1
 
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                  PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF
                      THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
Filed by the Registrant  /X/
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  / /
 
Check the appropriate box:
 
/ /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
/X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
/X/  Definitive Additional Materials
/ /  Soliciting Material Pursuant to sec. 240.14a-11(c) or sec. 240.14a-12
 
                 Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
 
                 Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)
 
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box): NOT APPLICABLE.
 
/ /  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(j)(2).
/ /  $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
 
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
 
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
 
     3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:(1)
 
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
 
(1) Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
    was determined.
 
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
 
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
 
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
 
     3) Filing Party:
 
     4) Date Filed:
   2





                         BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY
                                HOLDING COMPANY
                       550 Montgomery Street, 10th Floor
                        San Francisco, California 94111

                                  May 7, 1994

Dear Stockholder:

         You are cordially invited to attend the 1994 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company"),
to be held on May 23, 1994, at 3:00 p.m., in the Boardroom of the Company at
550 Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San Francisco, California.  Enclosed are the
Notice of the Annual Meeting, a Proxy Statement describing the business to be
transacted at the meeting, and proxy cards for use in voting at the meeting.
Separate proxy cards are provided for the holders of the Company's Class A
Common Stock, $0.01 par value (the "Class A Common Stock"), of the Company's 8%
Series B Convertible Preferred Stock, $0.01 par value (the "Series B Preferred
Stock"), and of the Company's 9% Series C Perpetual Preferred Stock, $0.01 par
value (the "Series C Preferred Stock").

         At the Annual Meeting, stockholders will be asked:

        (i)  to elect five of the nine authorized directors of the Company,
three (3) to serve for two-year terms and two (2) to serve for three-year
terms;

       (ii)  to authorize the conversion of each share of the Series C
Preferred Stock into 40 shares of the Class A Common Stock and 40 warrants (the
"Warrants"), with each Warrant granting the right to purchase an additional
share of Class A Common Stock, exercisable at $0.50 per share (the
"Conversion"), and in connection with the Conversion to amend the Company's
Certificate of Incorporation (the "Certificate"), including the Certificate of
Designations of Rights, Preferences, Privileges and Restrictions relating to
the Series C Preferred Stock (the "Certificate of Designation"), (a) to
increase the authorized number of shares of Class A Common Stock to 400,000,000
(subject to the subsequent decrease of the number of authorized shares to
40,000,000 through a 1-for-10 reverse stock split if the stockholders approve
Item (iv) below) so as to permit the Conversion and increase the ability of the
Company to raise capital in the future through the issuance of Class A Common
Stock or securities convertible into Class A Common Stock, and (b) to amend the
Certificate of Designation to provide that all outstanding shares of Series C
Preferred Stock will automatically be converted into Class A Common Stock and
Warrants, in accordance with the conversion rights set forth in the Certificate
of Designation, on May 31, 1994.  SUBJECT TO THE DILUTION WHICH IS EXPECTED AS
A RESULT OF THE PROPOSED PRIVATE PLACEMENT BY THE COMPANY WHICH IS DESCRIBED IN
ITEM (V) BELOW, THE CONVERSION OF THE OUTSTANDING SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED
STOCK WOULD RESULT IN A SUBSTANTIAL INCREASE IN THE VOTING POWER AND CONTROL
OVER THE COMPANY HELD BY THE COMPANY'S MAJORITY STOCKHOLDER, INCREASING HIS
OWNERSHIP FROM THE CURRENT 66.2% OF THE VOTING POWER OF THE COMPANY TO AT LEAST
92.6%, ASSUMING HE DOES NOT DISPOSE OF ANY OF HIS SHARES, AND AS MUCH AS 95.9%
IF HE WERE TO EXERCISE ALL OF THE WARRANTS HE WOULD HOLD UPON COMPLETION OF THE
CONVERSION;

           (iii) to increase the authorized number of shares of the Company's
Preferred Stock to 5,000,000 in order to increase the ability of the Company to
raise capital in the future through the issuance of Preferred Stock;

           (iv) to authorize the amendment and restatement of the Company's
Certificate to (a) reclassify the Company's Class B Common Stock as and into
Class A Common Stock, (b) effect a 1-for-10 reverse stock split of the Class A
Common Stock and thereby to decrease the authorized number of shares of the
Company's Class A Common Stock to 40,000,000, (c) change the name of the
Company to The San Francisco Company, and (d) update certain provisions of the
Certificate;
   3
        (v)  to authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A Common
Stock in excess of twenty percent (20%) of the number of shares of Class A
Common Stock outstanding following the Conversion, with the number of shares,
price and other terms and conditions of such offering determined by the Board
of Directors of the Company after negotiation with potential investors.  The
shares of Class A Common Stock to be issued may be issued at less than current
book and market value per share.  The Company is currently proposing a private
placement (the "Private Placement") of up to 8,125,000 units (the "Units"),
including a 1,250,000 Unit allotment for oversubscriptions, each consisting of
(i) one share of its Class A Common Stock, (ii) one warrant, entitling the
holder thereof to purchase one share of Class A Common Stock at $5.00 per share
(the "Unit Warrants"), and (iii) one right, entitling the holder thereof to
receive, without payment of additional consideration, an amount of shares of
Class A Common Stock in periodic distributions based upon the resolution value
of certain problem assets currently held in the Bank's portfolio and the Bank's
expenses in administering and carrying such problem assets (the "Rights").  THE
FOREGOING ASSUMES THE APPROVAL OF ITEMS (II), (III) AND (IV) AT THE ANNUAL
MEETING AND THE RESULTING 1-FOR-10 REVERSE STOCK SPLIT.  THE UNIT WARRANTS ARE
SUBSTANTIALLY IDENTICAL TO THE WARRANTS GRANTED IN CONNECTION WITH THE
CONVERSION OF THE OUTSTANDING SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK DESCRIBED IN
ITEM (II) ABOVE.  THE COMPANY IS OFFERING THE UNITS AT A PRICE OF $3.20 PER
UNIT.  ASSUMING (I) THE SALE OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE PRIVATE
PLACEMENT, BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY OF THE WARRANTS OR THE UNIT WARRANTS AND
(III) NO SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE RIGHTS, THE SHARES ISSUED IN THE
PRIVATE PLACEMENT WILL REPRESENT 54.0% OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING
SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT.  THE FINAL NUMBER
OF SHARES, PRICE AND OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT ARE
SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND WILL BE DETERMINED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
COMPANY BASED UPON INTEREST IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT EXPRESSED BY PROSPECTIVE
INVESTORS;

       (vi)  to approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the
1993 Nonemployee Directors  Stock Option Plan;

      (vii)  to ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat Marwick,
independent public accountants, as the independent accounting firm for the
Company during the fiscal years ending December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994;
and

     (viii)  to act upon such other business as may properly come before the
meeting or any adjournment thereof.

         We hope that you will be able to attend the Annual Meeting.  In any
event, please complete, date, sign, and promptly return the appropriate
enclosed proxy for the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock
and/or the Series C Preferred Stock.  It is important that your shares be
represented at the Annual Meeting.

Sincerely yours,



KENT D. PRICE
Chairman of the Board and,
  Chief Executive Officer

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT

         YOU ARE URGED TO COMPLETE, DATE, SIGN, AND PROMPTLY RETURN YOUR PROXY
IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING.





                                      -2-
   4
                         BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY
                                HOLDING COMPANY
                       550 MONTGOMERY STREET, 10TH FLOOR
                        SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94111


                 NOTICE OF 1994 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 23, 1994

         To the Holders of the Class A Common Stock, par value $.01 per share
(the "Class A Common Stock"), the 8% Series B Convertible Preferred Stock, par
value $.01 per share (the "Series B Preferred Stock"), and the 9% Series C
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share (the "Series C Preferred
Stock"), of Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company"):

         The 1994 annual meeting of the stockholders of the Company will be
held on May 23, 1994 at 3:00 p.m. local time, in the Boardroom of the Company,
550 Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San Francisco, California 94111 (the "Annual
Meeting") for the following purposes:

         1.      To elect five (5) of the nine (9) authorized directors of the
                 Company, three (3) to serve two-year terms and two (2) to
                 serve for three-year terms;

         2.      To authorize the conversion of each share of the Series C
                 Preferred Stock into 40 shares of Class A Common Stock and 40
                 warrants (the "Warrants"), with each Warrant granting the
                 right to purchase an additional share of Class A Common Stock,
                 exercisable at $.50 per share (the "Conversion"), and in
                 connection with said Conversion to amend the Company's
                 Certificate of Incorporation (the "Certificate"), including
                 the Certificate of Designations of Rights, Preferences,
                 Privileges and Restrictions relating to the Series C Preferred
                 Stock (the "Certificate of Designation"), (a) to increase the
                 authorized number of shares of Class A Common Stock to
                 400,000,000 (subject to subsequent decrease of the number of
                 authorized shares to 40,000,000 through a 1-for-10 reverse
                 stock split if the stockholders approve Item 4 below)) so as
                 to permit the Conversion and increase the ability of the
                 Company to raise capital in the future through the issuance of
                 Class A Common Stock and securities convertible into Class A
                 Common Stock, and (b) to amend the Certificate of Designation
                 to provide that all outstanding shares of Series C Preferred
                 Stock will automatically be converted into Class A Common
                 Stock and Warrants, in accordance with the conversion rights
                 set forth in the Certificate of Designation, on May 31, 1994.
                 SUBJECT TO THE DILUTION WHICH IS EXPECTED AS A RESULT OF THE
                 PROPOSED PRIVATE PLACEMENT BY THE COMPANY WHICH IS DESCRIBED
                 IN ITEM 5 BELOW, THE CONVERSION OF THE OUTSTANDING SHARES OF
                 SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK WOULD RESULT IN A SUBSTANTIAL
                 INCREASE IN THE VOTING POWER AND CONTROL OVER THE COMPANY HELD
                 BY THE COMPANY'S MAJORITY STOCKHOLDER, INCREASING HIS
                 OWNERSHIP FROM THE CURRENT 66.2% OF THE VOTING POWER OF THE
                 COMPANY TO AT LEAST 92.6%, ASSUMING HE DOES NOT DISPOSE OF ANY
                 OF HIS SHARES, AND AS MUCH AS 95.9% IF HE WERE TO EXERCISE ALL
                 OF THE WARRANTS HE WOULD HOLD UPON COMPLETION OF THE
                 CONVERSION;

         3.      To increase the authorized number of shares of the Company's
                 Preferred Stock to 5,000,000 in order to increase the ability
                 of the Company to raise capital in the future through the
                 issuance of Preferred Stock;

         4.      To authorize the amendment and restatement of the Company's
                 Certificate to (a) reclassify the Company's Class B Common
                 Stock as and into Class A Common Stock, (b) effect a 1-for-10





                                      -1-
   5
                 reverse stock split of the Class A Common Stock and thereby to
                 decrease the authorized number of shares of the Company's
                 Class A Common Stock to 40,000,000, (c) change the name of the
                 Company to The San Francisco Company, and (d) update certain
                 provisions of the Certificate;

         5.      To authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A
                 Common Stock in excess of twenty percent (20%) of the number
                 of shares of Class A Common Stock outstanding following the
                 Conversion, with the number of shares, price and other terms
                 and conditions of such offering determined by the Board of
                 Directors of the Company after negotiation with potential
                 investors.  The shares of Class A Common Stock to be issued
                 may be issued at less than current book and market value per
                 share.  The Company is currently proposing a private placement
                 (the "Private Placement") of up to 8,125,000 units (the
                 "Units"), including a 1,250,000 Unit allotment for
                 oversubscriptions, each consisting of (i) one share of its
                 Class A Common Stock, (ii) one warrant, entitling the holder
                 thereof to purchase one share of Class A Common Stock at $5.00
                 per share (the "Unit Warrants"), and (iii) one right,
                 entitling the holder thereof to receive, without payment of
                 additional consideration, an amount of shares of Class A
                 Common Stock in periodic distributions based upon the
                 resolution value of certain problem assets currently held in
                 the Bank's portfolio (the "Rights").  THE FOREGOING ASSUMES
                 THE APPROVAL OF ITEMS (2), (3) AND (4) AT THE ANNUAL MEETING
                 AND THE RESULTING 1-FOR-10 REVERSE STOCK SPLIT.  THE COMPANY
                 IS OFFERING THE UNITS AT A PRICE OF $3.20 PER UNIT.  ASSUMING
                 (I) THE SALE OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE PRIVATE
                 PLACEMENT, BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY OF THE WARRANTS OR THE
                 UNIT WARRANTS AND (III) NO SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE
                 RIGHTS, THE SHARES ISSUED IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT WILL
                 REPRESENT 54.0% OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING SHARES OF
                 CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT.  THE FINAL
                 NUMBER OF SHARES, PRICE AND OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE
                 PRIVATE PLACEMENT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND WILL BE DETERMINED
                 BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY BASED UPON INTEREST
                 IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT EXPRESSED BY PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS.

         6.      To approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and
                 the 1993 Nonemployee Directors Stock Option Plan;

         7.      To ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat
                 Marwick, independent public accountants, as the independent
                 accounting firm for the Company during the fiscal years ending
                 December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994; and

         8.      To act upon such other business as may properly come before
                 the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

         These matters are more fully discussed in the enclosed Proxy Statement.

         Holders of Class A Common Stock, Series B Preferred Stock and Series C
Preferred Stock of the Company of record at the close of business on March 24,
1994 are entitled to vote at the 1994 Annual Meeting to the extent and in the
manner set forth in the Proxy Statement.

         The Board of Directors has nominated Kent D. Price, Steven R. Champion
and Carl D. Gustavson to serve as Class II directors for terms until the
Company's 1996 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and Rodney D. Freed and Willard
D. Sharpe to serve as Class III directors for terms until the Company's 1997
Annual Meeting of Stockholders.  Any stockholder entitled to vote for directors
may nominate candidates for election as directors of the Company; provided,
however, that nominations for director of the Company by any person other than





                                      -2-
   6
the Board of Directors may be made only by a record stockholder who has
delivered a written notice to the Secretary of the Company no later than the
close of business sixty (60) days in advance of the Annual Meeting or ten (10)
days after the date on which notice of the Annual Meeting is first given to
stockholders, whichever is later.  Such stockholder's notice shall set forth
(a) as to each person, if any, whom the stockholder proposes to nominate for
election or re-election as a director:  (i) the name, age, business address and
residence address of such person, (ii) the principal occupation or employment
of such person, (iii) the Class and number of shares of the Company which are
beneficially owned by such person, and (iv) any other information relating to
such person that is required to be disclosed in solicitations of proxies for
election of directors, or is otherwise required, in each case pursuant to
Regulation 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended (including
without limitation such person's written consent to being named in the proxy
statement, if any, as a nominee and to serving as a director if elected); and
(b) as to the stockholder giving the notice:  (i) the name and address of such
stockholder, as they appear on the Company's books, and (ii) the Class and
number of shares of the Company which are beneficially owned by such
stockholder.

         At the request of the Board of Directors, any person nominated by the
Board for election as a director shall furnish to the Secretary of the Company
that information required to be set forth in the stockholder's notice of
nomination which pertains to the nominee.  No person shall be eligible for
election as a director of the Company unless nominated in accordance with the
procedures set forth herein.  The chairman of the Annual Meeting, if the facts
warrant, shall determine and declare at the Annual Meeting that a nomination
was not made in accordance with the procedures prescribed herein, and if he
should so determine, he shall so declare at the Annual Meeting and the
defective nomination shall be disregarded.

         Any person giving a proxy has the power to revoke or suspend it before
its exercise.  It is revocable before the Annual Meeting by sending written
notice or a duly executed proxy bearing a later date to Linda M. Tanner,
Assistant Secretary of the Company, at the principal executive offices of the
Company.  In addition, a stockholder giving the enclosed proxy may revoke it by
attending the Annual Meeting and electing to vote in person, before any vote is
taken.  Unless otherwise instructed, each valid proxy returned that is not
revoked will be voted FOR the election as directors of the person or persons
specified on such proxy card; FOR each of the proposals listed above; and at
the proxy holder's discretion, upon management's direction, on such other
matters, if any, as may come before the Annual Meeting (including any proposal
to adjourn the Annual Meeting).

         YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT.  PLEASE SIGN AND DATE THE APPROPRIATE ENCLOSED
PROXY CARD OR CARDS AND RETURN THEM PROMPTLY IN THE ENVELOPE PROVIDED WHETHER
OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING.  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE ELECTION AS DIRECTORS OF THE PERSONS
NAMED ON THE PROXY CARD ENCLOSED HEREIN, AND FOR EACH OF THE OTHER PROPOSALS.
THE DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY INTEND TO VOTE ALL OF THEIR SHARES FOR THE
APPROVAL OF THE PROPOSALS DESCRIBED ABOVE.

                                  By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                  Linda M. Tanner, Assistant Secretary
May 7, 1994
(approximate mailing date
of proxy material)





                                      -3-
   7





                      (THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK)





                                      -4-
   8
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                                       OF
                         BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY
                                HOLDING COMPANY
                       550 MONTGOMERY STREET, 10TH FLOOR
                        SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94111
                                 (415) 391-9000

                              GENERAL INFORMATION

         This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation
of the enclosed proxy by, and on behalf of, the Board of Directors of Bank of
San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company"), a Delaware corporation
and bank holding company for Bank of San Francisco (the "Bank").  The enclosed
proxy is for use at the 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Company to
be held at the Boardroom of the Company, 550 Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San
Francisco, California 94111 at 3:00 p.m. local time on May  23, 1994 and at all
postponements or adjournments thereof (the "Annual Meeting").  It is expected
that this Proxy Statement and the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of
Stockholders will be mailed to stockholders on or about May 7, 1994.

PURPOSE OF MEETING

         At the Annual Meeting, holders of the Company's Class A Common Stock,
par value $.01 per share (the "Class A Common Stock"), 8% Series B Convertible
Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share (the "Series B Preferred Stock") and
9% Series C Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share (the "Series C
Preferred Stock") will be asked to take the following actions:

         1.      To elect five (5) of the nine (9) authorized directors of the
                 Company, three (3) to serve two-year terms and two (2) to
                 serve for three-year terms;

         2.      To authorize the conversion of each share of the Series C
                 Preferred Stock into 40 shares of Class A Common Stock and 40
                 warrants (the "Warrants"), each Warrant granting the right to
                 purchase an additional share of Class A Common Stock,
                 exercisable at $.50 per share (the "Conversion"), and in
                 connection with said Conversion to amend the Company's
                 Certificate of Incorporation (the "Certificate"), including
                 the Certificate of Designations of Rights, Preferences,
                 Privileges and Restrictions relating to the Series C Preferred
                 Stock (the "Certificate of Designation"), (a) to increase the
                 authorized number of shares of Class A Common Stock to
                 400,000,000 (subject to the subsequent decrease of the number
                 of authorized shares to 40,000,000 through a 1-for-10 reverse
                 stock split if the stockholders approve Item 4 below) so as to
                 permit the Conversion and increase the ability of the Company
                 to raise capital in the future through the issuance of Class A
                 Common Stock and securities convertible into Class A Common
                 Stock, and (b) to amend the Certificate of Designation to
                 provide that all outstanding shares of Series C Preferred
                 Stock will automatically be converted into Class A Common
                 Stock and Warrants, in accordance with the conversion rights
                 set forth in the Certificate of Designation, on May 31, 1994.
                 SUBJECT TO THE DILUTION WHICH IS EXPECTED AS A RESULT OF THE
                 PROPOSED PRIVATE PLACEMENT BY THE COMPANY WHICH IS DESCRIBED
                 IN ITEM 5 BELOW, THE CONVERSION OF THE OUTSTANDING SHARES OF
                 SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK WOULD RESULT IN A SUBSTANTIAL
                 INCREASE IN THE VOTING POWER AND CONTROL OVER THE COMPANY HELD
                 BY THE COMPANY'S MAJORITY STOCKHOLDER, INCREASING HIS
                 OWNERSHIP FROM THE CURRENT 66.2% OF THE VOTING POWER OF THE
                 COMPANY TO AT LEAST 92.6%, ASSUMING HE DOES NOT DISPOSE OF





                                      -1-
   9
                 ANY OF HIS SHARES, AND AS MUCH AS 95.9% IF HE WERE TO EXERCISE
                 ALL OF THE WARRANTS HE WOULD HOLD UPON COMPLETION OF THE
                 CONVERSION;

         3.      To increase the authorized number of shares of the Company's
                 Preferred Stock to 5,000,000 in order to increase the ability
                 of the Company to raise capital in the future through the
                 issuance of Preferred Stock;

         4.      To authorize the amendment and restatement of the Certificate
                 to (a) reclassify the Class B Common Stock as and into Class A
                 Common Stock, (b) effect a 1-for-10 reverse stock split of the
                 Class A Common Stock and thereby to decrease the authorized
                 number of shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock to
                 40,000,000, (c) change the name of the Company to The San
                 Francisco Company, and (d) update certain provisions of the
                 Certificate;

         5.      To authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A
                 Common Stock in excess of twenty percent (20%) of the number
                 of shares of Class A Common Stock outstanding following the
                 Conversion, with the number of shares, price and other terms
                 and conditions of such offering determined by the Board of
                 Directors of the Company after negotiation with potential
                 investors.  The shares of Class A Common Stock to be issued
                 may be issued at less than current book and market value per
                 share.  The Company is currently proposing a private placement
                 (the "Private Placement") of up to 8,125,000 units (the
                 "Units"), including a 1,250,000 Unit allotment for
                 oversubscriptions, each consisting of (i) one share of its
                 Class A Common Stock, (ii) one warrant, entitling the holder
                 thereof to purchase one share of Class A Common Stock at $5.00
                 per share (the "Unit Warrants"), and (iii) one right,
                 entitling the holder thereof to receive, without payment of
                 additional consideration, an amount of shares of Class A
                 Common Stock in periodic distributions based upon the
                 resolution value of certain problem assets currently held in
                 the Bank's portfolio (the "Rights").  THE FOREGOING ASSUMES
                 THE APPROVAL OF ITEMS (2), (3) AND (4) AT THE ANNUAL MEETING
                 AND THE RESULTING 1-FOR-10 REVERSE STOCK SPLIT.  THE COMPANY
                 IS OFFERING THE UNITS AT A PRICE OF $3.20 PER UNIT.  ASSUMING
                 (I) THE SALE OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE PRIVATE
                 PLACEMENT, BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY OF THE WARRANTS OR THE
                 UNIT WARRANTS AND (III) NO SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE
                 RIGHTS, THE SHARES ISSUED IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT WILL
                 REPRESENT 54.0% OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING SHARES OF
                 CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT.  THE FINAL
                 NUMBER OF SHARES, PRICE AND OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE
                 PRIVATE PLACEMENT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND WILL BE DETERMINED
                 BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY BASED UPON INTEREST
                 IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT EXPRESSED BY PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS.

         6.      To approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and
                 the 1993 Nonemployee Directors Stock Option Plan
                 (collectively, the "New Stock Option Plans");

         7.      To ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat
                 Marwick, independent public accountants, as the independent
                 accounting firm for the Company during the fiscal years ending
                 December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994; and

         8.      To act upon such other business as may properly come before
                 the meeting or any adjournment thereof.





                                      -2-
   10
VOTING SECURITIES

         Only stockholders of record on March 24, 1994 (the "Record Date") are
entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.  At the close of
business on that date, the Company had outstanding eight million, eight hundred
and ninety-nine thousand, nine hundred thirty-two (8,899,932) shares of its
Class A Common Stock, sixteen thousand, five hundred ninety-one (16,591) shares
of its Series B Preferred Stock and nine hundred thousand (900,000) shares of
its Series C Preferred Stock.

         Each holder of the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock
and the Series C Preferred Stock is entitled, with respect to each matter as to
which such holder is entitled to vote, to one (1) vote, in person or by proxy,
for each share of the Class A Common Stock, Series B Preferred Stock or Series
C Preferred Stock outstanding in his or her name on the transfer books of the
Company as of the Record Date.

REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

         Any person giving a proxy has the power to revoke or suspend it before
its exercise.  It is revocable before the Annual Meeting by sending written
notice or a duly executed proxy bearing a later date to Linda M. Tanner,
Assistant Secretary of the Company, at the principal executive offices of the
Company.  In addition, a stockholder giving a proxy in any of the forms
accompanying this Proxy Statement may revoke it by attending the Annual Meeting
and electing to vote in person, before any vote is taken.

VOTES REQUIRED

         Holders of Class A Common Stock, Series B Preferred Stock and Series C
Preferred Stock are entitled to vote on each of the proposals to be presented
at the Annual Meeting.  The following paragraphs explain, for each proposal,
the vote required for adoption.  In each case, a quorum must be present for the
vote to be valid.

         PROPOSAL ONE:  ELECTION OF DIRECTORS, as to the Class II directors,
the validly-nominated nominees for election as directors who rank first, second
and third in number of votes received from holders of the Class A Common Stock,
the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock represented and
voting together as a single Class will be elected as directors, and as to the
Class III directors, the validly-nominated nominees for election as directors
who rank first and second in number of votes received from holders of the Class
A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock
represented and voting together as a single Class will be elected as directors,
even if some or all of such nominees receive less than a majority of the total
votes.

         PROPOSAL TWO:  AUTHORIZATION OF CONVERSION OF SERIES C PREFERRED
STOCK, AND AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE THE AUTHORIZED
NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK AND TO CHANGE THE REQUIRED CONVERSION
DATE OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK requires an affirmative vote of the holders of
a majority of the shares of the Class A Common Stock and the Series B Preferred
Stock represented and voting together as a single Class, and an affirmative
vote of the holders of a majority of the shares of the Series C Preferred Stock
represented and voting as a separate Class.

         PROPOSAL THREE: AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF
INCORPORATION TO INCREASE THE AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF SHARES OF PREFERRED STOCK
requires an affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares of the
Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred
Stock represented and voting together as a single class, and of the holders of
a majority of the shares of the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C
Preferred Stock represented and voting together as a single Class of Preferred
Stock.





                                      -3-
   11
         PROPOSAL FOUR:  AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT OF
CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION requires an affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of the shares of the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred
Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock represented and voting together as a
single Class, and of the holders of a majority of the shares of the Class A
Common Stock represented and voting as a single Class.

         PROPOSAL FIVE:  AUTHORIZATION OF ISSUANCE OF ADDITIONAL CLASS A COMMON
STOCK, WARRANTS AND RIGHTS requires an affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of the shares of the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred
Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock represented and voting together as a
single Class.

         PROPOSAL SIX:  APPROVAL OF THE 1993 EXECUTIVE STOCK OPTION PLAN AND
THE 1993 NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN and PROPOSAL SEVEN:
RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTING FIRM require an affirmative
vote of the holders of a majority of the shares of the Class A Common Stock,
the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock represented and
voting together as a single Class.

         Such other matters, if any, as may properly come before the Annual
Meeting will generally require the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of the shares of the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred
Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock represented and voting together as a
single Class.

         IF THE COMPANY'S MAJORITY STOCKHOLDER VOTES ALL OF HIS SHARES OF CLASS
A COMMON STOCK AND SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK IN FAVOR OF ANY OR ALL OF THESE
PROPOSALS, INCLUDING PROPOSAL TWO, THEN PASSAGE OF SUCH PROPOSALS WOULD BE
ASSURED.  WHILE THE MAJORITY STOCKHOLDER HAS NOT ENTERED INTO ANY AGREEMENTS AS
TO THE MANNER IN WHICH HE WILL VOTE HIS SHARES, HE HAS EXPRESSED HIS INTENT TO
VOTE IN FAVOR OF ALL OF THE ABOVE PROPOSALS.

         With regard to the election of directors, votes may be cast in favor
or withheld; votes that are withheld will be excluded entirely from the vote
and will have no effect.  Abstentions may be specified on all proposals (other
than the election of directors) and will be counted as shares that are present
or represented at the Annual Meeting for purposes of determining a quorum on
the proposal on which the abstention is specified.  However, because such
shares will be counted as represented at the Annual Meeting, and because the
success of the proposals (other than the election of directors) is measured
based on the number of affirmative votes out of the number of shares
represented at the Annual Meeting, abstentions will have the effect of a
negative vote.

         Under the rules of the American Stock Exchange ("AMEX"), brokers who
hold shares in street name for customers have the authority to vote on certain
items when they have not received instructions from beneficial owners; on other
items such brokers do not have the authority to vote.  Under applicable
Delaware law, broker non-votes are counted for the purpose of determining the
presence or absence of a quorum for the transaction of business but are not
otherwise counted.  Therefore, broker non-votes will have no effect on the
outcome of the election of directors but will have the same effect as a vote
against the other proposals.

         Unless otherwise instructed, each valid proxy returned which is not
revoked will be voted FOR the election as directors of the persons specified on
such proxy card, FOR each of the other proposals, and at the proxy holders'
discretion, upon management's direction, on such other matters, if any, that
may come before the Annual Meeting (including any proposal to adjourn the
Annual Meeting).





                                      -4-
   12
SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

         The Company will bear the entire cost of preparing, assembling,
printing and mailing proxy materials furnished by the Board of Directors to
stockholders.  Copies of proxy materials also will be furnished to brokerage
houses, fiduciaries and custodians to be forwarded to the beneficial owners of
the Class A Common Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C
Preferred Stock.  In addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the
mail, some of the officers, directors and regular employees of the Company and
the Bank may (without additional compensation) solicit proxies by telephone or
personal interview, the costs of which the Company will bear.

         In the event that any of the nominees for election as director becomes
unavailable, which the Company does not expect, it is intended that, pursuant
to the accompanying proxy, votes will be cast for such substitute nominee or
nominees as may be designated by the Board of Directors, unless the Board of
Directors reduces the number of directors.

ANNUAL REPORT

         A copy of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the twelve
months ended December 31, 1993 (the "1993 Annual Report") accompanies this
Proxy Statement.  Additional copies of the 1993 Annual Report are available
without cost upon request by writing to Linda M. Tanner, Assistant Secretary,
Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company, 550 Montgomery Street, 10th
Floor, San Francisco, California 94111.

BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF THE CLASS A COMMON STOCK, THE SERIES B PREFERRED STOCK
AND THE SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK

         CLASS A COMMON STOCK

         The following table sets forth information concerning the beneficial
ownership of the Class A Common Stock as of March 24, 1994, the latest
practicable date prior to filing of this Proxy Statement, by (i) each person
known to the Board of Directors to be the beneficial owner of more than five
percent (5%) of the Class A Common Stock; (ii) each director of the Company and
each nominee for director; (iii) the Company's Chief Executive Officer at the
end of the 1993 fiscal year, and the two most highly compensated executive
officers at the end of the 1993 fiscal year other than the Chief Executive
Officer and who had total compensation in excess of $100,000; and (iv)
directors, nominees and current executive officers of the Company and the Bank
as a group.  Other than as set forth below and in the footnotes thereto, based
upon filings made with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), the
Company is not aware of any person who is the beneficial owner of five percent
(5%) or more of the Class A Common Stock.





                                      -5-
   13



                                                                                            PERCENTAGE
                                               NUMBER OF SHARES OF                           ASSUMING
                                                 CLASS A COMMON           PERCENT          ADOPTION OF
                                               STOCK BENEFICIALLY            OF              PROPOSAL
       BENEFICIAL OWNER (1)                           OWNED                CLASS             TWO(10)
- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
 Putra Masagung                                      5,600,000(2)           62.92(2)        92.65(11)

 Donald R. Stephens (3)                                639,044               7.18            1.42

 Donna Miller Casey (4)(5)(9)(12)                       17,723               *               *

 David R. Holbrooke, M.D. (5)(12)                      121,100               1.28            *

 Gordon B. Swanson (6)(12)                              20,056               *               *

 Kent D. Price (7)                                           0               *               *

 Steven R. Champion (7)                                      0               *               *

 Rodney D. Freed                                             0               *               *

 Carl D. Gustavson(12)                                       0               *               *

 Willard D. Sharpe(12)                                   5,000               *               *

 All directors, nominees and current                   163,879               1.73            *
 executive officers of the Bank as a
 group (10 persons) (8)(9)


            The address of Mr. Masagung (also referred to herein as the
"Principal Stockholder") is 55 Jalan MH Thamrin, Jakarta, Indonesia.  The
address of Mr. Stephens is 500 Sansome Street, Suite 600, San Francisco, CA
94111.

