Thanks for the memories, Truist. It was like watching a slow-motion train wreck... except the trains were on fire, and the engineers were too busy high-fiving each other to notice.
Truist: Where leadership is optional, but arrogance is mandatory.
If you're wondering whether the rumors are true, you're missing the bigger tragedy: it doesn’t even matter anymore. Whether it's 1,000 layoffs or 10,000, this company is a rotting carcass masquerading as a bank.
Truist has become Wells Fargo Lite — a sad, pitiful imitation of a disgrace.
After importing the worst leadership Wells Fargo had to offer, what did anyone expect? You replace leadership with political ladder-climbers, not principled executives, and you get exactly what you deserve: a decaying, soulless institution run by self-serving parasites who couldn’t navigate a lemonade stand, much less a Fortune 500 company.
This isn’t a company anymore. It’s a hospice center for bad ideas and failed executives.
Layoffs? Go ahead. Patch a g-nshot wound with a Band-Aid. Maybe it'll buy you a few months. Maybe some sycophant will write a LinkedIn post about "how we're stronger than ever." But the rot is too deep, and leadership is too stupid, too gutless, and too obsessed with their bonus packages to fix it. They aren’t saving the bank — they're looting it on the way down.
Client service? Ethical behavior? Employee loyalty? Those were sacrificed on the altar of executive incompetence a long time ago. Clients are just cattle now, herded through endless policy shifts and service disasters while being milked for every last fee. Employees are nothing more than line items, shuffled around or eliminated to make the quarterly numbers look better for exactly five minutes.
The ethical compass isn’t broken — it’s been ripped out, thrown in the trash, and replaced with a compass that points only to “Maximize Bonuses.”
The damage is irreversible. Morale is dead. Talent is bleeding out. Reputation is in free fall. And the only people who don’t see it are the ones whose view is obstructed by their own giant paychecks.
But please, keep trotting out the empty platitudes about being a "purpose-driven" organization while the ship sinks. Maybe if you say it enough times, you’ll believe it yourselves.
The hammer’s coming.
The piper’s waiting.
And when the final bill comes due, no amount of smug self-congratulation in Charlotte is going to save you.
This is not a restructuring. This is a death rattl.
From someone who cared more about the clients and the company than leadership ever did. Sincerely,
Trustless@Truist