thompson received $17,321 for taxes associated
with personal use of company aircraft. And non-retired Vice
Chairman Wallace Malone received total compensation calculated
at $12,397,855 for 2005.
We believe that existing U.S. corporate governance
arrangements, including SEC rules and stock exchange listing
standards, do not provide stockholders with enough mechanisms
for providing input to boards on senior executive compensation.
In contrast to U.S. practices, in the United Kingdom,
public companies allow stockholders to cast an advisory vote on
the directors remuneration report, which
discloses executive compensation. Such a vote isnt
binding, but gives stockholders a clear voice that could help
shape senior executive compensation.
Currently U.S. stock exchange listing standards require
stockholder approval of equity-based compensation plans; those
plans, however, set general parameters and accord the
compensation committee substantial discretion in making awards
and establishing performance thresholds for a particular year.
Stockholders do not have any mechanism for providing ongoing
feedback on the application of those general standards to
individual pay packages. (See Lucian Bebchuk &
Jesse Fried, Pay Without Performance 49 (2004))
Similarly, performance criteria submitted for stockholder
approval to allow a company to deduct compensation in excess of
$1 million are broad and do not constrain compensation
committees in setting performance targets for particular senior
executives. Withholding votes from compensation committee
members who are standing for reelection is a blunt and
insufficient instrument for registering
28
dissatisfaction with the way in which the committee has
administered compensation plans and policies in the previous
year.
Accordingly, we urge Wachovias board to allow stockholders
to express their opinion about senior executive compensation at
Wachovia by establishing an annual referendum process. The
results of such a vote would, we think, provide Wachovia with
useful information about whether stockholders view the
companys senior executive compensation, as reported each
year, to be in stockholders best interests.
We urge stockholders to vote for this proposal.
Position
of the Board
Wachovias board recommends that stockholders vote
AGAINST the proposal set forth above for the
following reasons:
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Wachovia already has a more direct, effective process in
place for stockholders to communicate with our board of
directors;
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The proposal would create more confusion than clarity, to the
detriment of Wachovia stockholders; and
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Wachovia already has a very deliberate, thoughtful process
for determining executive compensation.
|
The board believes strongly in Wachovia stockholders having the
mechanisms to provide input to the board. In contrast to the
proponents assertion that Wachovia stockholders do not
have enough mechanisms for providing input to our board on
executive compensation, Wachovia stockholders already have the
ability to directly contact any or all of our board members. As
set forth above under Corporate Governance Policies and
Practices Communications with Directors,
Wachovia stockholders may contact any director at: Board of
Directors (or lead independent director or name of individual
director); c/o Corporate Secretary; Wachovia Corporation;
301 South College Street; Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013.
The board believes this is the most effective means for Wachovia
stockholders to provide input to it on any subject of interest
to stockholders, including executive compensation. The board
believes that the proposal represents a less effective method of
influencing the board because it is an inefficient manner of
expressing support or criticism of executive compensation. The
board believes direct communications are more effective and
accurate because it allows stockholders to voice specific
observations or objections directly to the decision-makers
before decisions are made, as opposed to voting on the results
of those decisions. The board believes that the advisory vote in
the proposal will not provide the Compensation Committee with
meaningful insight into specific stockholder concerns that it
could address when considering Wachovias compensation
program. Direct communications are the most effective, most
accurate voice Wachovia stockholders have in expressing concerns
with our board and eliminate the need for the board and the
Compensation Committee to attempt to interpret the results of
the proposals referendum.
Rather than simplify communications with the board, the board
believes that the proposal would create confusion as to how the
board, the Compensation Committee, and Wachovia interpret the
results of the non-binding referendum. The lack of clarity as to
the meaning of the vote results would eliminate any benefits the
proposal seeks to employ. Stockholders vote for or
against matters for many different reasons and the
board and the Compensation Committee would be left attempting to
interpret the results under the proposed referendum. For
example, if stockholders vote in favor of the executive
compensation, the Compensation Committee is not able to
determine if the vote signifies approval of Wachovias
overall practices or if the vote merely signifies approval of a
particular individuals compensation or a particular
component of the total compensation. Conversely, if stockholders
voted against the executive compensation, the Compensation
Committee does not have clarity with what aspect of executive
compensation stockholders did not agree. Instead of encouraging
stockholders to take advantage of Wachovias current direct
communication policy, the proposal advocates substituting a
narrower, more confusing and less effective mechanism.
29
To Wachovias knowledge, none of our peers and competitors
would be similarly bound by a referendum on compensation. The
board believes this would make it more difficult for Wachovia to
attract and retain senior management. In our industry, human
capital is our most important asset, and we believe that
adoption of the proposal could lead to a perception among senior
executives and top producers that compensation opportunities at
Wachovia may be limited or negatively affected by the advisory
vote when compared with opportunities at our competitors. In
addition, if implemented, our boards decisions regarding
executive compensation would be subject to second guessing and
this may impair Wachovias ability to attract and retain
individuals willing to serve as a director of Wachovia, to the
detriment of our stockholders.