______________
*        represents less than 1% of the Class A Common Stock outstanding.

(1)      The persons listed above have sole voting and investment power over
         the shares attributed to them, subject to community property laws
         where applicable, unless otherwise indicated in these footnotes.

(2)      Does not include up to 102,207 shares which Mr. Masagung has the right
         to acquire for $2.50 per share through the exercise of warrants
         granted by the Company (the "Anti-dilution Warrants") if participants
         in the Company's former stock option plans exercise their options (Mr.
         Masagung may acquire 1.0408 (i.e., 51/49) shares for each share that
         is issued by the Company as a result of exercise of any stock option
         that was outstanding as of July 13, 1992.  Options to acquire 98,200
         shares were granted by the Company prior to July 13, 1992 and remain
         in existence.  The product of 98,200 and 1.0408 equals 102,207).  All
         of such options have an exercise price higher than the current trading
         price of the Class A Common Stock.  Does not include (i) the
         36,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock that Mr. Masagung would be
         entitled (and on May 31, 1994 required) to receive, subject to
         stockholder approval of the conversion feature of the Series C
         Preferred Stock, upon conversion of the 900,000 shares of Series C
         Preferred Stock currently owned by him into shares of Class A Common
         Stock and Warrants, or (ii) the 36,000,000 additional shares of Class
         A Common Stock that he would be entitled to receive upon exercise of
         such Warrants for $0.50 per share.  See "Series C Preferred Stock"
         below.

(3)      Includes 23,340 shares held in trusts for the benefit of Mr. Stephens'
         children for which Mr. Stephens disclaims beneficial ownership.  Mr.
         Stephens resigned as a director of the Company on April 11, 1993.

(4)      Includes 908 shares held by Mrs. Casey's children for which Mrs. Casey
         disclaims beneficial ownership.





                                      -6-
   14
(5)      Includes 7,700 shares that the named individual has the right to
         acquire through the exercise of stock options granted by the Company
         pursuant to stock option plans that have terminated.

(6)      Includes 7,300 shares that the named individual has the right to
         acquire through the exercise of stock options granted by the Company
         pursuant to stock option plans that have terminated.

(7)      Does not include options to purchase shares of Class A Common Stock
         which the Company has agreed to grant to Messrs. Price and Champion as
         part of the consideration for Messrs. Price and Champion to enter into
         Employment Agreements with the Company, subject to the stockholders'
         approval of PROPOSAL SIX.  Under such Employment Agreements, each of
         Messrs. Price and Champion would receive options to purchase that
         number of shares equal to 4% of the outstanding shares of Class A
         Common Stock, with anti-dilution provisions requiring the grant of
         additional options so as to maintain the 4% ratio if more shares of
         Class A Common Stock become outstanding.  The price at which the
         options granted in the initial 4% grant could be exercised would be
         $0.50, the effective conversion price per share in the Company's most
         recent sale of Series C Preferred Stock to the Principal Stockholder
         (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described
         in PROPOSAL FOUR).  The price at which subsequent anti-dilution
         options could be exercised would be the fair market value at the date
         of grant.  The options would vest non-ratably over a ten-year period.

         Also does not include Warrants to purchase 1.5 million shares of Class
         A Common Stock with an exercise price of $0.50 per share (without
         giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in
         PROPOSAL FOUR), which the Principal Stockholder has agreed to transfer
         to each of Messrs. Price and Champion, upon conversion of the
         Company's Series C Preferred Stock and upon the successful completion
         of the Private Placement.

(8)      This group includes all current directors and executive officers of
         the Company and of the Bank.  Includes an aggregate of 30,000 shares
         that directors and executive officers have the right to acquire
         through the exercise of stock options granted by the Company pursuant
         to stock option plans that have terminated, but does not include an
         aggregate of 250,000 shares that non-employee directors have the right
         to acquire through the exercise of stock options granted by the
         Company pursuant to the 1993 Non-Employee Directors Stock Option Plan,
         subject to stockholders' approval of PROPOSAL SIX, which options would
         vest over a two-year period.  Does not include any of the options that
         may be granted to Messrs. Price and Champion as described in footnote
         7 above.

(9)      Does not include 39,772 unallocated shares of Class A Common Stock
         held by the Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company Employee
         Stock Ownership Plan (the "ESOP"), of which Mrs. Casey is a
         Co-Trustee.  Each participant in the ESOP may direct the Co-Trustees
         as to the manner in which shares of Class A Common Stock allocated to
         his or her account shall be voted.  The Co-Trustees may not vote
         shares of Class A Common Stock allocated to participants' accounts as
         to which they have not received voting instructions.  The ESOP
         provides that the Co-Trustees shall vote shares of Class A Common
         Stock held by the ESOP that are not allocated to participants'
         accounts in accordance with instructions received from the Company's
         401(k) and ESOP Committee.  The Company's 401(k) and ESOP  Committee
         is composed of Mrs. Casey, Willard D. Sharpe, three non-director
         senior officers of the Company and one non-director consultant to the
         Company.  The 39,772 unallocated shares of Class A Common Stock held
         by the ESOP are not included in the above table as being beneficially
         owned by Mrs. Casey.

(10)     Assumes that (a) PROPOSAL TWO is adopted, (b) Mr. Masagung converts
         all of his 900,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock into 36,000,000
         shares of Class A Common Stock and Warrants to acquire an additional
         36,000,000 shares, which conversion would be mandatory on May 31, 1994
         if PROPOSAL TWO is adopted, (c) as the Company understands is
         currently contemplated, Mr. Masagung does not exercise any of the
         Warrants, and (d) the number of shares of Class A Common Stock
         beneficially owned by all persons other than Mr. Masagung does not
         change between the Record Date and the date of the conversion.  The
         percentages shown in this table for Mr. Masagung differ from the
         percentages of his control of the total voting owner of the Company
         shown on page 1, because the percentages in this table reflect only
         ownership of the Class A Common Stock.

(11)     Does not include any units which may be purchased by Mr. Putra
         Masagung or Mr. Oka Masagung, his brother, in connection with the
         Private Placement.  Mr. Putra Masagung and Mr. Oka Masagung have
         indicated to management of the Company that they intend, individually
         or together, to subscribe for $2,000,000 or more of Units in the
         Private Placement.

(12)     Does not include 50,000 shares that the named individual has the right
         to acquire through the exercise of stock options granted by the
         Company pursuant to the 1993 Non-employee Directors Stock Option Plan,
         subject to stockholders' approval of PROPOSAL SIX, which options would
         vest over a two-year period.

         Mr. Kaharudin Latief of Jakarta, Indonesia has provided notice to the
Federal Reserve Board (the "FRB") and applied to the California State Banking
Department (the "Banking Department") for approval to acquire shares of Series
C Preferred Stock.  If and when regulatory clearance is received, Mr. Latief
plans to





                                      -7-
   15
acquire from Mr. Masagung 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock (or,
assuming that PROPOSAL TWO is approved, the shares of Class A Common Stock and
Warrants into which such shares of Series C Preferred Stock are converted)
through cancellation of an unsecured, personal loan in the amount of $6,000,000
which Mr. Latief previously extended to Mr. Masagung.  Mr. Masagung used the
proceeds of this loan to acquire 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock
from the Company.  If Mr. Latief consummates this transaction, and if the
conversion feature of the Series C Preferred Stock (including mandatory
conversion on May 31, 1994) is approved by the Company's stockholders, Mr.
Latief would  hold 12,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock and Warrants to
acquire an additional 12,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock at an exercise
price of $0.50 per share.

         Mr. Latief has indicated to management that if his acquisition of
Series C Preferred Stock (or Class A Common Stock if PROPOSAL TWO is adopted)
is consummated, Mr. Latief will seek appointment of himself or his designee as
a director of the Company (but not the Bank), subject to obtaining required
regulatory non-objection.  Management of the Company expects to recommend to
the Board of Directors that Mr. Latief or his designee be added to the Board if
his acquisition is completed, subject to regulatory clearance.  According to
information provided by Mr.  Latief's representatives, if Mr. Latief does not
receive all required approvals to purchase shares of the Company, Mr. Latief
will not acquire any shares of Series C Preferred Stock (or Class A Common
Stock if PROPOSAL TWO is adopted), and will expect repayment in full of the
Principal Stockholder's indebtedness to Mr. Latief.

         The following table sets forth information concerning the beneficial
ownership of the Class A Common Stock by Mr. Masagung, Mr. Latief and by all
shareholders other than Mr. Masagung, Mr. Latief and the current directors and
executive officers of the Company (the "non-affiliated stockholders") on the
Record Date assuming that the conversion feature of the Series C Preferred
Stock (including mandatory conversion on May 31, 1994) is approved by the
stockholders of the Company, that Mr. Latief receives regulatory clearance to
and does acquire 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock (or the shares of
Class A Common Stock and Warrants into which such shares of Series C Preferred
Stock are converted) from Mr. Masagung, that if either Mr. Masagung or Mr.
Latief exercise Warrants they will exercise all of the Warrants they hold, and
that the ownership of Class A Common Stock otherwise does not change between
the Record Date and May 31, 1994.  The table does not assume the completion of
the Private Placement.  Because Mr. Stephens is no longer a director or officer
of the Company or the Bank, and is not subject to the reporting and short-swing
profits provisions of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, his
holdings are included with the non-affiliated stockholders.



 STOCKHOLDER              SHARES AND          SHARES AND          SHARES AND           SHARES AND
                          PERCENTAGE OWNED    PERCENTAGE OWNED    PERCENTAGE OWNED     PERCENTAGE OWNED
                          ASSUMING WARRANTS   ASSUMING ONLY MR.   ASSUMING ONLY MR.    ASSUMING ALL
                          NOT EXERCISED       MASAGUNG            LATIEF  EXERCISES    WARRANTS EXERCISED
                                              EXERCISES           WARRANTS
                                              WARRANTS
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          
 Putra Masagung           29,600,000          53,600,000          29,600,000           53,600,000
                          (65.92%)            (77.79%)            (52.02%)             (66.25%)

 Kaharudin Latief         12,000,000          12,000,000          24,000,000           24,000,000
                          (26.73%)            (17.42%)            (42.18%)             (29.67%)

 Non-Affiliated           3,101,253           3,101,253           3,101,253            3,101,253
 Stockholders             (6.91%)             (4.50%)             (5.45%)              (3.83%)






                                      -8-
   16
SEE "PROPOSAL FIVE: AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL CLASS A COMMON STOCK, WARRANTS
AND RIGHTS" WITH RESPECT TO ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING THE POTENTIAL
IMPACT OF THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT ON THE HOLDERS OF THE COMPANY'S CLASS A COMMON
STOCK.


         SERIES B PREFERRED STOCK

         The following table sets forth information concerning the beneficial
ownership of the Series B Preferred Stock as of the Record Date, by (i) the
only persons known to the Board of Directors to be the beneficial owners of
more than 5% of the Series B Preferred Stock, (ii) each director of the Company
and each nominee for director; (iii) each of the named executive officers; and
(iv) directors, nominees and named executive officers of the Company and the
Bank as a group.  Other than as set forth below and in the footnotes thereto,
based on filings with the SEC, the Company is not aware of any person who is
the beneficial owner of 5% or more of the Series B Preferred Stock.



                                                                     NUMBER OF SHARES
                                                                       OF SERIES B                 PERCENT
                                                                     PREFERRED STOCK                 OF
BENEFICIAL OWNER (1)                                              BENEFICIALLY OWNED (2)            CLASS
- - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Gordon B. Swanson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                7,200                      43.4%
John A. Beal  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                2,143                      12.9
John Volckman   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                3,500                      21.1
Donna Miller Casey (3)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
David R. Holbrooke, M.D.  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
Kent D. Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
Steven R. Champion  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
Rodney D. Freed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
Carl D. Gustavson   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
Willard D. Sharpe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    0                       *
All directors, nominees and current executive officers of the
Company and the Bank as a group (10 persons) (3)  . . . .                7,200                      43.4



         The address of Mr. Beal is 225 Rollins Road, Burlingame, California
94010, the address of Mr. Volckman is 127 Alta Vista, Atherton, California
94025, and the address of Mr. Swanson for purposes of his ownership of the
Series B Preferred Stock is the principal executive office of the Company.

- - --------------
 *       represents less than 1% of the Series B Preferred Stock outstanding.

(1)      The persons listed above have sole voting and investment power over
         the shares attributed to them, subject to community property laws
         where applicable, unless otherwise indicated in these footnotes.

(2)      The holders of Series B Preferred Stock are entitled at any time to
         convert their shares of Series B Preferred Stock into shares of the
         Company's Class B Common Stock at the conversion ratio of one share of
         Series B Preferred Stock convertible into one share of Class B Common
         Stock, upon payment of a conversion fee to the Company of $7.00 per
         share, subject to adjustment.  As of the Record Date, the Company had
         not issued any shares of Class B Common Stock.  The holders of the
         Series B Preferred Stock were also entitled at any time between July
         13, 1992 and August 12, 1992, to convert their shares of Series B
         Preferred Stock into shares of the Class A Common Stock at the ratio
         of one share of Class A Common Stock for each share of Series B
         Preferred Stock without the payment of a conversion fee.  A total of
         420,909 shares of the Series B Preferred Stock were so converted into
         shares of the Class A Common Stock during said period.  Holders of the
         Series B Preferred Stock are no longer entitled to convert their
         shares into Class A Common Stock.  SEE "PROPOSAL FOUR: AUTHORIZATION
         OF AMENDMENT AND





                                      -9-
   17
         RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION" FOR A DISCUSSION OF THE
         PROPOSED RECLASSIFICATION OF CLASS B COMMON STOCK AS AND INTO CLASS A
         COMMON STOCK.

(3)      Does not include 422 shares of Series B Preferred Stock held by the
         ESOP.  Mrs. Casey is a Co-Trustee under the ESOP.  Each participant in
         the ESOP may direct the Co-Trustees as to the manner in which shares
         of Series B Preferred Stock allocated to his or her account shall be
         voted.  The ESOP provides that the Co-Trustees may vote shares of
         Series B Preferred Stock allocated to participants' accounts as to
         which they have not received voting instructions and shares of Series
         B Preferred Stock held by the ESOP that are not allocated to
         participants' accounts in accordance with instructions received from
         the Company's 401(k) and ESOP Committee.  The Company's 401(k) and
         ESOP Committee is composed of Mrs. Casey, Willard D. Sharpe, three
         non-director senior officers of the Company and one non-director
         consultant to the Company.



         SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK

         The following table sets forth information concerning the beneficial
ownership of the Series C Preferred Stock as of the Record Date, which, as of
that date, was owned solely by the Principal Stockholder.  Other than as set
forth below, and in the footnotes thereto, based on filings with the SEC, the
Company is not aware of any person who is the beneficial owner of 5% or more of
the Series C Preferred Stock.



                                                             NUMBER OF SHARES
                                                               OF SERIES C
                                                             PREFERRED STOCK             PERCENT OF
 BENEFICIAL OWNER (1)                                     BENEFICIALLY OWNED (2)            CLASS
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       
 Putra Masagung                                                  900,000                     100

 All directors, nominees and current executive                      0                         0
 officers of the Company and the Bank as a group (10
 persons)


The address of Mr. Masagung is 55 Jalan MH Thamrin, Jakarta, Indonesia.
______________
(1)      The persons listed above have sole voting and investment power over
         the shares attributed to them, subject to community property laws
         where applicable, unless otherwise indicated in these footnotes.

(2)      If the stockholders approve PROPOSAL TWO, the holders of Series C
         Preferred Stock will be entitled (and, as to shares outstanding on May
         31, 1994, required) to convert each share of Series C Preferred Stock
         into 40 shares of Class A Common Stock and 40 Warrants.  Each Warrant
         entitles the holder to purchase an additional share of Class A Common
         Stock at a purchase price of $0.50 per share.  The preceding sentences
         of this footnote do not give effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock
         split described in PROPOSAL FOUR.

SEE "PROPOSAL TWO:  AUTHORIZATION OF CONVERSION OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK AND
AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF
SHARES AND REQUIRE CONVERSION OF CERTAIN SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK."
SEE ALSO "CLASS A COMMON STOCK" FOR A DISCUSSION OF THE PROPOSED SALE OF SERIES
C PREFERRED STOCK BY THE PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDER TO MR. LATIEF.





