Helms to Replace Cooley as Seafirst CEO
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Richard P. Cooley, 66, who helped BankAmerica Corp. turn the once-struggling Seafirst Corp. into one of the San Francisco banking firm’s most profitable units, announced that he is retiring as head of the Seattle unit at year-end. Cooley is chairman and chief executive of Seafirst Corp. and Seattle-First National Bank.
Luke Helms, 46, president of Seafirst’s Seattle-First National Bank, will succeed Cooley, who led Seafirst for seven years. Kevin B. Ferrell, 43, a Bank of America senior vice president, will succeed Helms.
Cooley helped engineer the sale of Seafirst to BankAmerica for $125 million in cash and $94 million in stock in 1983, after a rash of problem energy loans had Seafirst reeling. At the time, it was the largest interstate bank purchase.
The energy loans caused a $90.2-million loss at Seafirst in 1982. Much of the red ink resulted from loans that Seafirst bought from the scandal-plagued Penn Square Bank in Oklahoma City, which failed in one of the banking industry’s biggest debacles.
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