As outlined in Compensation Discussion &
Analysis, the Compensation Committee has a very deliberate
and thoughtful process for setting compensation targets and
determining awards for Wachovias executives. That process
occurs at all Compensation Committee meetings that take place
throughout the year. As outlined in this proxy statement,
executive compensation determinations are a complex and
demanding process and Wachovias board exercises great care
and discipline in its analysis and decision-making. The
Compensation Committee has directly engaged an independent,
executive compensation expert whose firm has no other
significant business relationship with Wachovia. The advice of
this expert is used in establishing peer groups, compensation
targets and determining awards. The board believes that the
Compensation Committee and it advisors are much better informed
as to competitive practices in the industry, Wachovias
relative financial performance position and the appropriate
compensation for this performance than would be possible through
an unstructured, undefined referendum. Establishing executive
compensation involves balancing numerous business considerations
against competitive pressures and is an undertaking for which
the board and the Compensation Committee are uniquely suited and
should maintain responsibility. The results of the non-binding
referendum in the proposal could have a chilling effect on the
Compensation Committees deliberations because the
Compensation Committee would not have any specificity from the
results of the referendum as to what part of Wachovias
executive compensation program produced the voting results. As a
result, the proposal may place undue pressure on the
Compensation Committee to compensate Wachovia executives below
competitive levels that would cause great harm to Wachovia
stockholders and circumvent the purposes of Wachovias
executive compensation program as discussed in
Compensation Discussion & Analysis. The
Compensation Committee is charged with exercising its fiduciary
duties to set compensation that is in the best interests of
Wachovias stockholders and this responsibility should not
be subject to stockholder vote after the fact.
WACHOVIAS BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL. PROXIES, UNLESS INDICATED TO
THE CONTRARY, WILL BE VOTED AGAINST THIS
PROPOSAL.
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PROPOSAL 6.
|
A
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING QUALIFICATIONS OF DIRECTOR
NOMINEES
|
Hilda Kaplis and Sydney Kaplis Kay, of 5718 Harvest Hill Road,
Dallas, Texas
75230-1253,
owners of 317 shares of Wachovia common stock, have advised
Wachovia that they intend to present the following proposal and
supporting statement at the meeting. In accordance with
applicable proxy regulations, the proposal that is presented as
received by Wachovia and for which Wachovia and our board
accepts no responsibility, is set forth below.
Qualifications
for Director Nominees
WHEREAS MOST of the corporate Boards in the United States are
currently made up of present or past Chairmen/CEOs/Presidents
having considerable executive background experiences in a wide
variety of businesses.
WHEREAS MOST of the Director Nominees come from businesses
totally different from that of the company to which they have
been nominated to serve on its independent executive governance
Board.
WHEREAS It is known, throughout the financial industry, that
Director Nominees are often appointed by Chairmen/CEOs with the
power and influence to create their own Boards. John Kenneth
Galbraith, the
30
renown economist, said, Senior Executives in the great
corporations of this country set their own salaries...and stock
option deals...subject to the approval of the Board of Directors
that they have appointed. Not surprisingly, the Directors go
along. (The Dallas Morning News, 1-16-2000, p.
1/10J)
WHEREAS Sir J.E.E. Dalberg said, Power tends to corrupt
and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
WHEREAS Such Directors have been called Puppets by
the author of this Proposal; Flunkies by David
Broder of The Washington Post, and
Rubber-stampers by Steve Hamm of BusinessWeek
magazine.
WHEREAS Currently, ALL the non-employee Directors, COMBINED,
often do not own enough shares in the corporation to which they
have been nominated to have genuine feelings of fiduciary
responsibility to its shareholders. Their allegiance tends to be
directed toward the Chairmen-CEOs who nominated them, revealed
in the enormously distorted Compensation Packages given to the
Principal Executives that are totally unrelated to Performance
year after year after year.
WHEREAS To have a truly independent executive governance Board,
the Nominees must come from sources over which the Chairmen-CEO,
and other Principal Executives in the corporation, have no
control.
WHEREAS NO salaried employees shall qualify as a Director
Nominee: their presence on the Board corrupts and destroys its
function as a totally independent executive governance body.
THEREFORE, it is recommended and requested that, beginning with
the 2008 annual meeting of shareholders, all Director Nominees
be:
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1.
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Individual Investors who shall, for the past five
(5) years, have been, and currently are, the sole owner of
at least five million DOLLARS ($5,000,000) of the
corporations shares, and/or
|
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2.
|
Representatives from Mutual, Pension, State Treasury Funds or
Foundations that hold at least two million (2,000,000) SHARES in
the corporation to which they are being nominated..
|
Position
of the Board
Wachovias board recommends that stockholders vote
AGAINST the proposal set forth above for the
following reasons:
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The Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committees present process for identifying qualified
individuals to serve as director already ensures that
Wachovias board consists of experienced and independent
directors and, therefore, the proposals stock ownership
and other qualification requirements are unnecessary;
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Wachovias board believes that the proposal, if adopted,
would be harmful to Wachovia and its stockholders because its
requirements would immediately disqualify substantially all of
the boards existing directors from serving as a director
in the future and would unnecessarily limit the available pool
of qualified director candidates for Wachovia;
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The boards existing stock ownership policy for
directors is a more flexible way of ensuring that director and
stockholder interests are aligned.
|
The board strongly believes that it would not be in the best
interests of Wachovia and its stockholders to adopt this
proposal. The board believes that its present nominating process
already ensures that experienced, dedicated, and independent
directors serve on Wachovias board and that the arbitrary
stock ownership and other qualification requirements for
director nominees that would be mandated by the proposal are
unnecessary and would be harmful to stockholders.
As described under Corporate Governance Policies and
Practices Director Nomination Process, the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee, which
consists solely of independent directors, has developed a
process for identifying, and recommending to the board,
individuals qualified to become Wachovia directors. In
evaluating current members of the board and new candidates, the
Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee considers
the needs of the entire board and Wachovia in light of the
current mix of director skills and attributes, and considers a
variety of issues and factors in assessing the
31
qualifications of individual director nominees, including the
individuals business experience and background, financial
expertise, reputation, diversity, and knowledge and experience
in matters impacting financial institutions such as Wachovia.
The Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee also
considers the boards policies outlined in the boards
Corporate Governance Guidelines, including those relating to the
ability of directors to devote time to board and committee
matters and the boards belief that a substantial majority
of the board should consist of independent directors. Wachovia
believes that its nominating process has resulted in a strong
board that is highly experienced, dedicated and well equipped to
serve Wachovia and its stockholders. The board also has strong
independent leadership, as evidenced by the existence of a lead
independent director and 89% of the members of the board being
considered independent directors as determined in accordance
with NYSE rules and the boards independence standards. The
board, therefore, strongly disagrees with the proposals
suggestion that its board can only be independent and effective
if all director nominees satisfy the stock ownership and other
requirements specified in the proposal, and believes that the
proposal is unnecessary.
In addition to being unnecessary, the board believes that the
proposal, if implemented, would be harmful to Wachovia and its
stockholders. For example, if adopted, the proposals stock
ownership requirements would disqualify for nomination in 2008
as many as 16 of Wachovias 19 existing directors,
including 16 of its outside, independent directors. As a result,
there would be an immediate and extreme turnover in the
membership of the board that would be detrimental to Wachovia
and its stockholders. Wachovia is a complex, diversified
financial services company and its stockholders clearly benefit
from having a solid core of active, knowledgeable and
experienced directors. The implementation of the proposal would
result in a board with a significant number of new directors
unfamiliar with, and inexperienced in, Wachovias
operations and its long-term strategy. Moreover, the strict
stock ownership and other requirements would significantly and
unnecessarily limit the available pool of qualified director
candidates for Wachovia. In addition to disqualifying existing
Wachovia directors, it is very likely that the proposals
arbitrary stock ownership requirements would disqualify many
future candidates for director who would have superior
qualifications, but would not satisfy the proposals
requirements. Wachovia and its stockholders, therefore, would be
denied the services of talented individuals, some of whom may
end up serving as directors for other financial services
companies. There also would be no guarantee that Wachovia would
be able to identify either individual investors satisfying the
stock ownership requirements or representatives from the
specific groups identified in the proposal who would be both
qualified to serve as a director of the fourth largest banking
company in the United States and willing to serve as a director.
Accordingly, the board believes that limiting the Corporate
Governance & Nominating Committees and the
boards ability to consider qualified director nominees by
imposing arbitrary stock ownership requirements would be harmful
to stockholders and is not justified, especially given the
current strength of the board and its present nominating process.
The board, however, recognizes the importance of aligning the
boards interests with those of stockholders. The board has
already adopted a common stock ownership policy for members of
the board, which requires that directors own common stock or
common stock equivalents having a value equal to at least five
times the annual cash retainer, which is currently $70,000.
Under the policy, the directors have three years from first
becoming a director to meet the minimum requirements. The board
believes that its stock ownership policy is a more appropriate
method of aligning interests because it allows new directors to
meet requirements over time rather than automatically barring
otherwise qualified directors from serving as directors.
WACHOVIAS BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL. PROXIES, UNLESS INDICATED TO
THE CONTRARY, WILL BE VOTED AGAINST THIS
PROPOSAL.
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PROPOSAL 7.
|
A
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING REPORTING POLITICAL
CONTRIBUTIONS
|
The AFL-CIO Reserve Fund, 815 Sixteenth Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20006, an owner of 1,067 shares of
Wachovia common stock, has advised Wachovia that it intends to
present the following proposal and supporting statement at the
meeting. In accordance with applicable proxy regulations, the
proposal and
32
supporting statement, that are presented as received by Wachovia
and for which Wachovia and our board accept no responsibility,
are set forth below.
Shareholder
Proposal
Resolved, that the shareholders of Wachovia
(Wachovia or the Company) hereby request
that the Company provide a report, updated semi-annually,
disclosing the Companys:
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1.
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Policies and procedures for political contributions (both direct
and indirect) made with corporate funds.
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2.
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Monetary and non-monetary contributions to political candidates,
political parties, political committees and other political
entities organized and operating under 26 USC Sec. 527 of
the Internal Revenue Code including the following:
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a.
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An accounting of the Companys funds contributed to any of
the organizations described above;
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b.
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Identification of the person or persons in the Company who
participated in making the decisions to contribute;
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c.
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The internal guidelines or policies, if any, governing the
Companys political contributions.
|
This report shall be presented to the Board of Directors
Audit Committee or other relevant oversight committee, and
posted on the Companys website.
Supporting
Statement
As long-term shareholders of Wachovia, we support policies that
apply transparency and accountability to corporate political
giving. Absent a system of accountability, we believe that
corporate executives will be free to use the Companys
assets for political objectives that are not in the interests of
the Company and its shareholders. We are concerned that there is
currently no single source of information that provides all of
the information sought by this resolution.
Working Americans do business with our Company as depositors and
brokerage clients. They invest their retirement savings through
Wachovia and own shares in the Company itself. We believe these
relationships are based on the expectation of trust in Wachovia.
In our view, this trust is imperiled by Wachovias partisan
role in the national debate on Social Security that affects the
retirement security of our Companys depositors and
investors.