                                      -10-
   18
BACKGROUND INFORMATION

         JULY 1992 INVESTMENT BY THE PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDER

         As a result of the Company's net losses suffered for the year ended
December 31, 1991 and the first six months of 1992, the Company and the Bank
failed to meet capital adequacy requirements applicable to bank holding
companies and banks through July 13, 1992.  In order to raise additional
capital, on July 13, 1992, the Company completed the issuance and sale in a
private placement of 5,600,000 shares of its Class A Common Stock, which
represented a majority of the Company's total voting power, for $2.50 per
share, for an aggregate purchase price of $14,000,000, to the Principal
Stockholder, a private investor who is a citizen of Indonesia.  The Principal
Stockholder also received the Anti-dilution Warrants to purchase up to 384,310
shares of Class A Common Stock at a purchase price of $2.50 per share upon the
exercise of options previously granted by the Company to its officers and
directors.  In the two weeks preceding July 13, 1992, the average closing price
of the Class A Common Stock on the AMEX was $2.875.  Due to the expiration of
the majority of the options granted by the Company to its officers and
directors prior to July 13, 1992, the maximum number of shares that the
Principal Stockholder can potentially acquire through the exercise of
Anti-dilution Warrants has been reduced to 102,207.

         The sale to the Principal Stockholder was accomplished pursuant to a
Stock Purchase Agreement, dated as of April 10, 1992, between the Company and
Peninsula Holdings, a corporation organized under the laws of the Cayman
Islands.  The Stock Purchase Agreement had been assigned to the Principal
Stockholder on May 8, 1992 and had been amended on May 14 and June 18, 1992 (as
amended, the "Amended Stock Purchase Agreement").  The transactions
contemplated by the Amended Stock Purchase Agreement (the "Transactions"),
along with certain amendments to the Certificate which were necessary to
complete the Transactions, were approved by the Company's stockholders at a
Special Meeting of Stockholders held on July 6, 1992, following the mailing of
proper notice and a proxy solicitation conducted in accordance with SEC rules.

         As a condition to closing the Transactions (the "Closing"), the
Principal Stockholder required the directors of the Company and the executive
officers and directors of the Bank to acquire 600,000 shares of the Class A
Common Stock at $2.50 per share (the same price per share as was paid by the
Principal Stockholder for his shares of the Class A Common Stock) in a private
placement which was made concurrently with the Closing, for an aggregate
purchase price of $1,500,000.  Donald R. Stephens ("Stephens"), who at the time
was the Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer and President of the
Company, expressed a willingness to invest up to $715,000 in the Company, and
other executive officers and directors of the Company and the Bank agreed to
invest the remaining $785,000.  However, due to restrictions contained in the
Company's bylaws, Mr. Stephens could not acquire Class A Common Stock from the
Company at a price below the average closing price of the Class A Common Stock
in the twenty trading days prior to the purchase without the approval of the
holders of at least 50 percent of the Class A Common Stock.  Such average
closing  price in the twenty trading days prior to July 13, 1992 exceeded
$2.50.

         In order to permit the Company to proceed with closing of the
Transactions without having to conduct a further proxy solicitation, the
Principal Stockholder agreed to waive the condition that the directors and
executive officers invest $1,500,000 in Class A Common Stock, provided that (a)
the officers and directors of the Company and the Bank other than Mr. Stephens
would invest $785,000 in Class A Common Stock by purchasing 314,000 shares from
the Company at $2.50 per share, and (b) Mr. Stephens would invest $715,000 in
the Company through the purchase at par of a non-interest bearing Subordinated
Term Note issued by the Company (the "Subordinated Term Note") in the principal
amount of $715,000.  At the 1992 Annual Meeting of Stockholders held on
September 15, 1992, the stockholders of the Company approved the amendment of
the Company's bylaws and the issuance by the Company of 286,000 shares of Class
A Common Stock to Mr. Stephens in exchange for the cancellation of the
Subordinated Term Note, thereby effecting a sale of those shares to Stephens
for $2.50 per share.





                                      -11-
   19
         The Amended Stock Purchase Agreement also called for the Company to
commence a private offering of additional Class A Common Stock to the Principal
Stockholder and to potential investors other than the executive officers and
directors of the Company and the Bank as soon as possible following completion
of the Transactions.  The Company agreed to use its best efforts to raise up to
$10 million in the private offering, at the same price per share paid by the
Principal Stockholder in the Transactions, and to consummate the offering
within 60 days after its commencement.

         NEED FOR ADDITIONAL CAPITAL IN FOURTH QUARTER OF 1992

         As of July 13, 1992, following the completion of the Transactions, the
Company and the Bank were in compliance with all regulatory capital
requirements.  As a result of $8 million of losses in the third quarter of
1992, however, the Company and the Bank again failed to meet certain regulatory
capital requirements as of September 30, 1992.  If the Company and the Bank had
continued to fail to meet applicable capital requirements, they would have been
subject to a variety of possible regulatory restrictions and sanctions
including a termination of the Bank's ability to accept or "roll over" brokered
deposits (which would have severely affected the liquidity of the Bank), cease
and desist orders, civil monetary penalties on the institution and/or
management officials for violating safe and sound banking practices, removal of
officers or directors, temporary suspension or termination of the Bank's
deposit insurance, and possible seizure of the Bank by the FDIC followed by the
liquidation or forced sale of the Bank.  Management initiated a program of
immediate expense reductions, including the lay-off of 29 employees on
September 29, 1992, the elimination of living allowances for all executive
officers, and the expansion of efforts to negotiate a reduction in lease
expenses.  However, management forecast that, in addition to cost reductions,
at least $10 million of new capital would need to be raised in order to attain
compliance with regulatory requirements and to permit the Bank to reduce its
troubled assets.  As a result, management and the Board of Directors believed
that it was critically important to the Company and the Bank to raise a
significant amount of additional capital in a very short time period.

         The Company prepared and distributed a private placement memorandum in
connection with the $10 million private offering contemplated by the Amended
Stock Purchase Agreement, but was unable to identify any investors willing to
purchase shares of Class A Common Stock on the terms of the private offering,
and the Board of Directors terminated the offering on October 19, 1992.  At the
same time, the Board authorized management to develop a new capital instrument
if necessary in order to attract new capital for the Bank, which instrument
would be offered to the Principal Stockholder, to the Company's directors and
executive officers, and to the potential investors who had executed
confidentiality agreements in connection with the private offering.  In order
to raise the necessary capital quickly, and considering the lack of interest
from the other potential investors contacted in the private offering, the
Company entered into negotiations with the Principal Stockholder concerning the
terms and conditions on which he would agree to purchase additional securities
of the Company.

         The Company and the Principal Stockholder would have preferred that a
new investment be made through the purchase and sale of additional shares of
Class A Common Stock.  However, management believed that such a sale could not
be consummated as quickly as was necessary because of the Rules of the AMEX
(the "AMEX Rules"), on which the Class A Common Stock is traded.  The AMEX
Rules require AMEX approval of an application for listing prior to the issuance
of any additional securities of a class listed on the AMEX.  The AMEX Rules
further provide that, in order for AMEX to approve an application to list
additional common stock equal to or greater than twenty percent (20%) of the
then-outstanding stock, if the additional stock is to be sold for less than the
greater of the book or market value of the outstanding stock, stockholder
approval of the transaction must be obtained pursuant to a proxy solicitation
conforming to SEC proxy rules.  If the transaction contemplated between the
Company and the Principal Stockholder had involved the issuance of Class A
Common Stock, it would have involved the issuance of common stock equal to more
than twenty percent (20%) of the then-outstanding common stock at a price less
than the book value per share and the market value per share of the Company's
Class A Common Stock.





                                      -12-
   20
         Management of the Company believed that the process of calling a
special stockholders' meeting and preparing and circulating proxy materials
would have unacceptably delayed the necessary infusion of capital.
Consequently, the parties agreed upon a purchase and sale of convertible
preferred stock (the Series C Preferred Stock) and further agreed that the
conversion feature of that preferred stock (with each share of Series C
Preferred Stock convertible into 40 shares of Class A Common Stock and 40
Warrants to acquire an additional share of Class A Common Stock for $0.50 per
share) would be submitted to the stockholders of the Company for approval as
soon as practicable.  Because the Series C Preferred Stock is not convertible
into Class A Common Stock unless and until stockholder approval of the
conversion feature has been obtained, the Series C Preferred Stock could be
issued without stockholder approval without violating the AMEX Rules.  The
approval by the stockholders of the Company of the conversion feature of the
Series C Preferred Stock and certain related changes to the Certificate are
being sought at the Annual Meeting under PROPOSAL TWO.

         OCTOBER 29TH LETTER AGREEMENT

         Following a period of negotiations, the Company and the Principal
Stockholder entered into a letter agreement dated October 29, 1992, which was
subsequently amended on November 20, 1992 (as amended, the "October 29 Letter
Agreement") pursuant to which it was agreed that: (i) the Principal Stockholder
would purchase up to 500,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at a price of
Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per share for a total purchase price of $10,000,000,
subject to reduction by the number of shares of Series C Preferred Stock, if
any, issued and sold on the same terms to executive officers and directors of
the Company on or prior to the completion of the sale to the Principal
Stockholder, with the sale of 200,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock to be
completed by November 30, 1992, and the sale of an additional 300,000 shares of
Series C Preferred stock to be completed by December 18, 1992; (ii) the
Principal Stockholder would invest an additional $2,000,000 in the Company
through either (a) the purchase of Class A Common Stock and/or warrants (or
rights to subscribe for the same) in a proposed offering by the Company of
rights to purchase such Class A Common Stock and/or warrants to the Company's
existing stockholders and possibly additional investors, or (b) the purchase of
an additional 100,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at a price of Twenty
Dollars ($20.00) per share, with the choice of (a) or (b) at the Company's
option after discussion with the Principal Stockholder; and (iii) the Company
granted to the Principal Stockholder an option (the "Series C Preferred Stock
Option") to purchase up to an additional 400,000 shares of Series C Preferred
Stock at a price of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per share, exercisable in whole or
in part at any time on or before December 31, 1993.  The terms and conditions
set forth in the October 29 Letter Agreement were determined pursuant to an
arm's length negotiation and were approved by the unanimous vote of the Board
of Directors of the Company.  The Principal Stockholder's obligations under the
October 29 Letter Agreement were not conditioned on the Company's initiation of
a rights offering, but the October 29 Letter Agreement contemplated that the
Company would initiate a rights offering designed to raise up to $8 million in
capital, to be completed by March 31, 1993.

         The Principal Stockholder completed the purchase under the October 29
Letter Agreement of 200,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock on November 30,
1992; purchased the second installment of 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred
Stock in separate acquisitions of 100,000 shares on December 30, 1992 and
200,000 shares on January 12, 1993; and, when the Company was unable to obtain
any indications of interest in the contemplated rights offering, completed the
investment of an additional $2,000,000 in the Company through a purchase of
100,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock on February 26, 1993.  Assuming
stockholder approval of the conversion feature of the Series C Preferred Stock,
which approval the Principal Stockholder can control through his ownership of
the majority of the voting stock of the Company, the effective price paid by
the Principal Stockholder per share of Class A Common Stock in each of the
above acquisitions was $0.50.  In the two weeks preceding October 29, 1992, the
average closing price of the Class A Common Stock on the AMEX was $1.75; in the
two weeks preceding November 30, $1.19; in the two weeks preceding December 30,
$1.25; in the two weeks preceding January 12, 1993, $1.50, and in the two weeks
preceding February 26, $2.50.





                                      -13-
   21
         DETERMINATIONS BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         In approving the October 29 Letter Agreement, the Board of Directors
was influenced by the need to raise capital quickly.  Based on discussions with
the FDIC by management and the Board, the Board believed that if the Bank did
not obtain a firm commitment for a substantial investment of capital within a
very short time period, the Bank would be subject to severe regulatory
sanctions, including the appointment of a receiver or conservator for the Bank,
that would have very negative consequences for the Company and possibly require
the Company to file a petition for bankruptcy.  The Board, with assistance from
management and advice from the investment banking firm of Montgomery Securities
("Montgomery"), reviewed potential alternatives, including a private placement
of Class A Common Stock and a rights offering, but determined that the
Principal Stockholder constituted the only source from which the Company could
raise sufficient capital with the necessary promptness.


         The Board of Directors considered the fact that the effective price
which the Principal Stockholder was paying for Class A Common Stock under the
October 29 Letter Agreement, assuming conversion of the Series C Preferred
Stock  ($0.50) was below the trading price of the Class A Common Stock.
However, the Board of Directors believed that the only alternative to the
October 29 Letter Agreement was to accept regulatory sanctions which would
cause the value of the Class A Common Stock to fall below $0.50, including, in
the event of a conservatorship or receivership of the Bank, the likely need for
the Company to file bankruptcy, with its stock in such event likely becoming
worthless.   In addition, the Board relied on advice from Montgomery as to the
fairness of the consideration to be paid by the Principal Stockholder.

         FAIRNESS OPINION

         On November 20, 1992, Montgomery delivered to the Board of Directors
of the Company a written opinion (the "Fairness Opinion") as to the fairness to
the stockholders of the Company (other than the Principal Stockholder and the
directors and executive officers of the Company and the Bank) from a financial
point of view, of the consideration to be received by the Company from the
Principal Stockholder in the transactions contemplated by the October 29 Letter
Agreement.  The Fairness Opinion was based upon information available to
Montgomery as of the date the Fairness Opinion was issued.  The full text of
the Fairness Opinion is attached hereto as Appendix A and should be read
carefully and in its entirety in connection with this Proxy Statement.  The
following summary of Montgomery's opinion is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the full text of the opinion.  Montgomery's opinion is addressed
to the Company's Board only and does not constitute a recommendation to any
Company stockholder as to how such stockholder should vote at the Annual
Meeting.

         In connection with its opinion, Montgomery, among other things, (i)
reviewed certain publicly available financial and other data with respect to
the Company, including consolidated financial statements for recent years and
interim periods to the date of the Fairness Opinion and certain other relevant
financial and operating data relating to the Company made available to
Montgomery from published sources and from the internal records of the Company;
(ii) reviewed the October 29 Letter Agreement; (iii) reviewed the Certificate
of Designations of Rights, Preferences, Privileges and Restrictions of the
Series C Preferred Stock, as amended (the "Series C Certificate of
Designations"); (iv) reviewed certain historical market prices and trading
volumes of the Company's Class A Common Stock on the American Stock Exchange;
(v) as described in more detail below, compared the Company from a financial
point of view with certain other companies in the financial services industry
which it deemed relevant; (vi) as described in more detail below, considered
the financial terms, to the extent publicly available, of selected recent
transactions of financial institutions which it deemed to be comparable, in
whole or in part, to the transactions contemplated by the October 29 Letter
Agreement; (vii) reviewed and discussed with representatives of the management
of the Company certain information of a business and financial nature regarding
the Company, furnished to Montgomery by the Company's management, including
financial forecasts and related assumptions of the Company; (viii) made
inquiries regarding and discussed the October 29 Letter Agreement, the Series C
Certificate of Designations, the transactions





                                      -14-
   22
contemplated by the October 29 Letter Agreement, and other matters related
thereto with the Company and its counsel and accountants; and (ix) performed
such other analyses and examinations as Montgomery deemed appropriate.

         In connection with its review, Montgomery did not independently verify
any of the foregoing information, relied on such information and assumed that
all such information was complete and accurate in all material respects.  With
respect to the financial forecasts for the Company provided to Montgomery  by
the Company's management, Montgomery assumed that they were reasonably prepared
on bases reflecting the best available estimates and judgments of the Company's
management at the time of preparation as to the Company's future financial
performance and that they provided a reasonable basis upon which Montgomery
could form its opinion.  Montgomery also assumed there had been no material
changes in the Company's assets, financial condition, results of operations,
business or prospects since the date of the last financial statements made
available to Montgomery.  Montgomery relied on advice of counsel to the Company
as to all legal matters with respect to the Company, the October 29 Letter
Agreement, the transactions contemplated by the October 29 Letter Agreement,
and this Proxy Statement.  In addition, Montgomery did not make an independent
evaluation, appraisal or physical inspection of the assets or individual
properties of the Company nor was it furnished with  any such appraisals.
Further, Montgomery's opinion was based on economic, monetary and market
conditions existing as of the date of the Fairness Opinion.

