† Offer expires 1/31/19. Receive up to $450 in cash back and savings. An American Savings Bank business checking account is required to qualify for this promotion. 1) get $100 when you sign-up for Merchant Services and complete your first transaction within 30 calendar days from sign-up; 2) get $100 when you open or upgrade to an Analyzed Checking account; and/or 3) receive an application fee waiver (up to $250 in value for loan or lines of $100,000) when you apply for a Business Line or Business Loan. The cash back will be deposited into your business checking account by the end of the third week of the month following the criteria being met. If the Business Checking account is closed within 180 days after the offer expires, a $100 fee will be assessed. Value of the cash back is considered interest and may be reported to the IRS. Limit of one gift per customer per account and only one account per customer is eligible. Cannot be combined with any other promotional offer. To qualify for the offers, you must not have had these services within the last 12 months. For merchant services, the account is subject to underwriting guidelines and credit approval.
Please see the Summary of Credit Terms for important information on rates, fees, costs, conditions and limitations.
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- Free 24/7 online access for managing your account. Your Authorized Company Representative can view transaction activity and history, pay your bill, set up your alerts and more.
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- For additional information about Annual Percentage Rates (APRs), fees and other costs, see the Summary of Credit Terms.
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Directory of Business Bankers
Our team of friendly, knowledgeable and experienced Business Bankers are here to help. With offices conveniently located on four islands of Hawaii, we can help you find the right financing to meet your business needs.
Trini Abaya-Wright
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #991451
Direct: (808) 526-2771
Mobile: (808) 476-1679
tabayawright@asbhawaii.com
Branches served: Hokulei Village, Mililani and Pearlridge, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Winfred Cameron
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #477446
Direct: (808) 539-7959
Mobile: (808) 341-8648
wcameron@asbhawaii.com
Branches served: Campus, Kalihi and Makiki, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Irene Casinas
VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #2543163
Direct: (808) 539-7965
icasinas@asbhawaii.com
Branch served: Kahului, Kehalani Foodland and Kihei
Michael Chang
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #2358170
Direct: (808) 590-8435
michang@asbhawaii.com
Branches served: Hilo, Kailua, Kailua-Kona and Kaneohe, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Christy Hong
VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #399228
Direct: (808) 539-7954
chong@asbhawaii.com
Branches served: Kahala and Main, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Jerah Subia
VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #2512093
Direct: (808) 539-7958
jsubia@asbhawaii.com
(Ilocano speaking)
Branch served: Kailua and Kaneohe, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Trevor Takizawa
VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #2622528
Direct: (808) 541-8681
Mobile: (808) 749-7272
ttakizawa@asbhawaii.com
Branches served: Kailua and Kaneohe, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Chris Whang
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #671750
Direct: (808) 526-2774
Mobile: (808) 232-6662
cwhang@asbhawaii.com
(Korean speaking)
Branches served: Kapiolani and Queen-Ward, can meet at different branch locations by appointment.
Allan Zheng
VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKER
NMLS #2445471
Direct: (808) 539-7962
azheng@asbhawaii.com
(Cantonese speaking)
Paula Miyashiro
ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKING SPECIALIST
Direct: (808) 539-7952
pmiyashiro@asbhawaii.com
Matt Orias
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP TEAM LEADER
NMLS #1066758
Direct: (808) 539-7951
Mobile: (808) 773-0076
morias@asbhawaii.com
Lawrence Pai
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT
BUSINESS BANKING DIRECTOR
NMLS #639257
Direct: (808) 539-7960
Mobile: (808) 927-1887
lpai@asbhawaii.com
American Savings Bank reveals interior renderings of new Honolulu headquarters: Slideshow
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ASB February 16, 2017 | 5 min read N/AAmerican Savings Bank released interior renderings of its future headquarters to PBN on Thursday, giving a sneak peek at the 373,00-square-foot, 11-story building planned for the block at 300 N. Beretania St., the site of the company’s new campus.
