President Donald Trump is considering nominating U.S. Bancorp Chief Executive Richard Davis for the Federal Reserve Board, said people familiar with the matter, as the president prepares to start reshaping the central bank's approach to monetary policy and Wall Street oversight.
Davis, who has announced he plans to retire as chief of the Minneapolis-based bank later this year, is a contender to fill one of three openings on the seven-member Fed board, said people who asked not to be named because the process is still in flux.
However, the company quickly doused the speculation.
"He is not a candidate for the Fed position," Dana Ripley, senior vice president for corporate communications at U.S. Bancorp, said Thursday afternoon. "He is focused on the successful completion of the CEO transition at the company in April."
Davis, 58, has previously said he would stay on as executive chairman of U.S. Bancorp after he steps down as CEO in April. He has run the lender for more than a decade. It performed well through the financial crisis by concentrating on retail customers and managing money for corporations and governments.
His avoidance of investment banking, proprietary trading and subprime mortgage lending helped the bank dodge the steep costs that plagued larger firms.
In an appearance before the Economic Club of Minnesota last month, Davis said he hasn't decided what to do after leaving the full-time CEO job but added that he was interested in working with "mission-based" organizations in philanthropy and education.
He said he plans to remain active in Twin Cities civic groups.