Our Company has been a member of the Alliance for Worker
Retirement Security (AWRS), which is in our opinion
the main business-backed lobby group for privatization of Social
Security. Wachovia is one of only two known financial services
firms remaining in AWRS (Charlotte Observer, 2/7/05), and
as the groups director pointed out, there is no reason to
belong to AWRS except to support privatization
(St. Louis Post Dispatch, 2/9/05).
We believe that Wachovias support for these groups creates
a serious potential conflict of interest between the
Companys own interest in profits from managing privatized
Social Security accounts and the interests of its clients in
preserving Social Security in its current form. For this reason,
we believe that complete political contributions disclosure by
the Company is necessary for the Board and its shareholders to
be able to fully evaluate the political use of corporate
assets.
Position
of the Board
Wachovias board recommends that stockholders vote
AGAINST the proposal set forth above for the
following reasons:
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Federal and state election laws already require extensive
disclosure;
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33
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Wachovias policy is that it does not use corporate
funds to make contributions to political candidates, political
parties or committees, or political entities organized under
Section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code; and
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If adopted, the proposal would serve no useful purpose, be
overly burdensome and result in unnecessary expense for Wachovia
stockholders.
|
The board believes that it is not necessary to adopt this
proposal. Federal and state laws already require extensive
disclosure of political contributions, and Wachovia complies
with all applicable laws and regulations regarding political
contributions and disclosure. In addition, Wachovias
policy is not to use corporate funds to make contributions to
the political candidates and entities described in the proposal,
and information regarding Wachovias policies on political
contributions is located at Wachovias website. The board
believes that any additional disclosures or reports prepared by
Wachovia relating to its political contributions and activities
would result in unnecessary duplication and expense for Wachovia
and its stockholders.
As a large financial services company involved in many different
businesses, including consumer and commercial lending,
securities brokerage, asset and wealth management and insurance,
Wachovia is subject to significant federal, state and local
regulation. Wachovia recognizes that these regulations can have
a profound impact on the way we operate our business, deliver
value to our stockholders, support our employees and serve our
customers and communities. To increase the likelihood that our
views on legislative and regulatory developments affecting
Wachovia and its constituencies are included in the legislative
process, the board believes that it is in the best interests of
Wachovia and its stockholders that Wachovia be an active
participant in the electoral process.
Wachovias policy, however, is that it does not use
corporate funds to make contributions to political candidates,
political parties or committees, or political entities organized
under Section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code. Instead,
Wachovias political activities consist primarily of
Wachovias sponsorship of political action committees,
known as PACs, which solicit and accept voluntary contributions
from eligible employees and make political contributions to
federal, state and local candidates and candidate committees
that promote responsible government and support effective
financial legislation important to Wachovia and its
stockholders. Decisions regarding political contributions by the
PACs are subject to the oversight of the board of trustees for
each PAC based upon advancing the best interests of Wachovia and
its stockholders and the recommendations made voluntarily by
contributing Wachovia employees. Any Wachovia employee who
contributes to a PAC may request a PAC contribution for a
candidate
and/or
candidate committee. As required by law, all PAC contributions
are reported on a periodic basis to the Federal Election
Commission and to the appropriate state election authorities.
Reports made to those agencies are a matter of public record. In
addition, Wachovias PACs and political contributions made
by the PACs are subject to annual internal audits.
The proposals reporting requirements are unnecessary given
Wachovias political contributions policy described above
and on its website. The board also believes that the legally
required disclosures currently being made by our PACs and the
recipients of political contributions from the PACs, as well as
Wachovias internal oversight process and policies and
procedures, are more than adequate and that any additional
disclosure would serve no useful purpose, would be burdensome,
and would result in an unnecessary duplication and expense for
Wachovias stockholders.
WACHOVIAS BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL. PROXIES, UNLESS INDICATED TO
THE CONTRARY, WILL BE VOTED AGAINST THIS
PROPOSAL.
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PROPOSAL 8.
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A
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING SEPARATING THE OFFICES OF
CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
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Mr. Richard A. Dee, of 115 East 89th Street, New York,
New York 10128, an owner of 200 shares of Wachovia common
stock, has advised Wachovia that he intends to present the
following proposal and supporting statement at the meeting. In
accordance with applicable proxy regulations, the proposal and
34
supporting statement, that are presented as received by Wachovia
and for which Wachovia and our board accept no responsibility,
are set forth below.
Stockholders hereby request that the Board of Directors
of Wachovia Corporation adopt promptly a resolution requiring
that it have a Chairman who serves in that capacity only, and
has no management duties, titles or responsibilities.
What conflicts of interest can be more damaging to the
interests of stockholders than those that occur when overseers
are allowed to oversee and to supervise themselves?
At Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, and other legends of
mismanagement and corruption, the Chairmen also served as
CEOs. Their dual roles helped those individuals to achieve
virtually total control of the companies.
I believe that far too many of Corporate Americas
problems stem from the efforts of title and power-hungry senior
executives to concentrate power in themselves. Such amassing of
power is a somewhat recent phenomenon in the history of
publicly-owned companies, but certainly not a recent phenomenon
in the history of nations. Such concentrations of power rarely
have proven to be in the best interests of stockholders or
citizenries.
When a top operating officer is allowed to serve also as
its Chairman, or the position is abolished, a crucial link in a
proven successful chain of command and responsibility is
eliminatedand the owners of a company, its outside
stockholders, are deprived of both a vital protection against
conflicts of interest and a clear and direct channel of
communication to the company.