The bank said approximately 600 of its employees will work out of the new headquarters, which will include 166,000 square feet of office space. The bank broke ground on the project on Saturday.
Rich Wacker, ASB president and CEO, said the new headquarters will help improve communication between ASB’s employees.
“The campus is a facility, but it’s not about the facility,” he told Pacific Business News. “It’s about that culture of what we’re trying to create and the ability to get the whole team together and working without a gap, for that mission that we have.”
The building, which will be located across from Aala Park, close to Chinatown, will bring employees from five different locations under one roof.
“We’ve gotten it down to five, but we’re going to get it to one,” Wacker said on centralizing the bank’s headquarters. “That’s the essence of what we need to do — that seamless teamwork and everyone being part of the engagement that we want to have. We’re excited about it. It’s really a game changer for is.”
The bank, which paid $12 million for the 62,595-square-foot vacant lot, expects the campus to be completed in 18 to 24 months.
Nordic PCL is the general contractor, with the facility’s exterior and interior design by Leo A Daly and ZGF Architects.
Anna Hrushka covers money and technology for Pacific Business News
Media Contact
Karwin Sui
Communications Manager
(808) 539-7268
ksui@asbhawaii.com
Rich Wacker's turning points
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ASB March 03, 2017 | 5 min read N/ATwo years from now, Rich Wacker will be leading American Savings Bank from a brand new office at the company’s headquarters at 300 North Beretania St.
The building, which is expected to be completed in 18 to 24 months, will bring 600 of the bank’s corporate employees, currently spread out across five locations, under one roof.
The central location for the financial institution and its staff will be a stark contrast to its earlier days as a small savings and loan bank. “The bank was built up over time through a series of combinations,” Wacker told Pacific Business News. Through acquisitions and mergers, the bank has grown into Hawaii’s third largest, with 52 branches and $6 billion in assets.
But with that growth, came a scattered infrastructure.
“You had this natural inefficiency, lack of communication and an inability to get to every teammate to really know that you’re doing it right,” Wacker said, referring to his first year with the company, back in 2010, when the bank’s corporate headquarters were distributed through 12 different locations.
While 12 has since become five, Wacker said he is eager to see the bank’s staff headquartered under one roof.
“In areas today where we have internal issues, it’s due to communication,” he said. Beth Whitehead, the bank’s executive vice president and chief administrative officer, has been with ASB since 2008 and said she can’t remember who first had the idea to centralize the company’s headquarters. But she said the endeavor quickly became a passion project for Wacker once he came on board.
“It’s so funny, because we are such a collaborative culture, I can’t pinpoint who it was that first suggested the idea,” she said. “But when Rich got here, it became one of our strategies and focuses.”
Wacker, who often refers to the bank’s employees as teammates, said getting the staff closer together, talking and discussing without the need for email or phone calls will be a “game changer” for ASB.
“That’s the culture that we’re trying to create,” he said. “The ability to get the whole team really owning and together and working without gap for that mission that we have.”
And the mission? Wacker says it’s simple.
“Our mission is making people’s dream’s possible. Whether you like it or not, all the big things in our lives depend on financial resources,” he said. “Whether it’s where you want to retire, send your kids to school or build a business, it all requires financial resources.”
Wacker speaks often about ASB’s mission, making people’s dreams possible. But what happens when its own dreams of becoming a freestanding publicly traded company aren’t realized?
“We keep marching,” Wacker said, when asked about the impact of last summer’s terminated acquisition of Hawaiian Electric Co. by NextEra Energy, which would have spun ASB off as its own public company.
In 2014, Hawaiian Electric Industries, ASB’s parent company, announced its utility subsidiary, Hawaiian Electric, would be acquired by Florida-based NextEra Energy. The $4.3 billion takeover would have resulted in ASB becoming independent of HEI.
“It was a huge opportunity,” he said. “We thought there were great values for both the utility and the bank coming out of that transaction. We were disappointed it didn’t go through. But that’s done, it’s what it was.”
