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Bank of America said to drop Merrill Lynch name from investment bank

Sign hangs at the entrance of Merrill Lynch headquarters on Thursday, Mar. 12, 2009 in New York, U.S. Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg News

The bank's wealth management unit will use the name Merrill going forward.

Bank of America Corp. is planning to drop Merrill Lynch from the branding of its investment bank, while it will use the name Merrill for its wealth management unit.

The Charlotte, N.C.-based lender will refer to its investment bank as BofA Securities and drop the U.S. Trust name from its private bank, the company said Monday in a statement.

Bank of America acquired Merrill Lynch, known for its “thundering herd” of brokers pitching stocks to Main Street, in the depths of the financial crisis. The company took steps to dissolve the Merrill legal entity in 2013, but had kept the brand name across retail and institutional businesses.

Here are the key changes:

• BofA Securities will be the name for the bank’s institutional broker-dealer businesses, including its global markets, investment banking and capital markets divisions.
• Merrill will be the brand for the bank’s investing and wealth-management unit.
• U.S. Trust will be renamed Bank of America Private Bank.

The moves are part of a campaign rolled out last year with an ad by CEO Brian Moynihan, who took the helm in 2010 after Kenneth Lewis stepped down. The bank posted a record net income of $28.1 billion in 2018, and is remaking its image as it moves on from crisis-era legacies, including the acquisitions of Merrill Lynch and subprime lender Countrywide Financial Corp.

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns about 9.5% of the bank, said financial stocks are a good investment, specifically praising Bank of America’s chief in an interview with CNBC Monday.

“Brian Moynihan has done such a good job running that company since he took over — he was the most underestimated bank executive in the country,” Mr. Buffett said. “Everything he’s said he would do, he’s done it, and he’s beat it. He sets tougher targets for himself all the time and he’s been smart about repurchasing shares.”

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