Allowing senior executives, such as CEOs and
Presidents, to be appointed directors of publicly-owned
companies employing them is, in itself, a fairly recent turn of
events. Their presence at board meetings was long considered
inappropriate inasmuch as it could discourage proper
consideration of matters involving them. They were, at times,
invited to be present. Isnt it fair NOW to
ask: What does that say about allowing them to rule
the roost?
When a Chairman also runs a company, the information
received by directors, auditors, and stockholders may not be
accurate. If a Chairman/CEO wishes to cover up corporate
improprieties, how difficult is it to convince subordinates to
go along? If they refuse, to whom do wary subordinates complain?
As a banker, investment banker, and concerned and
outspoken stockholder, my experience with corporate officers and
directors has been considerableand gained over a
considerable period.
It is unfortunate that so few individual outside
stockholders ever become well-informed about the companies in
which they risk their hard-earned money. And almost none ever
question corporate actions. Far too many institutional investors
are in the same boat. And that combination of stockholders has
proven a recipe for disasters.
Although institutional stockholders are charged by law
with protecting their investors, most that I have encountered
were far more interested in currying favor with managements than
in questioning them. They wont chance losing collateral
business and access to the extremely profitable Inside
Information Superhighway. They are easy prey for
managements that spend considerable time and stockholder money
convincing large holders to vote against stockholder
proposals that challenge what is fast becoming their absolute
power.
Please vote FOR this proposal.
Position
of the Board
Wachovias board recommends that stockholders vote
AGAINST the proposal set forth above for the
following reasons:
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If adopted, the proposal would unnecessarily reduce the
boards flexibility in corporate governance matters;
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Wachovias lead independent director structure is a
recognized viable corporate governance structure having benefits
very similar to the proposal; and
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Wachovias strong corporate governance practices and its
corporate performance do not require the changes requested in
the proposal.
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The board believes that it would not be in the best interests of
Wachovia and its stockholders to require that the Chairman of
the Board serve in that capacity only and have no management
duties, titles or responsibilities. The proposal would prevent
Wachovias Chief Executive Officer from also serving as
Chairman of the Board, and suggests that separating the role of
Chairman of the Board from the Chief Executive Officer is
necessary for ensuring an independent board. The board strongly
disagrees with the proposal because it believes that its
existing corporate governance practices already provide for
strong independent leadership on the board, as well as direct
accountability to stockholders.
As provided in the boards Corporate Governance Guidelines,
the board believes that a substantial majority of the board
should consist of independent directors, and 89% of the members
of the board are independent directors, as determined in
accordance with NYSE rules and the boards independence
standards described in Corporate Governance Policies and
PracticesDirector Independence. Each of the members
of the boards Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, Audit Committee and Management Resources &
Compensation Committee are independent directors.
The boards independent leadership is further enhanced by
the existence of a lead independent director, which has been in
place at Wachovia since 2000. The lead independent director is
elected by the independent directors and has clearly delineated
duties. As set forth in the boards Corporate Governance
Guidelines, the lead independent director, among other things,
assists the Chairman of the Board with board related matters,
including approving meeting schedules and agendas, and acts as a
liaison between the Chairman and the independent directors. The
board understands that corporate governance experts recognize
that having a lead independent director is a viable corporate
governance structure, having benefits very similar to separating
the role of Chairman of the Board and the Chief Executive
Officer.
The board believes that the existence of the lead independent
director, as well as some of its other governance practices,
ensures the independent exchange of information among
Wachovias independent directors and provides Wachovia and
its stockholders with the same benefits that the proposal
suggests may only be obtained by separating the role of Chairman
of the Board and Chief Executive Officer. For example, as set
forth in the boards Corporate Governance Guidelines or as
provided in other practices of the board or Wachovia,
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the board meets with the non-management directors in executive
session at least three times a year and meets in executive
session with only the independent directors at least once a year;
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the lead independent director presides at all meetings of the
non-management directors and the independent directors;
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the lead independent director may also call meetings of the
independent directors, if desired;
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the board has provided a process for stockholders to communicate
directly with one or more directors, including the lead
independent director; and
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Wachovias corporate governance website also provides a
method for interested parties to communicate directly with the
boards Audit Committee.
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As noted in the boards Corporate Governance Guidelines,
given the existence of the lead independent director and
Wachovias overall governance profile, as well as the
boards belief that it should maintain the flexibility to
determine the leadership of Wachovia, the board does not have a
fixed policy regarding the separation of the offices of the
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer. The
stockholder proposal, however, would unnecessarily eliminate the
flexibility of the board to consider whether a member of
management is the best suited to serve as Chairman of the Board
at a given time. The board believes that Wachovia and its
stockholders benefit from the boards current ability to
freely select the Chairman of the Board based on criteria that
it deems to be in the best interests of Wachovia and its
stockholders.
36
In the boards view, Wachovias stockholders have
benefited from the boards current sound corporate
governance practices and strong independent board leadership,
and there is no need to require the separation of the role of
Chairman of the Board from Chief Executive Officer.
Wachovias performance, which includes five consecutive
years of double digit earnings per share growth and a stock that
has significantly outperformed the Keefe, Bruyette &
Woods Bank Stock Index and the S&P 500 Index over the past
five years (as shown in Performance Graph), is solid
evidence that our current corporate governance structure is
working.
WACHOVIAS BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL. PROXIES, UNLESS INDICATED TO
THE CONTRARY, WILL BE VOTED AGAINST THIS
PROPOSAL.
OTHER
STOCKHOLDER MATTERS
Management is not aware of any other matters to be voted on at
the meeting. If any other matters are presented for a vote, the
enclosed proxy confers discretionary authority to the
individuals named as proxies to vote the shares represented by
proxy, as to those matters.