Wacker said the failed spinoff hasn’t hurt the bank’s performance or its relationship to its customers.
“What drives us day to day is, helping make people’s dreams possible, helping make banking easy and delivering high performance and being a great place to work,” he said. “That’s what we spend all our time on. And that spin-off or no spin-off is sort of indifferent to that.”
When faced with setbacks, Whitehead said Wacker looks at them as an opportunity.
“He stresses that setbacks give us the opportunity to make sure we are approaching an issue from the right direction,” she said. “Rich focuses on the big picture and doing things right.”
Even in his early years as a mechanical engineer at General Electric, Wacker was interested in the big picture, eager to look beyond the immediate tasks associated with his role.
“You wouldn’t pick the career path in any book,” said Wacker who calls his career atypical.
During his two decades at GE, he transitioned from the world of mechanical engineering to financial services, out of his desire to learn more about the corporate decisions that affected his role on the shop floor as a foreman, production control guy and quality engineer.
After witnessing the discontent and frustration from fellow engineers due to poor investment choices from management, Wacker said he was compelled to learn about finance.
“Anybody who was grouchy, it was because management was stupid and they wouldn’t invest in all the things that they knew the company should invest in,” he said.
To justify what he felt were the areas management needed to invest in, Wacker began volunteering with GE’s chief financial officer and eventually joined the company’s internal audit staff.
The experience landed him a role at GE Capital where he helped bring the company’s operating discipline into the financial services world.
“I ended up being a kind of turnaround guy,” Wacker said. His reputation as a “turnaround guy” spread, taking him to South Korea, where he was recruited to help restructure and recapitalize Korea Exchange Bank after the Asian financial crisis.
“One of the guys there knew what I had done in other parts of my career and recruited me over to be part of the turnaround of that bank,” he said.
Wacker called the experience a huge culture shock and a big change for his wife and for their four children, then under the age of 5.
But he said the transition fit into their 10-year plan, which included eventually moving to Hawaii.
Wacker’s family moved to Hawaii in 2007, with Wacker following in 2010. His delay in joining them was the result of an acquisition falling through.
“About halfway through Korea, we thought we were going to be leaving around 2007, because there was a transaction for HSBC to buy our bank in Korea, and that was a good exit,” Wacker recalled.
When the deal fell through, Wacker stayed on in Seoul for another three years, flying to Hawaii on the weekends to be with his family.
You can hear the hint of exhaustion in his voice when he recalls the weekly flights from Seoul to Honolulu, fitting in homework with the kids and date night with his wife, before heading back to Korea by Sunday night. “It was a wild experience,” he said.
Those who know Wacker say they’re amazed at how he manages to find the time for all his commitments.
“He’s a really busy guy,” Susan Yamada, executive director of the Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship at the University of Hawaii’s Shidler College of Business said. “In the middle of the whole [NextEra] merger, we had a fairly big meeting on the Hawaii Innovation Initiative, a joint venture by UH and the Hawaii Business Roundtable. He was in the middle of what must have been a tremendous number of meetings, yet he still made the effort to come out and support.”
Wacker’s passion for innovation is reflected in the various boards he has joined.
“A lot of the things I’m involved in tend to line up around the innovation space,” said Wacker, who is chair of the Hawaii Business Roundtable and vice chair of the UH Foundation.
“When you think about what our companies need, we need more innovation, we need more of a critical mass here to be excellent,” Wacker said.
“It’s not just lip service,” said Yamada on Wacker’s devotion to innovation in Hawaii.
ASB’s $100,000 gift to PACE in 2014 was followed by an additional donation of $25,000 from Wacker himself.
“He gets the importance of innovation and how we need to diversify the economy in Hawaii,” Yamada said. “He gets how the university plays a big role. It was a terrific gesture.”
Wacker said getting the bank to support and invest in innovation is a long-term goal of his, yet when it comes to fostering that economic growth within the state, he doesn’t claim to know all the answers.