         In connection with rendering the Fairness Opinion, Montgomery
considered that the Bank was not in compliance with regulatory capital adequacy
requirements and, if the Bank was not able to raise adequate capital on a
timely basis, the Bank would face formal regulatory sanctions inhibiting its
ability to accept, renew or roll over brokered deposits on which the Bank was
heavily dependent for its liquidity.  Montgomery also considered the likely
possibility that a conservator or receiver could be appointed for the Bank if
the Bank was unable to raise additional capital by December 19, 1992, the date
certain provisions of the prompt corrective action requirements of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 ("FDICIA") would become
effective (the FDICIA requirements are described below in "Prompt Corrective
Action and Capital Restoration Plan").  Given the short period of time that the
Bank had to raise additional capital, Montgomery also concluded that potential
investors or sources of new capital for the Bank other than Mr. Masagung were
not available.

         In addition, Montgomery performed certain financial analyses, which
are summarized below.  Although the evaluation of the fairness, from a
financial point of view, of the consideration to be paid in the transactions
contemplated by the October 29 Letter Agreement, was to some extent a
subjective one based on the experience and judgment of Montgomery, and not
merely the result of mathematical analysis of financial data, Montgomery relied
on two financial valuation methodologies in its determinations.

         COMPARABLE COMPANY ANALYSIS.  Using public and other available
information, Montgomery compared certain financial ratios of the Company
(including equity to assets, common equity to assets, return on average assets,
return on average equity, net interest margin, nonperforming assets to period
end loans, nonperforming assets to equity, loan loss reserve to loans, loan
loss reserve to nonperforming assets, chargeoffs to average loans, non-interest
expenses, net interest margin and non-interest expenses to average assets) as
of September 30, 1992, to the average for two groups of banks and bank holding
companies which Montgomery considered to be comparable.  These banks and bank
holding companies are in some cases a subset of the largest 50 United States
bank holding companies ranked by assets (the "National Proxy Group") and the
other was a group of Western banks and bank holding companies including TriCo
Bancshares, Redwood Empire Bancorp, Exchange Bank, Savings Bank of Mendocino
County, RCB Corporation, First Commercial Bancorp, Union Bank, Sumitomo Bank of
California, The Pacific Bank, Westamerica Bank, Mechanics Bank, Civic BanCorp,
California Bancshares Inc., University National Bank, Silicon Valley
Bancshares, Pacific Western Bancshares, Pacific Capital Bancorp, MBC Corp.
(Modesto Banking Company), California Republic Bancorp, Mid-State Bank, Santa
Barbara Bancorp, Levy Bancorp, First State Bank of the Oaks, CU Bancorp,
Foothill Independent Bank, City





                                      -15-
   23
National Bank, 1st Business Corporation, Guardian Bancorp, GBC Bancorp, Santa
Monica Bank, Home Interstate Bancorp, Pioneer Bancorp, Landmark Bancorp, CVB
Financial Corporation, Eldorado Bancorp, Riverside National Bank, California
Commercial, Commerce Bancorp, San Diego Financial Corp., Peninsula Bank of San
Diego, First National Corporation, CPB Inc., First Hawaiian, Inc., First
Security Corp., and West One Bancorp (the "Western Proxy Group").

         The comparisons revealed ratios for the National Proxy Group, the
Western Proxy Group and the Company as follows:  (i) equity to assets of 6.09%,
7.22% and 4.16%, respectively; (ii) common equity to assets of 6.62%, 6.99% and
4.16%, respectively; (iii) return on average assets of 1.09%, 0.51% and -6.53%,
respectively; (iv) return on average equity of 16.02%, 7.05% and -166.68%,
respectively; (v) net interest margin of 3.84%, 4.94% and 4.23%, respectively;
(vi) nonperforming assets to period end loans of 4.22%, 4.32% and 26.34%,
respectively; (vii) nonperforming assets to equity of 31.70%, 39.70% and
449.24%, respectively; (viii) loan loss reserve to loans of 3.28%, 2.26% and
4.60%, respectively; (ix) loan loss reserve to nonperforming assets of 79.30%,
59.40% and 17.47%, respectively; (x) chargeoffs to average loans of 1.16%,
1.02% and 4.79%, respectively; (xi) non-interest expenses and revenues of
61.57%, 67.10 % and 164.06%, respectively; (xii) non-interest expenses to net
interest margin of 98.20%, 86.30% and 241.72%, respectively; and (xiii)
non-interest expenses to average assets of 3.45%, 3.85% and 8.22%,
respectively.

         No company reviewed in the analysis is identical to the Company or the
Bank.  The analysis necessarily involved complex considerations and judgments
concerning differences in financial and operating characteristics of the
companies.  Some of these commercial banking companies are included in
Montgomery's Quarterly Bank Monitor and Western Bank Monitor, respectively.

         ANALYSIS OF SELECTED FINANCIAL INSTITUTION TRANSACTIONS.  Montgomery
also compared the transactions contemplated by the October 29 Letter Agreement,
on the basis of the multiple of book value derived from the aggregate value of
the consideration involved in the transactions contemplated by the October 29
Letter Agreement, as of the date of determination of such consideration, with
the same ratio in recent acquisitions of bank holding companies which
Montgomery deemed comparable.  In conducting this analysis Montgomery examined
Western transactions with multiples less than or equal to 100% of book value.
Such comparable acquisitions included:  ValliCorp's acquisition of Pacific
Bancorp, HomeFed's acquisition of Antelope Valley Savings and Loan Association,
Peninsula Bank's acquisition of Citizen's Western Bank, Royal Trustco Limited's
acquisition of Pacific First Financial, Washington Mutual Savings Bank's
acquisition of Sound Savings & Loan and Mr. Masagung's July investment in the
Company.

         These comparable acquisitions yielded implied multiples of book value
and return on assets for the acquired banks of (i) 0.81x and 0.64%,
respectively, for ValliCorp's acquisition of Pacific Bancorp; (ii) 0.80x and
0.40%, respectively, for HomeFed's acquisition of Antelope Valley S&LA; (iii)
1.00x and 0.47%, respectively, for Peninsula Bank's acquisition of Citizen's
Western Bank; (iv) 0.85x and 0.33%, respectively, for Royal Trustco Limited's
acquisition of Pacific First Financial; (v) 0.44x and -0.35%, respectively, for
Washington Mutual Savings Bank's acquisition of Sound Savings & Loan; and (v)
0.45 and -1.25%, respectively, for Mr. Putra Masagung's July investment in the
Company.  In comparison, Montgomery determined that the transactions
contemplated by the October 29 Letter Agreement would yield an implied multiple
of book value of 0.32x, while the Company's return on average assets for the
nine months ended September 30, 1992 was -6.53%.

         The summary set forth above does not purport to be a complete
description of the analyses performed by Montgomery.  The preparation of a
fairness opinion is not necessarily susceptible to partial analysis or summary
description.  Montgomery believes that its analyses and the summary set forth
above must be considered as a whole and that selecting portions of its analyses
and of the factors considered, without considering all analyses and factors,
would create an incomplete view of the process underlying the analyses set





                                      -16-
   24
forth in its presentation to the Company's Board or of the process underlying
the Fairness Opinion.  In addition, Montgomery may have given various analyses
more or less weight than other analyses, and may have deemed various
assumptions more or less probable than other assumptions, so that the results
from any particular analysis described above should not be taken to be
Montgomery's view of the actual value of the Company.  The fact that any
specific analysis has been referred to in the summary above is not meant to
indicate that such analysis was given greater weight than any other analysis.

         In performing its analyses, Montgomery made numerous assumptions with
respect to industry performance, general business and economic conditions,
actions which could be taken by bank regulators and other matters, many of
which were and are beyond the control of the Company.  The analyses performed
by Montgomery are not necessarily indicative of actual values or actual future
results, which may be significantly more or less favorable than suggested by
such analyses.  Such analyses were prepared solely as part of Montgomery's
analysis of the fairness of the transactions contemplated by the October 29
Letter Agreement to the Company's stockholders other than the Principal
Stockholder and the Company's and the Bank's directors and executive officers,
and were reported to the Company's Board in connection with the delivery of
Montgomery's opinion.  The analyses do not purport to be appraisals or to
reflect the prices at which a company might actually be sold or the prices at
which any securities may trade at the present time or at any time in the
future.  Montgomery used in its analyses various projections of future
performance prepared by the Company.  Although as stated above Montgomery
assumed that these projections provided a reasonable basis upon which
Montgomery could form its opinion, the projections were based on numerous
variables and assumptions which are inherently unpredictable and must be
considered not certain of occurrence as projected.  Accordingly, actual results
could vary significantly from those set forth in such projections.
Furthermore, the assumptions about bank regulatory actions are inherently
unpredictable and must be considered not certain of occurrence as assumed.
Accordingly, actual regulatory actions could have varied significantly from
those set forth above.

         The Company's Board of Directors selected Montgomery to act as its
financial advisor in connection with the transactions contemplated by the
October 29 Letter Agreement, on the basis of Montgomery's expertise in such
matters and its prior relationship with the Company.  The Company originally
engaged Montgomery in November 1991 as the Company's exclusive representative
and financial advisor for the purpose of identifying opportunities for
maximizing stockholder value, including advising the Company regarding
alternatives for raising additional capital.  As part of its engagement,
Montgomery agreed to and did render a fairness opinion in June 1992 regarding
the Amended Stock Purchase Agreement.  The Board of Directors of the Company
paid a fee of $278,740 to Montgomery in connection with this engagement.  In
addition, Montgomery was paid a fee of $150,000 for rendering the Fairness
Opinion.  The Company also agreed to reimburse Montgomery for its reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses in connection with its services to the Company.   The
Company has retained Montgomery as one of its financial advisors for its
planned private placement described in more detail in PROPOSAL FIVE below.

         ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT BY THE PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDER

         Upon completion by the Principal Stockholder on November 30, 1992 of
the first installment of the purchase of Series C Preferred Stock contemplated
by the October 29 Letter Agreement, the Company and the Bank were again in
compliance with then-applicable capital adequacy requirements.  However,
because the Company and the Bank continued to incur losses during the fourth
quarter of 1992 and because the Principal Stockholder was not able to complete
the entire 300,000-share second installment of his investment commitment under
the October 29 Letter Agreement until January 12, 1993, the Company and the
Bank did not have sufficient capital to satisfy all applicable federal
regulatory requirements on December 31, 1992.  Although the Company and the
Bank believed that all minimum capital requirements were satisfied as of
February 26, 1993 upon completion by the Principal Stockholder of the
$2,000,000 third installment of his investment commitment under the October 29
Letter Agreement, as a result of continuing losses in the first half of 1993,
the Bank did not satisfy all minimum capital requirements as of March 31, 1993
and June 30, 1993.  In order to assist the





                                      -17-
   25
Bank to attain compliance with minimum regulatory capital requirements, and
again facing the threat of regulatory action including the appointment of a
conservator or receiver, the Company determined to sell additional shares of
Series C Preferred Stock in a private placement.

         The Company prepared a private placement memorandum for an offering of
up to $12 million of Series C Preferred Stock at the same price paid by the
Principal Stockholder under the October 29 Letter Agreement.  The offering
would expire unless at least 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock were
sold on or before June 30, 1993, subject to extension at the option of the
Company until September 30, 1993.  The private placement memorandum was
distributed to accredited investors, and the Company obtained indications of
interest for a potential $10 million investment in the Company.  However, when
the Company was unable to obtain a letter of intent from the potential
investor, the Company entered into negotiations with Mr. Masagung to encourage
Mr. Masagung to purchase additional shares of Series C Preferred Stock on the
terms indicated in the private placement memorandum.

         Following a period of negotiations, including a review of the Bank's
loan portfolio by consultants retained by the Principal Stockholder, the
Principal Stockholder agreed to purchase an additional 300,000 shares of Series
C Preferred Stock for $6.0 million by no later than September 30, 1993 (the
"September Investment") under the Series C Preferred Stock Option and the
private placement memorandum.  The Board of Directors unanimously authorized
the sale to the Principal Stockholder and extended the date for expiration of
the private placement to September 30, 1993.  The September Investment was made
in two installments on August 27, 1993 and September 30, 1993, and the Bank has
returned to compliance with the industry-wide minimum regulatory capital
requirements.  See the discussion below under the caption "Regulatory
Directives and Orders," however, with respect to compliance with orders issued
by the FDIC and the Banking Department.  However, on August 29, 1993 the Bank
had become subject to higher capital requirements under orders issued by the
FDIC and the Banking Department and, as described below, is not currently in
compliance with such higher requirements.  Assuming stockholder approval of the
conversion feature of the Series C Preferred Stock, which approval the
Principal Stockholder can control through his ownership of the majority of the
voting stock of the Company, the effective price paid by the Principal
Stockholder per share of Class A Common Stock in the September Investment was
$0.50.  In the two weeks preceding August 27, 1993, the average closing price
of the Class A Common Stock on the AMEX was $1.40, and in the two weeks
preceding September 30 was $1.09.

REGULATORY DIRECTIVES AND ORDERS

         FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD DIRECTIVE

         As a result of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco's (the "FRB")
examination of the Company as of June 30, 1991, the FRB on April 20, 1992
issued a letter (the "Directive") prohibiting the Company, without the FRB's
prior approval, from (i) paying any cash dividends to its stockholders, (ii)
incurring any new debt or increasing existing debt, (iii) repurchasing any
outstanding stock of the Company or (iv) acquiring or entering into an
agreement to acquire any entities or portfolios.  The Company has been notified
that it is in a "troubled condition" for purposes of Section 914 of the
Financial Institutions Recovery, Reform and Enforcement Act ("FIRREA").
Accordingly, the Company must notify the FRB 30 days in advance of adding or
replacing any director or senior executive officer.  All directors and officers
who have been submitted to the FRB for approval have been approved as the new
management team and additional directors have been identified for approval.

         MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING

         Pursuant to federal law, the Company is subject to the capital
guidelines of the Federal Reserve Board and the Bank is subject to the FDIC's
regulations governing capital adequacy for banks that are not members
("nonmember banks") of the Federal Reserve System.  As a result of the Bank's
failure to meet its minimum





                                      -18-
   26
capital requirements during 1991, on November 15, 1991 the Bank entered into a
Memorandum of Understanding (the "MOU") with the FDIC and the California State
Banking Department (the "Banking Department").  The MOU required the Bank to
restore its capital and its allowance for loan losses to acceptable levels or
to sell the Bank.  In response to the MOU, management of the Bank established
and filed with the Banking Department and the FDIC a capital plan to determine
an appropriate range of capital ratios within which the Bank could operate in a
safe and sound manner, and to execute the appropriate strategy to ensure that
the Bank maintain capital within a minimum desirable range.  After certain
interim actions, as a result of a failure to meet regulatory capital
requirements at March 31, 1993, the Bank was required to file a Capital
Restoration Plan (the "Restoration Plan") in compliance with the "Prompt
Corrective Action" system imposed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act of 1991 ("FDICIA"), and that plan was approved by the FDIC on
September 8, 1993.  As a condition of the FDIC's approval of the Restoration
Plan, the Company agreed to guarantee that the Bank will comply with the
Restoration Plan until the Bank has met its minimum capital requirements on
average during each of four consecutive calendar quarters.  The Company's
liability under the guarantee is limited to the lesser of 5% of the Bank's
total assets at the time it became undercapitalized, $15.3 million, or an
amount necessary (or that would have been necessary) to bring the Bank into
compliance with all of its capital requirements as of the time it fails to
comply with the Restoration Plan.