Stockholder proposals intended to be included in our proxy
statement and voted on at the 2008 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders must be received at our offices at 301 South
College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013,
Attention: Corporate Secretary, on or before
November [ l ],
2007. Applicable SEC rules and regulations govern the submission
of stockholder proposals and our consideration of them for
inclusion in next years proxy statement and form of proxy.
Pursuant to Wachovias bylaws, in order for any business
not included in the proxy statement for the 2008 Annual Meeting
of Stockholders to be brought before the meeting by a
stockholder, the stockholder must be entitled to vote at that
meeting and must give timely written notice of that business to
Wachovias Corporate Secretary. That meeting is currently
scheduled to be held on April 22, 2008, and to be timely,
the notice must not be received any earlier than
January 18, 2008 (90 days prior to April 17,
2008, the first anniversary of this years annual meeting
date), nor any later than February 17, 2008 (60 days
prior to April 17, 2008). If the date of the meeting is
advanced by more than 30 days or delayed by more than
60 days from April 22, 2008, the notice must be
received no earlier than the 90th day prior to the 2008
annual meeting and not later than either the 60th day prior
to the 2008 annual meeting or the tenth day after public
disclosure of the actual meeting date, whichever is later. The
notice must contain the information required by our bylaws.
Similarly, a stockholder wishing to submit a director nomination
directly at an annual meeting of stockholders must deliver
written notice of the nomination within the time period
described in this paragraph and comply with the information
requirements in our bylaws relating to stockholder nominations.
For information regarding stockholder nominations to be
considered by the Corporate Governance & Nominating
Committee, see Corporate Governance Policies and
Practices Director Nomination Process. A proxy
may confer discretionary authority to vote on any matter at a
meeting if we do not receive notice of the matter within the
time-frames described above. A copy of our bylaws is available
upon request to: Wachovia Corporation, 301 South College Street,
Charlotte, North Carolina
28288-0013,
Attention: Corporate Secretary. The Chairman of the meeting may
exclude matters that are not properly presented in accordance
with the foregoing requirements.
MISCELLANEOUS
The information referred to under the captions
Compensation Committee Report on Executive
Compensation, Performance Graph, and
Audit Committee Report (to the extent permitted
under the 1934 Act) (i) shall not be deemed to be
soliciting material or to be filed with
the SEC or subject to Regulation 14A or the liabilities of
Section 18 of the 1934 Act, and
(ii) notwithstanding anything to the contrary that may be
contained in any filing by Wachovia under the 1934 Act or
the Securities Act of 1933, shall not be deemed to be
incorporated by reference in any such filing.
March [ l ],
2007
37
Appendix A
Director
Independence Standards
The rules of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
provide that a Wachovia director does not qualify as independent
unless the board of directors affirmatively determines that the
director has no material relationship with Wachovia. The NYSE
rules require a board to consider all of the relevant facts and
circumstances in determining the materiality of a
directors relationship with Wachovia, and permit the board
to adopt and disclose standards to assist the board in making
determinations of independence. Accordingly, the board has
adopted the independence standards outlined below to assist the
board in determining whether a director has a material
relationship with Wachovia. These independence standards should
be read together with the NYSEs independence rules,
including the bright line tests and the applicable look-back
periods contained in the NYSEs rules.
Customer
Relationships
General
Standard for Wachovia Customer Relationships
A lending, deposit, banking, brokerage, investment advisory,
investment banking, insurance, trust, custodial or other
customer relationship between Wachovia and (i) a director,
(ii) an Affiliated Entity of a director, (iii) an
Immediate Family Member, or (iv) an Affiliated Entity of an
Immediate Family Member will not be deemed a material
relationship if the relationship was made in the ordinary course
of business and on substantially the same terms as those
prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with other
nonaffiliated persons and, to the extent applicable, the
relationship satisfies the other specific customer relationship
standards for the director and Immediate Family Member
relationships described below.
Specific
Standards for Wachovia Customer Relationships
A relationship is not material if Wachovia is providing
financial services to an entity where a director is an employee,
or to an entity where an Immediate Family Member is an executive
officer, and the payments (i.e. interest payments and fees on
loans and fees for financial services) made by the entity to
Wachovia, or received by the other entity from Wachovia, for
such financial services, in any fiscal year, are less than the
greater of $1 million or two percent of such other
entitys consolidated gross revenues.
Lending
Relationships
A relationship is not material if Wachovia is providing lending
services to (i) a director, (ii) an Affiliated Entity
of a director, (iii) an Immediate Family Member, or
(iv) an Affiliated Entity of an Immediate Family Member who
shares the directors home or who is financially dependent
on the director and
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the loan or extension of credit was made in the ordinary course
of business and on substantially the same terms, including
interest rates and collateral, as, and following credit
underwriting procedures that were not less stringent than, those
prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with other
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the loan or extension of credit when made did not involve more
than the normal risk of collectability or, from Wachovias
perspective, present other unfavorable features; |
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the loan or extension of credit otherwise complies with
applicable law, including Regulation O of the Federal
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the loan or extension of credit is not classified as nonaccrual,
past due, restructured or potential problems (as provided in
Item III.C.1. and 2. of Industry Guide 3, Statistical
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Supplier
or Other Business Relationships
General
Standard for Supplier or Other Business Relationships
A supplier or other business relationship between Wachovia and
(i) a director, (ii) an Affiliated Entity of a
director, (iii) an Immediate Family Member, or (iv) an
Affiliated Entity of an Immediate Family Member will not be
deemed a material relationship if the relationship was made in
the ordinary course of business and on substantially the same
terms as those prevailing at the time for comparable
transactions with other nonaffiliated persons and, to the extent
applicable, the relationship satisfies the other specific
business relationship standard for the director and Immediate
Family Member relationships described below.