“I don’t always know what to do, but I know how to listen,” he said. “And I know how to figure out who are smart people who can say, ‘This is what we need to do.’”
Howard Garval, the outgoing president and chief executive officer of Child & Family Service, described Wacker’s leadership style as strong and definitive.
Garval said shortly after coming on board as ASB’s president and CEO in 2010, Wacker was eager to follow in the footsteps of a previous ASB CEO, Wayne Minami, as a member of the nonprofit’s board.
Garval said Wacker’s role as board chair during the nonprofit’s Stronger Families Fund initiative in 2015 played a key part in raising close to $1 million within a month from sustaining members, who pledged to give over a four-year period.
“The board chair needs to lead that effort,” he said. “If the board chair doesn’t lead, it’s hard for other members to get behind it. A lot of that credit goes to Rich.”
But Wacker is the last person to take any kind of credit one might attribute to him. He’s quick to remind you that his role heading the state’s third-largest bank is just one of many critical pieces that keep the bank running.
“I’m just another teammate having a role that’s a little bit different than everybody else’s,” he said. “I have my role to do what I do, but it’s about the team that we built, and the passion they have for what we’re trying to do that’s making it work.”
Wacker said he didn’t always get that concept.
He recalls a moment of realization during his career with GE, when he was dealing with reliability and product problems associated with one of the company’s medical products.
“I nearly killed myself, trying to figure it out,” he said. “The realization came when I was at a dinner with a mentor of mine. He said, ‘The problem, is, you think it’s about you.’ That was a very crystallizing moment for me, because it was that realization that the role of the leader is to figure it out with everybody else and guide it, steer it. It’s not about waiting for the leader to pontificate on the solution. That’s what builds the organizational ownership, the commitment, the buy in and the commitment to the result.”
Anna Hrushka
Reporter
Pacific Business News
Media Contact
Karwin Sui
Communications Manager
(808) 539-7268
ksui@asbhawaii.com
Enjoy convenient 24-hour ATM access to your Statement Savings, Tiered Savings or Money Market account.
- Free ATM access – at any American Savings Bank ATM throughout Hawaii
- More ATM access – you can use another bank’s ATM to access your savings account, even when you’re not near an American Savings Bank ATM†
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HOW TO UPDATE YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION
To update your contact information for your accounts follow these steps after logging into Online Banking:
- From the Menu, click on 'Profile & Preferences.'
- Click on 'Contact Information.'
- To update your email address and phone number, click on Other Information.
- Update your home address by clicking on Home Address.
- Update your mailing address by click on Mailing Address.
- Click Save.
Returned Mail Fee
American Savings Bank will apply a $5 fee to accountholders whose statements and/or notices are returned. This fee will be assessed per account each month and will continue until a mailing address change request is completed. Applicable to Personal Accounts (checking, savings, and money market accounts) and Business Accounts (checking, savings, and money market accounts).
Other Ways to Manage Your Contact Information
Call us at (808) 627-6900 or toll-free (800) 272-2566
Protecting our customers' financial data is a high priority for us. American Savings Bank will never request verbally or via e-mail/text, your Password, Debit Card PIN, or Secure Access Code. We encourage our customers to closely monitor accounts regularly. For best practice, you should report immediately any suspicious activity to our Customer Banking Center at (808) 627-6900 or toll-free (800) 272-2566.
Punawai ‘O Pu‘uhonua receives $55 million in New Markets Tax Credits Allocation
By
ASB November 22, 2016 | 5 min read N/AAmerican Savings Bank and the Oahu Economic Development Board support economic growth and quality jobs across Hawaii
HONOLULU, HAWAII - Punawai ‘O Pu‘uhonua (POP), a Hawaii-based Community Development Entity (CDE) responsible for the management of New Market Tax Credits (NMTC) that support the creation of jobs, goods and services in low-income communities, has received an allocation of $55 million in NMTC from the U.S. Department of Treasury. POP was formed in 2010 by American Savings Bank and the Oahu Economic Development Board and was one of 120 CDEs selected to receive $7 billion in NMTC allocations. POP is the only Hawaii-based CDE to receive an NMTC allocation during the current round of awards covering 2015 and 2016. The NMTC Program, administered by the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund, spurs economic growth through NMTC that attract private investment to distressed communities.