         CEASE AND DESIST ORDERS

         On August 18, 1993, the Bank, without admitting or denying any alleged
charges, stipulated to Cease and Desist Orders (the "Orders") issued by the
FDIC and the Banking Department that became effective August 29, 1993 (the
"Orders Effective Date"), and that superseded the MOU.  The Orders directed,
among other things, that the Bank:  (a) achieve and maintain a 7% leverage
capital ratio on and after September 30, 1993; (b) pay no dividends without the
prior written consent of the FDIC and the California Superintendent of Banks
(the "Superintendent"); (c) reduce the $88.6 million in assets classified
"Substandard" or "Doubtful" as of November 30, 1992 (the date of the most
recent full-scope FDIC and Banking Department Report of Examination of the
Bank), to no more than $75.0 million by October 31, 1993, with further
reductions to no more than $60.0 million by December 31, 1993, no more than
$50.0 million by March 31, 1994 and no more than $40.0 million by August 31,
1994; (d) have and retain management whose qualifications and experience are
commensurate with their duties and responsibilities to operate the Bank in a
safe and sound manner, notify the FDIC and the Superintendent at least 30 days
prior to adding or replacing any new director or senior executive officer and
comply with certain restrictions in compensation of senior executive officers;
(e) maintain an adequate reserve for loan losses; (f) not extend additional
credit to, or for the benefit of, any borrower who had a previous loan from the
Bank that was charged off or classified "Loss" in whole or in part; (g) develop
and implement a plan to reduce its concentrations of construction and
development loans; (h) not increase the amount of its brokered deposits above
the amount outstanding on the Orders Effective Date and submit a written plan
for eliminating reliance on brokered deposits; (i) revise or adopt, and
implement, certain plans and policies to reduce the Bank's concentration of
construction and land development loans, reduce the Bank's dependency on
brokered deposits and out of area deposits, and to improve internal routines
and controls; (j) reduce the Bank's volatile liability dependency ratio to not
more than 25% by December 31, 1993, and not more than 15% by March 31, 1994;
(k) eliminate or correct all violations of law set out in the most recent
Report of Examination, and take all necessary steps to ensure future compliance
with all applicable laws and regulations; and (l) establish a committee of
three independent directors to monitor compliance with the Orders and report to
the FDIC and the Superintendent on a quarterly basis.

         The following table reflects both the Company's and the Bank's capital
ratios at December 31, 1993 with respect to the industry-wide prompt corrective
action minimum capital requirements and the Orders.  As of December 31, 1993,
the Bank met all industry-wide requirements but failed to meet the 7% leverage
capital ratio imposed by the Orders.  This failure occurred because the
leverage ratio is calculated by dividing Tier 1 capital by average assets at
each month-end, and the Bank's primary action taken to meet the required ratios
during the fourth quarter -- the sale of its Sacramento branch -- could not be
effectuated until December 4, 1993





                                      -19-
   27
due to delays in the approval by the FDIC and the Banking Department of such
sale.  If the sale of the Sacramento branch had been effected in October 1993
(as planned by the Bank) and the Bank's other operating results had remained
the same, the Bank leverage capital ratio for the fourth quarter would have
been in excess of 7%.  In addition, at December 31, 1993 the Bank's Tier 1
capital divided by total assets (without risk weighting) was 7.6%.  Management
believes that receipt of the proceeds from the Private Placement will permit
the Bank to meet the 7% leverage capital ratio requirement.



- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Prompt Corrective        Regulatory
                                                                        Action                Order
                             Company                Bank             Requirement           Requirement
                             -------                ----             -----------           -----------
                                                                                  
 Leverage Ratio               6.7%                  6.7%                4.00%                 7.00%

 Tier 1 Risk-                 8.0%                  8.0%                4.00%                 N.A.
 Based Capital
 Total Risk-                  9.5%                  9.5%                8.00%                 N.A.
 Based Capital
- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



         The FDIC and the Banking Department began an examination of the Bank
on February 28, 1994.  A final report to the Bank of the results of such
examination is not expected until after the date of the Annual Meeting.
However, as a result of discussions with the regulatory officials conducting
such examination, the Bank may not be in compliance with the following
provisions of the Orders:  (a) The Orders require that the Bank reduce assets
classified as "Substandard" and "Doubtful" to no more than $50 million by March
31, 1994 and no more than $40.0 million by August 31, 1994.  The amount of such
classified assets at March 31, 1994 were $51.1 million, which exceeds the
requirements of the Orders.  However, the Bank expects that no action will be
taken by the FDIC or the Banking Department with respect to such deficiency in
light of its substantial compliance with the requirement.  The Bank expects
that it will meet the August 31, 1994 requirement.  (b) The Bank currently has
outstanding $20.0 million of brokered certificates of deposit (which were
extended by the depositor to mature on September 30, 1994) that it is permitted
to accept only as a result of the waiver granted by the FDIC (with no assurance
that such waiver would be extended) of an otherwise applicable prohibition
against the Bank's acceptance of brokered deposits.  In connection with the
regulatory examination, certain questions at the field examination level have
been raised relating to the Bank's solicitation and acceptance of certain other
deposits placed in the Bank by certain money managers.  The aggregate amount of
such deposits were approximately $7 million at March 31, 1994.  If the FDIC
ultimately concludes that such deposits constitute brokered deposits, the Bank
would be required to seek a further waiver from the FDIC to increase the amount
of brokered deposits the Bank is permitted to accept, which also would affect
the Bank's volatile liability dependency ratio.  (The Bank anticipates that it
will not be in compliance with the volatile liability dependency ratio or
leverage capital requirements of the Orders at March 31, 1994, but it expects
that if it is able to complete the Private Placement, it does not expect action
will be taken by the FDIC or the Banking Department with respect to such
non-compliance.  No assurances, however, can be given that no action will be
taken with respect to such non-compliance.)  In addition, the Bank offers a
certificate of deposit arbitrage program designed to invest certain customer
funds in other financial institutions that the FDIC field examiner has
suggested constitutes a deposit brokerage activity which requires that prior
written notice be given to the FDIC.  If the FDIC ultimately concludes that the
Bank is acting as a deposit broker, the Bank will provide the requisite notice
to the FDIC.  In both cases, it is possible that the Bank could be subject to
regulatory sanctions for engaging in these activities, although the FDIC has
not advised the Bank that any such action is contemplated.  (c) The Bank
anticipates a further aggregate reduction in the book value of certain of its
problem assets of approximately $1,169,000.  Such reduction includes a
reduction of approximately $587,000 in the carrying value of a loan transferred
during 1993 with a carrying value of $1.6 million collateralized by





                                      -20-
   28
commercial real estate to in-substance foreclosure (discussed at page 43 of the
Company's 1993 Annual Report). Certain aspects of this reduction, including the
necessity for and the timing and reflection of such charges, continue to be
discussed with the regulatory examiners, but, upon and assuming completion of,
the Private Placement, notwithstanding such additional charges, the Bank's
capital should be in excess of the capital adequacy requirements of the Orders
set forth above.  Of course, if the Private Placement is not completed, the
Bank then would not be in compliance with the Orders.  Also, even with the
capital provided in the Private Placement, the Bank will not be in compliance
with the Banking Department's order requiring the Bank to correct its capital
impairment.  See"--Capital Impairment Orders."  No assurance can be given that
capital, in addition to, or in substitution for, that raised pursuant to the
Private Placement, can be raised if the Bank requires such additional capital
to remain in compliance with capital adequacy requirements or to pursue the new
strategic focus of the Bank and the Company.  In addition, because of its asset
quality, operating losses, volatile liability dependency and liquidity
problems, the Bank is potentially subject to further regulatory sanctions that
are generally applicable to banks that are not adequately capitalized.

         In response to the Orders, management has submitted a business plan to
the FDIC and the Banking Department for approval.  Management expects that the
basic strategic actions contemplated by the business plan will be substantially
approved by the FDIC and the Banking Department after the above-mentioned
examination is completed.  Management also expects, however, that the FDIC and
the Banking Department will require that the business plan should be modified
to address their brokered deposit and liquidity concerns with more specific
plans.  Management is presently developing such specific plans and believes
that the Bank will be able to take the basic strategies actions contemplated by
the business plan without need for further regulatory approval, subject to the
general requirement that the Bank return to profitability and be operated
safely and soundly.  A number of the restrictions imposed by the Orders will
remain in effect until the Orders are officially lifted.  Although management
anticipates the FDIC and the Banking Department will lift the Orders once the
Bank's problem assets are fully resolved, no assurance can be given as to when
all conditions precedent to the lifting of the Orders will be fulfilled.  The
Company also is subject to certain restrictions imposed by the FRB pursuant to
the Directive that may prevent the Company from taking steps to establish new
businesses (or new subsidiaries) at the Company level until similar conditions
precedent are fulfilled.  However, management believes that, initially, all new
lines of business that the Company plans to enter may be operated directly
within the Bank.

         CAPITAL IMPAIRMENT ORDERS

         The California Financial Code (the "Financial Code") requires the
Superintendent to order any bank whose contributed capital is impaired to
correct such impairment within 60 days of the date of his or her order.  Under
Section 134(b) of the Financial Code, the "contributed capital," defined as all
shareholders' equity other than retained earnings, of a bank is deemed to be
impaired whenever such bank has deficit retained earnings in an amount
exceeding 40% of such contributed capital.  Under Section 662 of the Financial
Code, the Superintendent has the authority, in his or her discretion, to take
certain appropriate regulatory action with respect to a bank having impaired
contributed capital, including possible seizure of such bank's assets.  A bank
that has deficit retained earnings may, subject to the approval of its
shareholders and of the Superintendent, readjust its accounts in a
quasi-reorganization, which may include eliminating its deficit retained
earnings, under Section 663 of the Financial Code.  However, a bank that is not
able to effect such a quasi-reorganization or otherwise to correct an
impairment of its contributed capital within 60 days of an order to do so from
the Superintendent must levy and collect an assessment on its common shares
pursuant to Section 423 of the California Corporations Code.

         A bank is required to levy such an assessment within 60 days of the
Superintendent's order; the assessment becomes a lien upon the shares assessed
from the time of service or publication of such notice of assessment.  Within
60 days of the date on which the assessment becomes delinquent, a bank subject
to the





                                      -21-
   29
Superintendent's order must sell or cause to be sold to the highest bidder for
cash as many shares of each delinquent holder of the assessed shares as may be
necessary to pay the assessment and charges thereon.

         As of December 31, 1993, the Bank had contributed capital of $49.2
million and deficit retained earnings of $31.8 million, or approximately 64.6%
of contributed capital, within the meaning of Section 134(b) of the Financial
Code.  Thus, under Section 134(b) of the Financial Code, the Bank's contributed
capital was impaired as of that date in the approximate amount of $12.0
million.  On November 6, 1992, February 17, 1993, November 16, 1993 and
February 7, 1994, the Superintendent issued orders to the Bank to correct the
impairment of its contributed capital within 60 days.  The Bank has not
complied with these orders.  As the sole shareholder of the Bank, the Company
(not the Company's stockholders) will receive any notices of assessment issued
by the Bank.  The Bank is in violation of this California law requiring it to
assess the shares of the Bank (which are all held by the Company) in order to
correct the impairment of the bank's capital.

         In response to the February 7, 1994 order requiring the Bank to
correct its impaired capital within 60 days, the Bank notified the Banking
Department in writing that it did not believe it will be in a position to
comply with the order within 60 days and requested the Banking Department's
cooperation as the Company implements its plan for an offering.

         The Bank's capital impairment may be corrected through earnings, by
raising additional capital or by a quasi-reorganization, subject to the
approval of the Banking Department, in which the Bank's deficit retained
earnings would be reduced or eliminated by a corresponding reduction in the
Bank's contributed capital.

         As of December 31, 1993, the Bank would have been required to raise
$30.2 million in new capital in order to correct its impaired contributed
capital (because the ratio of deficit retained earnings to contributed capital
may not exceed 40%, $2.50 of new capital must be raised for every dollar or
impairment).  The proceeds of the Private Placement alone will not be
sufficient to correct the Bank's capital impairment.  However, the Bank
believes that with the proceeds of the Private Placement and, if a
quasi-reorganization is permitted by the Banking Department, permitting the
Bank to reclassify (among other adjustments) the Bank's stockholders' equity by
reducing deficit retained earnings by a corresponding charge to the Bank's
contributed capital in excess of par value, the Bank, then, would not have
impaired contributed capital.

         The Company continues discussions with Banking Department staff
regarding a quasi-reorganization.  It is the policy of the Superintendent not
to grant a quasi-reorganization unless a bank can establish that (a) it has
adequate capital, (b) the problems that created past losses and the impairment
of capital have been corrected and (c) it is currently operating on a
profitable basis and will continue to do so in the future.  Management
believes, although it cannot assure, that the Bank will be able to so
demonstrate at such time as the Bank's problem assets are substantially
resolved, and that it will then be possible for the Bank to effect a
quasi-reorganization.  Management also believes that, because it is anticipated
that the Bank will have high leverage and risk-based capital ratios after the
Private Placement, it is unlikely that the Superintendent would seek to take
action solely on the basis of impaired capital under the Section 134
definition.  There can be no assurance, however, that other circumstances such
as insufficient liquidity or further operating issues could not arise that
would provide incentive to the Superintendent to utilize the powers granted by
Section 134.

         No assurance can be given that the Bank's capital condition will not
deteriorate further as a result of operating losses prior to a
quasi-reorganization.  In addition, because a quasi-reorganization requires
that the Bank adjust its assets and liabilities to market value at the time of
the reorganization, the Bank's capital could be further reduced from its
present level as a result of such a reduction in the market value of the Bank's
assets over its liabilities.  Finally, there can be no assurance that,
following a correction of the Bank's capital impairment, whether through a
quasi-reorganization or an infusion of sufficient capital, the Bank's capital
position will not continue to erode through future operating losses.  As long
as the Bank's contributed capital is impaired, the Superintendent is authorized
to take possession of the property and business of the Bank, or to





                                      -22-
   30
order the Bank to comply with the legal requirement and levy an assessment on
the shares of the Bank held by the Company sufficient to correct the
impairment.  As the Company is the sole shareholder of the Bank, the assessment
would be made on the Company.  The Company does not have the funds to satisfy
such an assessment.  Management believes, however, that the Superintendent has
never exercised his bank takeover powers under Section 134 solely on the basis
that a bank's capital is impaired under the standards set forth in Section 134.


         PRIVATE PLACEMENT

         The Company is attempting to raise additional capital in order to
obtain greater assurance that the Company and the Bank will be able to meet
their minimum capital requirements on an on-going basis in the coming months
and as a precaution against prolonged or increased uncertainty in the economy
in general and the real estate market in particular.  In addition, the Company
is seeking to raise capital in order to initiate the Bank's new strategic focus
and permit management to pursue perceived opportunities both domestically and
in the Asian markets which is discussed in the Company's 1993 Annual Report.
The Company is seeking to raise net proceeds of a minimum of $15,000,000 and a
maximum of approximately $23,500,000 (if the entire allotment for
oversubscriptions is sold) in the Private Placement.  Because of the regulatory
considerations discussed above, the Board of Directors of the Company believes
it is critical to the Company and the Bank to raise a substantial portion of
this additional capital as soon as possible.

         The Company has retained Montgomery and NatWest Markets ("NatWest") as
Placement Agents (collectively, the "Placement Agents") to assist and advise
the Company with respect to the Company's capital raising efforts.  The Bank
has also retained the Placement Agents as financial advisors.  The Company has
prepared and is in the process of distributing a private placement memorandum
in connection with the Private Placement.  As currently proposed, the Company
is offering to issue up to 8,125,000 units (the "Units"), each consisting of
(i) one share of its Class A Common Stock, (ii) one warrant, entitling the
holder thereof to purchase one share of Class A Common Stock at $5.00 per share
(the "Unit Warrants"), and (iii) one right, entitling the holder thereof to
receive, without payment of additional consideration, an amount of shares of
Class A Common Stock in periodic distributions based upon the resolution value
of certain problem assets currently held in the Bank's portfolio and the Bank's
expenses in administering and carrying such problem assets (the "Rights").  The
Company is offering the Units at a price of $3.20 per Unit (the "Unit Price").
The foregoing assumes the approval of Items 2, 3, and 4 at the Annual Meeting
and the resulting 1-for-10 reverse stock split.  ASSUMING (I) THE SALE OF THE
MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT, BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY
OF THE WARRANTS OR THE UNIT WARRANTS AND (III) NO SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO
THE RIGHTS, THE SHARES ISSUED IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT WILL REPRESENT 54.0% OF
THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE
PLACEMENT.  See "PROPOSAL FIVE: Authorization of Issuance of Additional Shares
of Class A Common Stock, Warrants and Rights" for additional information
regarding the proposed terms of the Private Placement and the potential impact
on current holders of the Company's outstanding securities.