Specific
Standard for Supplier or Other Business Relationships
The supplier or other business relationship is not material if
the business transaction involves Wachovia and an Affiliated
Entity of a director, or an Affiliated Entity of an Immediate
Family Member, and the payments made by the entity to Wachovia,
or received by the other entity from Wachovia, for property or
services, in any fiscal year, are less than the greater of
$1 million or two percent of such other entitys
consolidated gross revenues.
Family
Relationships
The employment by Wachovia of an Immediate Family Member will
not be deemed a material relationship if (i) the Immediate
Family Member is not an executive officer of Wachovia and
(ii) the compensation and benefits of the Immediate Family
Member were established by Wachovia in accordance with the
compensation policies and practices applicable to Wachovia
employees in comparable positions.
Charitable
Relationships
Contributions, other than matching gift contributions, by
Wachovia or the Wachovia Foundation, to a non-profit entity,
including educational institutions, where a director or an
Immediate Family Member is employed as an executive officer will
not be deemed a material relationship if the contributions, in
any fiscal year, are less than the greater of $1 million or
two percent of such other entitys consolidated gross
revenues.
Consulting
or Advisory Relationships
A director may not accept from Wachovia any payments for
consulting, advisory or other personal services, other than
director and committee fees and pension or other forms of
deferred compensation for prior service (provided such
compensation is not contingent in any way on continued service).
Other
Relationships
Relationships, including charitable relationships, between
Wachovia and an entity, including a non-profit entity or other
charitable organization, where a director or an Immediate Family
Member serves solely as a non-management director, advisory
director or trustee (or in a similar capacity) will not be
deemed a material relationship.
Definitions
Affiliated Entity of a director means any entity (i) where
the director is an employee or (ii) that is a related
interest (as defined in Regulation O of the Federal
Reserve Board) of a director.
Affiliated Entity of an Immediate Family Member means any entity
(i) where the Immediate Family Member is an executive
officer or (ii) that would be a related
interest (as defined in Regulation O of the Federal
Reserve Board) of an Immediate Family Member.
A-2
Immediate Family Member means a directors spouse, parents,
children, siblings, mothers and
fathers-in-law,
sons and
daughters-in-law,
brothers and
sisters-in-law,
and anyone (other than domestic employees) who shares the
directors home.
Wachovia means Wachovia or any of its subsidiaries.
A-3
Appendix B
Proposed
Amendments to Wachovias Articles of Incorporation
Regarding Eliminating the Provisions Classifying the Terms of
Directors
Article 7 of the Articles of Incorporation is hereby
amended by deleting the second full paragraph thereof and by
deleting the last sentence of the third paragraph thereof, as
set forth below:
7. The number of directors shall be determined
from time to time by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
directors then in office, but the number of directors shall not
be less than nine or more than 30, provided that no decrease in
the number of directors shall shorten the term of any director
then in office.
The board of directors shall be divided into three
classes, as determined by the affirmative vote of a majority of
the directors then in office, each class to be as nearly equal
in number as possible to each other class. At the annual meeting
of shareholders in 1989, one class of directors shall be elected
to hold office initially for a term expiring at the 1990 annual
meeting of shareholders, a second class of directors shall be
elected to hold office initially for a term expiring at the 1991
annual meeting of shareholders, and a third class of directors
shall be elected to hold office initially for a term expiring at
the 1992 annual meeting of shareholders, in each case to hold
office until their successors have been duly elected and
qualified. At each annual meeting of shareholders, the
successors to the class of directors whose term expires at such
meeting shall be elected to hold office for a term expiring at
the annual meeting of shareholders held in the third year
following the year of their election and until their successors
have been duly elected and qualified.
Vacancies in the board of directors that occur between annual
meetings of shareholders at which directors are elected,
including vacancies resulting from an enlargement of the board
within the authorized number of nine to 30 directors, shall be
filled by the affirmative vote of a majority of the remaining
directors even though less than a quorum or by a sole remaining
director, except that any vacancies resulting from removal from
office by a vote of shareholders may be filled by a vote of
shareholders at the same meeting at which such removal occurs.
The directors elected to fill such vacancies shall hold
office for a term expiring at the next annual meeting of
shareholders at which the term of the class of directors to
which they have been elected expires and until their successors
have been duly elected and qualified.
Any director or directors may be removed from office only for
cause and only by the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of the outstanding shares of capital stock of the
corporation entitled to vote in the election of directors,
voting together as a single class.
The foregoing provisions of this Article 7 shall not apply
to any director who may be elected under specified circumstances
by holders of any class or series of stock having a preference
over the common stock as to dividends or upon liquidation.
Special meetings of shareholders, other than special meetings
called under specified circumstances for holders of any class or
series of stock of the corporation having a preference over the
common stock as to dividends or upon liquidation, may be called
only by the Board of Directors, the Chairman of the Board, or
the President of the corporation.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Charter or the
By-laws of the corporation (and as permitted under North
Carolina law to require higher voting percentages than otherwise
prescribed by law), the affirmative vote of the holders of not
less than 80% of the outstanding shares of capital stock of the
corporation entitled to vote in the election of directors,
voting together as a single class, shall be required to amend or
repeal, or to adopt any provision (in this Charter, the By-laws
of the corporation or otherwise) or take any action inconsistent
with or (as to any matter covered by this
Article 7) in a manner other than as prescribed by,
this Article 7.