“The NMTC allocation is positive for the entire state, and will do much to help our most economically disadvantaged communities,” said Richard Wacker, President and CEO of American Savings Bank. “Through New Markets Tax Credits, we’re able to fund projects that create jobs in low-income communities with the most need.”
"The NMTC program provides an extremely important resource to Hawaii, and supports strategic community investments in quality jobs, healthcare and renewable energy across Hawaii," said Pono Shim, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Oahu Economic Development Board. “Our underserved communities will benefit from the delivery of critically necessary services.”
In 2012 POP received a $40 million allocation, which was deployed into three projects: construction of the new campus of the West Hawaii Community Health Center, a federally-qualified health center located on the Island of Hawaii; the renovation of the Hilo Hawaiian Hotel; and a clean energy project in Waianae and Pearl City with Forest City Sustainable Resources, LLC.
In the coming year, POP is looking for high-impact projects greater than $7 million in size with a gap in financing to fund with its new NMTC allocation. For more information about POP’s NMTC program please contact: punawai@oedb.biz.
About Punawai ‘O Pu‘uhonua
The Punawai ‘O Pu‘uhonua (POP) program provides low-cost financing to eligible projects across the state in areas that promote the creation and retention of jobs, healthy foods, renewable energy and healthcare. POP uses New Market Tax Credits (NMTC) to catalyze and leverage private investment in projects that improve access to primary care to create healthy, thriving communities.
About American Savings Bank
ASB has been serving Hawaii’s businesses and communities since 1925 and currently provides a full range of financial products and services, including business and consumer banking, home loans, insurance, and investments. ASB is one of Hawaii’s leading financial institutions, with e-banking services and branch locations throughout the state offering evening, weekend and holiday hours. ASB provides Hawaii’s consumers and businesses with more extended weekday and weekend hours than other
similarly sized local banks, as well as convenient in-store branches. ASB was the first Hawaii bank to introduce remote-deposit capture with a mobile banking application.
ASB matches its exceptional customer experience with an employee experience that has garnered local and national awards. ASB has been recognized locally as one of the “Best Places to Work” by Hawaii Business Magazine for seven consecutive years and honored nationally as one of the “Best Banks to Work For” by American Banker Magazine. Fortune Magazine recognized ASB as one of the 100 Best Workplaces for Women and 50 Best Workplaces for Diversity. For more than 90 years, ASB has been helping build strong communities. Through its Seeds of Service program, ASB teammates have contributed more than 22,000 hours of volunteer service, and ASB has donated millions of dollars to Hawaii’s schools, non-profits and community organizations.
Media Contact
Karwin Sui
Communications Manager
(808) 539-7268
ksui@asbhawaii.com
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Lisa Carillo
Vice President
Executive Residential Loan Officer
American Savings Bank
NMLS #685883
Equal Housing Lender
Direct: (808) 872-4991
Mobile: (808) 463-2296
lcarillo@asbhawaii.com
With nearly 20 years of mortgage lending experience, Lisa is a seasoned professional who is ready to help her clients facilitate smooth and efficient closings. Having worked as a loan officer for a number of local and national mortgage companies, Lisa enjoys helping people achieve their dream of homeownership. She also helps to educate new buyers on the lending process by facilitating regular home buyer seminars.
Outside of work, Lisa enjoys giving back to her community, serving on the Board of Directors for Habitat for Humanity Maui and also volunteering for youth sports. She is a graduate of Lahainaluna High School and the University of Hawaii at Manoa.