         DETERMINATIONS BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         In approving the terms of the Private Placement, the Board of
Directors was influenced by the need to raise capital quickly.  The Board
believes that if the Bank does not obtain substantial investment of capital
within a very short time period, the Bank may be subject to regulatory actions
that could, among other things, severely restrict the Bank's ability to develop
new lines of business.  Under such circumstances, the Board anticipates that it
would be necessary to reduce the Bank's deposit liabilities, accelerate plans
to reduce expenses (including personnel expenses) and continue to attempt to
dispose of problem assets on an orderly basis.  Such reductions could adversely
affect the Company's and the Bank's ability to retain key management employees.
Although the Board believes that, under such circumstances, such a business
strategy would permit the Bank to continue





                                      -23-
   31
in business and eventually to resolve the problem assets, management cannot
predict whether such a strategy would cause such an erosion in the value of the
Bank's business franchise that it could appear prudent to seek a sale or merger
with another bank.  The Board determined the proposed terms of the Private
Placement with assistance from management and advice from the Placement Agents.

         The Board of Directors believes that an offering by the Company can
only be made at or near the current book value of the Company's Class A Common
Stock.  Likewise, the Board believes it necessary to market the Units to offer
new investors warrants on the same terms as the warrants into which the Series
C Preferred Stock held by the Principal Stockholder may be converted (and will
be converted assuming stockholder approval of PROPOSAL TWO).  Further, the
Board believes that the offering must substantially insulate new investors from
the potential effects of the Company's "problem" assets.  The Rights were
developed as a mechanism to address this requirement.

         Management has identified assets (each, a "Specified Asset") currently
held in the Bank's portfolio that have given rise to losses, or that management
believes pose a significant risk of loss, to the Bank.  Such Specified Assets
include non-performing loans held in the Bank's portfolio, real estate
classified by the Bank as "other real estate owned" (primarily resulting from
foreclosed loans) and real estate acquired by the Bank through real estate
development and investment activity, in each case where such loans or real
estate assets have an outstanding principal balance or carrying value on the
Bank's financial statements, respectively, in excess of $100,000.  The
approximate amount of such Specified Assets was approximately $61 million as of
March 31, 1994.  The Bank's asset carrying value of each Specified Asset is
referred to as its "Specified Asset Value."

         All Specified Assets have been included as part of an asset portfolio
(the "Specified Asset Pool," with the aggregate Specified Asset Value of the
Specified Assets in the Specified Asset Pool on any given date being referred
to below as the "Specified Asset Pool Value").  The purpose of the Rights is to
protect investors purchasing Units in the Private Placement (the "New
Investors"), to a defined extent, for unanticipated losses and related expenses
incurred in the administration, carrying and resolution of such problem assets.
The Rights will effectuate this risk allocation by compensating the New
Investors with additional shares of Class A Common Stock ("Adjustment Shares"),
up to a maximum number of shares per Right (the "Maximum Adjustment"), without
payment of additional consideration by the New Investors, as net losses in
respect of the resolution of the Specified Assets, and as the costs of
administering and carrying the Specified Assets, are incurred by the Bank with
respect to the Specified Asset Pool.  The aggregate number of Adjustment Shares
included in the Maximum Adjustment for all Rights included in the Units is
approximately 8,821,500 Adjustment Shares, if the minimum amount of Units is
sold in the Private Placement, and approximately 13,611,800 Adjustment Shares,
if the maximum amount of Units is sold in the Private Placement, assuming a
book value of $0.32 per share of Class A Common Stock and the sale of such
shares at such book value.

         This compensation will be effected through periodic distributions
(each, an "Interim Distribution") of Adjustment Shares made with respect to
each six-month period during the period from the Initial Closing Date to
December 31, 1995 (the "Initial Distribution Period"), except that the initial
Interim Distribution shall be made with respect to the period ending on
December 31, 1994 (each, an "Adjustment Period," and the date of each Interim
Distribution, an "Interim Distribution Date"), unless the Maximum Adjustment is
distributed or all Specified Assets are resolved before December 31, 1995.
Issuances of Adjustment Shares will not be made in respect of losses in
relation to the carrying cost of the Specified Assets on the Bank's books and
administrative and carrying cost expenses until such losses and expenses exceed
(on a cumulative basis) the reserves on the Bank's books that are allocated to
the Specified Assets (estimated to be between $5.0 and $6.0 million).
Thereafter, Adjustment Shares will be issued to compensate for losses and
expenses up to a cumulative amount of $14 million (including the allocated
reserves).  Expenses attributable to a particular Specified Asset (such as
legal and appraisal expenses) will be recognized upon the resolution of the
Specified Asset to which such expenses relate.  Accordingly, New Investors will
be protected, to a defined extent, from further reductions in the book value of
their aggregate investment through the acquisition, for no additional
consideration, of a larger





                                      -24-
   32
equity interest in the Company.  However, because the market value of an
investor's Class A Common Stock may be dependent upon the trading price of such
stock on the AMEX or on such other market on which the Company's stock may
trade, and because the Company can have no control over the trading price of
its stock, the market value of an investor's Adjustment Shares from time to
time may nevertheless not fully compensate such investor for the pro rata
portion of the loss of the Bank's book value against which the Rights are
intended to provide protection.

         While management's current intention is to resolve the Specified
Assets on an asset-by-asset basis, management is also exploring other
alternatives, including the potential disposition of part or all of the
Specified Asset Pool to a single buyer.  This resolution alternative could be
effected by selling the entire Specified Asset Pool to investors or to a
special purpose entity.  In connection with such sale, it is anticipated that
the special purpose entity would issue debt and equity to provide funding for
the orderly liquidation and resolution of the Specified Assets, and a portion
of the proceeds of such sales by the special purpose entity would be paid to
the Bank as consideration for the Specified Asset Pool.  Management expects
that if this alternative resolution were undertaken, it could entail further
write-downs of the Specified Assets by the Bank in recognition of the
administrative expenses and the costs of financing assumed by the buyer,
together with the requirement imposed by a typical buyer in such transactions
that it be able to achieve a substantial return on its investment.  If such
write- downs were necessary, additional Adjustment Shares (up to the Maximum
Adjustment) would be issued pursuant to the Rights, and the Rights would mature
upon the consummation of such disposition.  Mr. Putra Masagung has indicated
that he might invest in such an entity, either alone or together with his
brother, Mr. Oka Masagung, but has made no commitment to do so.

         If, upon the expiration of the Initial Distribution Period, (i)
Specified Assets having an aggregate Specified Asset Value in excess of
two-thirds of the Specified Asset Pool Value on the final closing date of the
Private Placement have been liquidated or otherwise resolved, (ii) all the
Specified Assets have been resolved or (iii) the number of shares issued in
prior Interim Distributions equals the Maximum Adjustment (each, a "Termination
Condition" and collectively, the "Termination Conditions"), the Rights will
mature and no further distributions will be made in respect thereof.  If,
however, upon the expiration of the Initial Distribution Period, none of the
Termination Conditions has been satisfied, the maturity of the Rights will be
extended for an additional six-month Adjustment Period, and for one final
six-month Adjustment Period thereafter if none of the Termination Conditions
has been satisfied after the first such extension period expires.  If the
Rights have matured but the Maximum Adjustment has not been distributed, a
final distribution of Adjustment Shares (the "Final Distribution") will take
place following an appraisal of all remaining Specified Assets.  The number of
Adjustment Shares issued in the Final Distribution will be based upon the
difference between the appraised value and the Specified Asset Pool Value on
the date of such Final Distribution (the "Final Distribution Date") (together
with a charge for defined administrative and carrying costs), with such
difference deemed to represent the loss incurred by the Bank with respect to
such remaining Specified Assets.

         In calculating the amount of aggregate loss for any Interim
Distribution, if a Specified Asset is liquidated at a price above its Specified
Asset Value, the surplus will be netted against deficits incurred in the
liquidation of other Specified Assets at prices below their Specified Asset
Values, as well as against defined carrying and administrative costs.  Any net
surplus will be carried over and applied against net deficits, if any, incurred
in respect of subsequent Adjustment Periods.  However, even if such surpluses
exceed net deficits incurred in respect of one or more of such Adjustment
Periods, Adjustment Shares that have already been issued pursuant to the
Interim Distributions will not be subject to forfeiture or return to the
Company.

         The number of Adjustment Shares that may be acquired on any Interim
Distribution Date or the Final Distribution Date by any one "person" (as that
term is used in Rule 13d-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended) including persons acting together as a group, will be limited to not
more than the number of Adjustments Shares issuable pursuant to the Rights
included in the Units purchased by the purchaser of the





                                      -25-
   33
largest number of Units in the Private Placement, but in any event not more
than the number of Adjustment Shares issuable in respect of the Rights
purchased as part of Units whose purchaser would hold 10% of the shares in
Class A Common Stock outstanding immediately after the completion of the
Private Placement.

         The Board of Directors considered the fact that the effective price
per share of Class A Common Stock is expected to be upon issuance substantially
below the trading price of the Class A Common Stock.  However, the Board of
Directors believes that the Company will be unable to raise sufficient capital
on more favorable terms and that the alternative of regulatory sanctions (or
actions to forestall such sanctions) would cause the value of the Class A
Common Stock to fall below the effective offering price, including, in the
event of a conservatorship or receivership of the Bank, the likely need for the
Company to file bankruptcy, with its stock in such event likely becoming
worthless.

         The Company's Board of Directors selected the Placement Agents on the
basis of their expertise in such matters and, in the case of Montgomery, its
prior relationship with the Company.  The Company and the Bank have entered
into an Engagement Letter (the "Engagement Letter") and an Advisory Agreement
(the "Advisory Agreement"), respectively, with the Placement Agents.  The
Engagement Letter provides that the Placement Agents will act as placement
agents on a "best efforts" basis in connection with the Private Placement.  In
such capacity, the Placement Agents will receive selling commissions from the
Company equal to 7% of the aggregate price to investors to whom Units are sold
(the "Selling Commission"), including sales to any entities affiliated or
associated with either Placement Agent, payable on the closing date to which
the sales relate.  The Placement Agents are authorized to re-allow a portion of
the selling commission to selected dealers.  The Advisory Agreement provides
that the Placement Agents will furnish advisory services with respect to the
Bank's capital adequacy and risk-sharing criteria for the troubled asset
portfolio.  The Bank has agreed to compensate the Placement Agents for such
advisory services in an aggregate amount of $100,000, payable in installments
of $50,000 upon execution of the Advisory Agreement and $50,000 on April 1,
1994, provided that such $100,000 fee is to be credited against the Selling
Commission.  Each of the Engagement Letter and the Advisory Agreement also
provide that the Company and the Bank will reimburse the Placement Agents for
up to $25,000 of expenses incurred in connection with the Private Placement and
the furnishing of the advisory services.  The Engagement Letter and the
Advisory Agreement further provide that the Bank and the Company will indemnify
the Placement Agents and their affiliates against certain liabilities that
relate to or arise out of the Engagement Letter or the Advisory Agreement.

POSSIBLE ADDITIONAL SALES OF SECURITIES

         Mr. Putra Masagung and Mr. Oka Masagung have indicated to management
of the Company that they intend, individually or together, to subscribe for
$2,000,000 or more of Units in the Private Placement.

         The Bank currently leases space for its business operations in a
building located at 550 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, California (the
"Property") from the Bank of San Francisco Building Company, a California
limited partnership (the "Building Partnership").  The Partnership was formed
in 1987 to hold a leasehold interest in the Property and raised capital by
means of a private placement of 100 units of Limited Partnership Interest,
originally valued at $50,000 per interest ("Building Units").  Bank of San
Francisco Realty Investors, a California corporation ("BSFRI") and a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bank, is a general partner of the Partnership
and in such capacity holds two Building Units.  The Bank is also a limited
partner of the Partnership and in such capacity holds 28 Building Units.  The
remaining Building Units are held by various individuals.

         The Bank and the Company contemplate making an offer to the limited
partners of the Building Partnership to purchase the Building Units held by
them.  The Company currently contemplates that such offer to the limited
partners would be composed of two parts.  First, each person who is an
"accredited investor" (as defined in Regulation D under the Securities and
Exchange Act of 1934 as amended) would be able to exchange





                                      -26-
   34
each of his or her Building Units for (i) Units having a value (based upon the
amount paid by investors in the Private Placement) of a minimum of $18,334 and
(ii) a maximum of $33,333 in cash.  Such person could elect to take more than
$18,334 in Units (so valued) and correspondingly less cash.  Each limited
partner who is not an accredited investor would be able to exchange his or her
Building Units for $50,000 in cash per Building Unit.  Representatives of the
Company have had discussions regarding such an offer with a holder of
approximately 13.5% of the Building Units and believe that he would accept such
an offer if made.  The Bank and the Company believe that further discussion
regarding this offer will continue in the future.  Any such offering for the
Building Units will be subject to the approval of the FDIC and the
Superintendent, which approvals are being sought.  If such an offer is
successful, the Bank hopes to be able to renegotiate its lease for the
Building, which, the Bank believes, calls for payment of rent above the current
lease market.  There can be no assurance, however, that if made, the offering
for the Building Units will be successful or that subsequent lease
renegotiations will succeed in materially diminishing the Bank's lease
liabilities.

                      PROPOSAL ONE:  ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

DIRECTORS AND NOMINEES

         The bylaws of the Company provide a procedure for nomination for
election of members of the Board of Directors, which procedure is printed in
full in the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders accompanying this Proxy
Statement.  If a nomination is not made in accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders, the Chairman of the
Annual Meeting may, if the facts warrant, determine and declare at the Annual
Meeting that a nomination was not made in accordance with the procedures set
forth in the bylaws and direct that the defective nomination be disregarded.

         The bylaws of the Company currently provide that the number of
directors of the Company is subject to adjustment by resolution of the Board of
Directors, and the Board of Directors have adopted a resolution setting the
number of directors at nine (9).  Pursuant to the reincorporation of the
Company in Delaware in 1988, the Board of Directors is divided into three
classes (Class I, Class II and Class III).  The bylaws prescribe that the three
classes shall be as nearly equal in number as possible.  Accordingly, Classes
I, II and III are each comprised of three (3) directors.   Each director serves
for a term ending on the date of the third annual meeting of the stockholders
following the annual meeting at which the director was elected.  The Class I
directors are currently serving and will serve until the 1995 annual meeting of
stockholders; the Class II directors are currently serving until the Annual
Meeting and the Class II directors elected at the Annual Meeting will serve
until the 1996 annual meeting of stockholders; and the Class III directors are
currently serving until the Annual Meeting and the Class III directors elected
at the Annual Meeting will serve until the 1997 annual meeting of stockholders.
Notwithstanding the above, each director serves pursuant to the bylaws until
his successor is duly elected and qualified or until his death, resignation or
removal.

         The Board has nominated Mr. Carl D. Gustavson, who is currently
serving as a Class III director, for election as a Class II director.  If Mr.
Gustavson is elected as a Class II director, there will exist one vacancy in
Class III on the Board of Directors that will remain vacant after the election
of directors pursuant to this PROPOSAL ONE.

         Management expects to recommend that the Board increase the number of
authorized directors to twelve (12), and to continue to identify additional
persons to serve on the Board of Directors, subject to approval by the Board
and non-objection by the FRB, FDIC and the Banking Department.  Mr. Putra
Masagung, the Company's principal stockholder, has indicated that he wishes to
serve on the Board of Directors of the Company (but not the Bank).  Subject to
non-objection by the FRB, FDIC and the Banking Department, it is expected that
Mr. Masagung will be appointed to the Board.  Mr. Masagung agreed to and did
support the appointment of Messrs. Price and Champion as, respectively,
Chairman of the Board and Vice Chairman of the





                                      -27-
   35
Board, and the employment agreements negotiated by Messrs. Price and Champion
with the Bank, which provide for such appointments.  Mr. Rodney D. Freed, a
director of the Company, served as Executive Director of Tigamas Holdings, Pte.
Ltd., a Singapore based investment company, from 1991 to 1993.  See the
description of Mr. Freed's principal occupations during the last five years
under "Class III Directors" below.  Mr. Freed's responsibilities as Executive
Director of Tigamas Holdings, Pte., Ltd. during 1993 included the management of
Mr.  Masagung's investments in the Company, and monitoring of the investment
through Mr. Freed's role as a director of the Company and the Bank.  Other than
such agreements, there were no arrangements or understandings pursuant to which
the persons listed above were selected as directors or nominees for director.

