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Green Dot Joins Corporate Exodus From California as Fintech Firm Moves to Austin

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images
  • Green Dot, a fintech firm and biggest U.S. provider of prepaid debit cards, is moving its headquarters from Pasadena, California to Austin, Texas, CNBC has learned exclusively.
  • The firm will focus on four hubs – the new headquarters in Texas, as well as WeWork-style offices in Florida, Ohio and California – as it embraces a permanent remote-working model.
  • "I want the best and brightest people we can find to join our team to help us be successful, and you can live anywhere you want," CEO Dan Henry said. "I'm not Jamie Dimon, I'm not going to force you to take the train three hours a day."

Another corporation is leaving California.

Green Dot, a fintech firm and biggest U.S. provider of prepaid debit cards, is moving its headquarters from Pasadena, California to Austin, Texas, CNBC has learned exclusively.

The move follows the departures announced last year of technology giants including Oracle, Palantir and Hewlett-Packard Enterprise. Some companies, in particular tech firms, have embraced the shift to remote working forced by the coronavirus pandemic, and that's reduced the need to maintain large headquarters in expensive cities.

Green Dot will focus on four hubs – the new headquarters in Texas, as well as WeWork-style offices in Florida, Ohio and California – as it embraces a permanent remote working model, CEO Dan Henry said in a Zoom interview.

"I want the best and brightest people we can find to join our team to help us be successful, and you can live anywhere you want," Henry said. "I'm not Jamie Dimon, I'm not going to force you to take the train three hours a day."

Henry was referring to comments made this week by JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who is summoning his U.S. employees back to offices this month and who has expressed frustration with the limitations of teleconferencing.

Green Dot will let the lease on its 160,000 square-foot headquarters building in Pasadena lapse and plans to set up its Austin headquarters by the end of the year, according to Henry, who took over last year as part of a turnaround effort.

While employees who leave California stand to save on personal income taxes in states like Texas and Florida, the corporation itself won't be saving much from a tax perspective, Henry said. Instead, the CEO called Texas a very "business friendly state" relative to California, where local rules could dictate how the company chooses board members, for instance.

"What Covid did was force a mind shift; we see how productive we are working from anywhere and how much our employees love it," Henry said. "It's more important to be productive than be busy. If you force people to come to an office every day, then everybody's going to try to be busy."

Henry said that internal surveys found that 70% of employees were fine with never coming into the office.

But to maintain company culture, the firm is planning regular monthly, quarterly and yearly events to gather at one of the four hubs, he said. Younger employees who crave more interaction can simply live near a hub until "they've earned their stripes and they want to move to the mountains or the beach."

The firm will maintain a presence in Pasadena as it expects many of its employees to remain there, he said. Green Dot has almost 1,300 workers in the U.S. and China.

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