B-1
Appendix C
Proposed
Amendments to Wachovias Articles of Incorporation
Regarding Majority Voting in Uncontested Director
Elections
The Articles of Incorporation are
hereby amended by adding the following paragraph 12 to the
Articles of Incorporation, which shall read as follows:
12. Except as may otherwise
be provided by these Articles of Incorporation, a nominee for
director in an uncontested election shall be elected to the
board of directors if the votes cast for such nominees
election exceed the votes cast against such nominees
election. For purposes of the foregoing, an uncontested
election means any meeting of shareholders at which
directors are elected and with respect to which either
(i) no shareholder has submitted to the Secretary of the
corporation a notice of an intent to nominate a candidate for
election at such meeting pursuant to the advance notice
requirements for shareholder nominees for director set forth in
the corporations By-laws or (ii) if such a notice has
been submitted with respect to such meeting, all such notices
with respect to such meeting have been withdrawn by their
respective submitting shareholders in writing to the Secretary
of the corporation on or before the tenth day preceding the date
the corporation first mails its notice of meeting for such
meeting to the shareholders. In the event that votes cast for a
nominees election are equal to or less than the votes cast
against such nominees election in an uncontested election,
the board of directors may decrease the number of directors,
fill any vacancy, or take other appropriate action. In all
director elections other than uncontested elections, directors
shall be elected by a plurality of the votes cast.
C-1
THERE ARE THREE WAYS TO VOTE YOUR PROXY
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TELEPHONE VOTING |
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INTERNET VOTING |
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VOTING BY MAIL |
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This method of voting is
available for residents of the
U.S. and Canada. On a touch
tone telephone, call TOLL
FREE 1-877-816-0869, 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week. Have this
proxy card ready, then follow the
prerecorded instructions. Your
vote will be confirmed and cast
as you have directed. Available
until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Daylight
Time on April 16, 2007.
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Visit the Internet voting Web site
at http://proxy.georgeson.com.
Have this proxy card ready and
follow the instructions on your
screen. You will incur only your
usual Internet charges. Available
until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Daylight
Time on April 16, 2007
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Simply mark, sign and date
your proxy card and return it
in the postage-paid envelope
to Georgeson Inc., Wall Street
Station, P.O. Box 1100, New
York, NY 10269-0646. If you
are voting by telephone or the
Internet, please do not mail
your proxy card. |
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TO VOTE BY MAIL, PLEASE DETACH PROXY CARD HERE
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Please mark
votes as in
this example.
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE
FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3 AND 4.
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE
AGAINST PROPOSALS 5, 6, 7 AND 8. |
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A Wachovia proposal to elect directors.
Class I: Ernest S. Rady
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A stockholder proposal regarding non-binding
stockholder vote ratifying executive compensation.
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Class II: Jerry Gitt
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Class III: John T. Casteen, III, Maryellen C. Herringer,
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Joseph Neubauer, Timothy D. Proctor, Van L. Richey
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INSTRUCTIONS: to withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee(s),
write name(s) in the space provided.
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A stockholder proposal regarding qualifications of director nominees.
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A Wachovia proposal to amend Wachovias articles of incorporation to
eliminate the provisions classifying the terms of its board of directors.
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A stockholder proposal regarding reporting political contributions.
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A Wachovia proposal to amend Wachovias articles of incorporation to
provide for majority voting in uncontested director elections.
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4.
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A Wachovia proposal to ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as auditors for
the year 2007.
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o
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8. |
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A stockholder proposal regarding
separating the offices of chairman and chief executive officer.
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I will attend the Annual
Meeting of Stockholders
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Signature |
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Signature (if held jointly) |
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Date |
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NOTE: Signature(s) should agree with name(s) on
proxy form. Executors, administrators, trustees and
other fiduciaries, and persons signing on behalf of
corporations, or partnerships, should so indicate
when signing. |
TO VOTE BY MAIL, PLEASE DETACH PROXY CARD HERE
WACHOVIA CORPORATION
THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
APRIL 17, 2007
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P
R
O
X
Y
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The undersigned holder of shares of common stock of Wachovia Corporation (the Corporation) hereby
constitutes and appoints
and ,
or either of them, the lawful
attorneys and proxies of the undersigned, each with full power of substitution, for and on behalf
of the undersigned, to vote as specified on the matters set forth on the reverse side, all of the
shares of the Corporations common stock held of record by the undersigned on February 12, 2007, at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Corporation to be held on April 17, 2007, at 9:30 a.m.
EDT, at the Charlotte Convention Center, 501 South College Street, Charlotte, North Carolina 28202,
and at any adjournments or postponements thereof.
THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED AS SPECIFIED ON THE REVERSE SIDE. IF NO
SPECIFICATION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3 AND 4 AND AGAINST
PROPOSALS 5, 6, 7 AND 8. IF ANY OTHER MATTERS ARE VOTED ON AT THE MEETING, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED
BY THE PROXYHOLDERS ON SUCH MATTERS IN THEIR SOLE DISCRETION.
PLEASE COMPLETE, DATE AND SIGN THIS PROXY ON THE REVERSE SIDE AND MAIL WITHOUT DELAY IN THE
ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. |
SEE REVERSE SIDE
Return to:
Georgeson Shareholder Communications
Wall Street Station
P.O. Box 1100
New York, NY 10269-0646