Wells Fargo has named company veteran Derek Flowers as its new chief risk officer, a key position as the megabank seeks to repair its standing with regulators.
Flowers will replace Amanda Norton, whose retirement plans were announced earlier this month. Norton, a former JPMorgan Chase executive who
“Building a risk and control foundation appropriate for Wells Fargo's size and complexity remains our top priority,” Scharf said Tuesday in a press release, calling Flowers a “proven leader” whose “background and familiarity with the company” will help it meet that mission.
Flowers, who was previously the bank’s head of strategic execution and operations, has spent more than two decades at the $1.9 trillion-asset bank and has played a key role in helping to rebuild its operations in the wake of past regulatory scandals, Scharf said. The San Francisco bank
During Wells Fargo’s fourth quarter earnings call last week, Scharf pointed to progress the bank has made in resolving some of those issues, while also noting that setbacks were “likely to continue along the way” and describing the process as a “multiyear effort.”
In September, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Flowers’ promotion was effective immediately. He is a member of Wells Fargo’s operating committee and has previously served as the company’s chief market risk officer and chief credit officer.