         Mr. Kaharudin Latief of Jakarta, Indonesia, has provided notice to the
FRB and applied to the Banking Department for approval to acquire shares of
Series C Preferred Stock.  If and when regulatory clearance is received, Mr.
Latief plans to acquire from Mr. Masagung 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred
Stock (or, assuming that PROPOSAL TWO is approved, the shares of Class A Common
Stock and Warrants into which such shares of Series C Preferred Stock are
converted) through cancellation of an unsecured, personal loan in the amount of
$6,000,000 which Mr. Latief previously extended to Mr. Masagung.  Mr. Masagung
used the proceeds of this loan to acquire 300,000 shares of Series C Preferred
Stock from the Company.  If Mr. Latief consummates this transaction, and if the
conversion feature of the Series C Preferred Stock (including mandatory
conversion on May 31, 1994) is approved by the Company's stockholders, Mr.
Latief would hold 12,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock and Warrants to
acquire an additional 12,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock at an exercise
price of $0.50 per share.  Mr.  Latief has indicated that if he acquires the
Company's capital stock from Mr. Masagung as presently contemplated, he will
seek appointment of himself or his designee as a director of the Company (but
not the Bank), subject to obtaining required regulatory non-objection.
Management of the Company expects to recommend to the Board of Directors that
Mr. Latief or his designee be added to the Board if his acquisition is
completed, subject to regulatory clearance and the expansion of the Board of
Directors.  Management of the Company has also identified an additional person
who has indicated his willingness to serve as a director of the Company (but
not the Bank).  This person has not been chosen by the Board to fill any
vacancy, but his name has been submitted to the FRB, FDIC and the Banking
Department for review as a potential director, as required by statute and the
terms of the Orders.  If the FRB, FDIC and the Banking Department do not
indicate any objection to the service of this person as a director, management
would recommend to the Board that this person be chosen to fill the expected
vacancy on the Board of Directors.

         The Board has had significant turnover since the 1992 annual meeting
of stockholders, at which time the bylaws of the Company provided for fourteen
directors and there were ten directors serving on the Board.  Of those ten
directors, Messrs. John V. Diepenbrock, Donald R.  Stephens, Thayer T.
Prentice, Timothy J. Parrott, William J. Rosetti and W. Howard Lester have
resigned from the Board for personal reasons and to facilitate the transition
to new management of the Company and the Bank.

         CLASS II DIRECTORS.  Three (3) Class II directors are to be elected at
the Company's 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, each to hold office until
the Company's 1996 annual meeting of stockholders and until his respective
successor is duly elected and qualified, or until his death, resignation or
removal.  The nominees for election as a Class II Director are Messrs. Kent D.
Price, Steven R. Champion and Carl D.  Gustavson.  Messrs. Price and Champion
are currently serving as Class II directors, and Mr. Gustavson is currently
serving as a Class III director.  The following table sets forth as to each
nominee for election as a Class II director of the Company, such person's age,
principal occupations during at least the last five years, and the period
during which such person has served as a director of the Company.

         Mr. Price served as Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice
President of Bank of New England Corporation from May 1990 to January 1991.  Mr
Price was asked to join Bank of New England Corporation as part of a new
management team charged with improving the condition of the troubled company.
Despite the new management's efforts, Bank of New England Corporation filed a
petition for liquidation under Chapter 7





                                      -28-
   36
of the federal Bankruptcy Code on January 7, 1991 following the appointment of
the FDIC as receiver for its subsidiary banks.  The Board believes that the
bankruptcy of Bank of New England Corporation is immaterial to Mr. Price's
ability to serve as a director of the Company.



                                                                                        Director of
                                                                                        the Company
               Name of Class II Director or Nominee and                    Age at      (and Director
                    Principal Occupation for Last                       December 31,    of the Bank)
                              Five Years                                    1993           Since
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     
 KENT D. PRICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           50             1993

          Mr. Price has served as Chairman and Chief Executive                             (1993)
          Officer of the Company and the Bank since September 1993.
          He served as Executive Vice President, Private Banking
          and Corporate Development of Bank of America from 1991 to
          1993; Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice
          President of Bank of New England Corporation from 1990 to
          1991; Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer
          and Director of Barr Rosenberg Investment Management in
          1990; and Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
          Chloride Group PLC in London from 1986 to 1989.

 STEVEN R. CHAMPION  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           48             1993

          Mr. Champion has served as Vice Chairman and Chief                               (1993)
          Financial Officer of the Company and the Bank, and Chief
          Investment Officer of the Bank, since August 1993.  He
          served as Chief International Investment Officer of Bank
          of America from 1992 to 1993, President and Chief
          Executive Officer of the R.O.C. - Taiwan Fund from 1989
          to 1992, and President and Chief Executive Officer of
          International Investment Trust Company in Taipei, Taiwan
          from 1987 to 1992.

 CARL D. GUSTAVSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           52             1993

          Mr. Gustavson served as Chairman of the Board of Jackson                         (1993)
          County Federal Bank, FSB in Medford, Oregon from December
          1988 until its merger into Key Bank of Oregon on
          December 31, 1993, and is the principal of Carl D.
          Gustavson & Associates, an investment and consulting
          firm.  From 1983 to 1988, Mr. Gustavson was Chairman,
          President and Chief Executive Officer of Hibernia
          Bancshares Corporation and Hibernia Bank, both of San
          Francisco.


         CLASS III DIRECTORS.  Two (2) Class III directors are to be elected at
the Company's 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, each to hold office until
the Company's 1997 annual meeting of stockholders and until his respective
successor is duly elected and qualified, or until his death, resignation or
removal.  The nominees for election as a Class III director are Messrs. Rodney
D. Freed and Willard D. Sharpe who are currently serving as Class III
directors.  The following table sets forth as to each nominee for election as a
Class III director of the Company, such person's age, principal occupations
during at least the last five years, and the period during which such person
has served as a director of the Company.  Mr. Freed's responsibilities as
Executive Director of Tigamas Holdings, Pte., Ltd. during 1993 included the
management of the Principal Stockholder's investments in the Company, and
monitoring of the investment through Mr. Freed's role as a director of the
Company and the Bank.  Other than Mr. Freed's arrangement with Tigamas
Holdings, there were no arrangements or understandings pursuant to which the
persons listed below were selected as directors or nominees for director.





                                      -29-
   37


                                                                                          Director of
                                                                                          the Company
              Name of Class III Director or Nominee and                    Age at        (and Director
                    Principal Occupation for Last                       December 31,     of the Bank)
                              Five Years                                    1993             Since
- - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      
 RODNEY D. FREED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           50              1992

          Mr. Freed has served as President of the Company since                            (1992)
          February 1993, President of the Bank since September
          1993, and served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
          of the Company between February 1993 and September 1993.
          Mr. Freed has served as Senior Investment Manager of the
          Gunung Agung Group, an Indonesian multinational
          conglomerate, from November 1990 through December 1992.
          Mr. Freed served as Singapore Country Manager for The
          Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. from 1987 to 1990, and as
          Taiwan Country Manager from 1982 to 1987.  Mr. Freed
          served as Executive Director of Tigamas Holdings, Pte.
          Ltd., a Singapore based investment Company from 1991 to
          1993, and as a director of Aerodyne International Pte.
          Ltd., a Singapore manufacturer of precision machine parts
          from 1991 to 1993.

 WILLARD D. SHARPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           70              1993

          Mr. Sharpe is a retired economist who, at the time of his                         (1993)
          retirement in 1987, served as a Vice President of Chase
          Manhattan Bank and as the Bank's chief economist for
          Asia.


         CLASS I DIRECTORS.  The following table sets forth as to each Class I
director of the Company, such person's age, principal occupations during at
least the last five years, and the period during which such person has served
as a director of the Company.




                                                                                        Director of
                                                                                        the Company
               Name of Class I Director or Nominee and                     Age at      (and Director
                    Principal Occupation for Last                       December 31,    of the Bank)
                              Five Years                                    1993           Since
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     
 DONNA MILLER CASEY  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           44             1981
          Mrs. Casey served as a partner of Loder & Associates, a                          (1978)
          special events, marketing and promotion firm, from May
          1991 to June 1993, and as Executive Director of San
          Francisco Beautiful, a non-profit organization dedicated
          to civic beautification, from 1987 to 1989.  Mrs. Casey
          served as Secretary of the Company from its organization
          in 1981 until 1992.  She served as Secretary of the Bank
          from its organization in 1978 until 1992.  Mrs. Casey has
          served as a director of Compensation Resource Group, Inc.
          since 1990, a Trustee of University of San Francisco
          since 1984, and a Trustee of the California State Summer
          School for the Arts since 1983.






                                      -30-
   38


                                                                                        Director of
                                                                                        the Company
               Name of Class I Director or Nominee and                     Age at      (and Director
                    Principal Occupation for Last                       December 31,    of the Bank)
                              Five Years                                    1993           Since
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     
 DAVID R. HOLBROOKE, M.D.  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           52             1981

          Dr. Holbrooke has served as Chief Executive Officer of                           (1978)
          Holbrooke & Associates, a health care investment and
          management firm, since 1985.  He has served as a director
          of TriCare, Inc., a health care services company, since
          1985.  Dr. Holbrooke is a principal and director of a
          number of privately held firms in the health care field.

 GORDON B. SWANSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           49             1985

          Mr. Swanson is President of G.B. Swanson & Co., a real                           (1985)
          estate advisory firm.  Mr. Swanson has served as a
          Director Emeritus of the San Francisco Chamber of
          Commerce since 1986.  Mr. Swanson served as Managing
          Director of Jones Lang Wootton U.S.A., a commercial real
          estate investment company, from 1989 to 1991, and as Vice
          President of Goldman Sachs from 1986 to 1989.

- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         The following table sets forth as to each person who currently serves
as an executive officer of the Company or the Bank, such person's age, such
person's principal occupations during the past five years, such person's
current position with the Company or the Bank, and the period during which the
person has served in such position.  Virtually all of the executive officers
have joined the Company and the Bank within the past year, as a result of the
changes in ownership of the Company and the reorientation of the Company to
focus on private banking, investment management and trust services in the San
Francisco Bay Area, the West Coast and the Pacific Basin.





                                                              Position with the Company or
                                      Age at                     the Bank and Principal
                                   December 31,                  Occupations During the
             Officer                   1993                          Past Five Years
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              
 Kent D. Price . . . . . . . .          50          (Please see the description of Mr. Price's
                                                    positions with the Company and the Bank and
                                                    background under the heading "Directors").

 Rodney D. Freed . . . . . . .          50          (Please see the description of Mr. Freed's
                                                    positions with the Company and the Bank and
                                                    background under the heading "Directors").

 Steven R. Champion  . . . . .          48          (Please see the description of Mr. Champion's
                                                    positions with the Company and the Bank and
                                                    background under the heading "Directors").


                                      -31-
   39


                                                              Position with the Company or
                                      Age at                     the Bank and Principal
                                   December 31,                  Occupations During the
             Officer                   1993                          Past Five Years
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              
 C. William Criss, Jr. . . . .          51          Executive Vice President-Senior Credit Officer
                                                    since August 1993.  Executive Vice President,
                                                    special Assets since 1992.  A Principal of
                                                    Wright Houlihan & Associates in 1992.  President
                                                    and Chief Executive Officer of East West
                                                    Financial Group and East West Bank, N.A. from
                                                    1989 to 1991.  Vice President and General
                                                    Manager of Chase Bank International from 1981 to
                                                    1989.

 Stephen V. R. Spaulding . . .          56          Senior Vice President of the Bank and Managing
                                                    Director of Private and Business Banking since
                                                    1993.  President of Chase Manhattan Trust
                                                    Company of California from 1992 to 1993, Senior
                                                    Vice President and Manager, United States
                                                    Private Banking Division of Bank of America,
                                                    from 1984 to 1992.
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         Each executive officer is selected annually by the Board of Directors
pursuant to provisions of the bylaws of the Company and the Bank.  The
Principal Stockholder has agreed to transfer to each of Messrs. Price and
Champion Warrants to purchase 1.5 million shares of Class A Common Stock with
an exercise price of $0.50 per share (without giving effect to the 1-for-10
reverse stock split described in PROPOSAL FOUR), upon conversion of the
Company's Series C Preferred Stock and upon the successful completion of the
Private Placement.  In addition, the Principal Stockholder advanced Mr. Price
$250,000 in consideration of Mr. Price's agreement to develop a strategic plan
for the Company and the Bank prior to regulatory non-objection of Mr. Price's
employment agreement, with such advance to be repaid upon Mr. Price realizing
the benefit of the Warrants which the Principal Stockholder has agreed to grant
to Mr. Price.  Other than the foregoing arrangements and the Price and Champion
employment agreements described in "Employment Contracts and Termination of
Employment and Change-in-Control Arrangements" below, there were no
arrangements or understandings pursuant to which the persons listed above were
selected as executive officers.

         Except for the Bank, none of the corporations or organizations
discussed in the above table is an affiliate of the Company.  No director,
nominee for director or executive officer of the Company or the Bank has any
family relationship with any other director or executive officer of the Company
or director or executive officer of the Bank.

         Except as stated above, no director of the Company is a director of
any company with a class of securities registered pursuant to section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or subject to the requirements of
section 15(d) of such Act or of any company registered as an investment company
under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

COMMITTEES OF THE BOARDS OF DIRECTORS

         The Company's Board of Directors held fourteen (14) meetings during
1993 and acted on numerous items by unanimous written consent.

                                      -32-
   40
         The Company and the Bank thoroughly reorganized their committee
structures in October 1993.  The following sets forth information with respect
to the committees of the Company's and the Bank's Board of Directors following
such revisions.  The current Committee membership will be expanded if and when
additional directors join the Boards of the Company and the Bank.  The
Company's Board of Directors presently does not have a standing nominating
committee.

CURRENT COMMITTEES

                 The Bank Executive Committee presently includes directors
         Price, Gustavson, Holbrooke, and Swanson.  The Executive Committee may
         exercise all of the authority of the Board of Directors in the
         management of the business of the Bank in the interim between meetings
         of the Board of Directors, except with respect to the filling of
         vacancies on the Board, the fixing of compensation of directors, the
         amendment of the by-laws, distributions to stockholders, the
         appointment of committees of the Board, and any action which by law
         requires Board or stockholder approval.

                 The Company Personnel/Compensation Committee presently
         includes directors Casey, Gustavson, Sharpe and one non-director
         executive officer.  This Committee has responsibility for all matters
         pertaining to Bank employees, officers and directors.  It also
         monitors the Company's compliance with laws and regulations applicable
         uniquely to the protection of employees and officers.

                 The Bank Examining Committee presently includes non-employee
         directors Gustavson, Sharpe, Swanson, Holbrooke and Casey and one
         non-director executive officer.  Mr. Champion serves as an advisor to
         the Committee.  This Committee evaluates Bank performance and progress
         of the organization with respect to its business and profit plans,
         annual operating budget and operating results against plans.  It also
         initiates suitable audit examinations of the Bank's internal controls
         to preserve the Bank's assets, and reviews periodic reports from
         outside auditors.

                 The Bank Loan and Discount Committee presently includes
         directors Price, Champion, Holbrooke, Gustavson, Swanson, one
         non-director executive officer and one non-director consultant.  The
         Committee examines and approves loans above a specified size, and
         conducts regular reviews of the entire loan portfolio and annual
         reviews of management's compliance with Community Reinvestment Act
         regulations.

                 The Company Investment Committee presently includes directors
         Champion, Price, Sharpe and Holbrooke, one non-director executive
         officer and one non-director consultant.  This Committee ensures that
         the Company and the Bank make investments consistent with regulatory
         and liquidity requirements.

                 The Company Special Assets Steering Committee presently
         includes directors Price, Holbrooke, Swanson, one non-director
         executive officer and one non-director consultant.  This Committee is
         responsible for supervising activities of the Bank's Special Assets
         Department, which administers all of the Bank's nonperforming assets
         and all performing assets classified substandard or below.


                 The Bank's Regulatory Committee presently includes directors
         Swanson, Champion, Holbrooke, Freed, Price, Sharpe, Casey and two
         non-director officers.  This Committee is responsible for reviewing
         management's progress toward meeting and resolving all conditions
         contained in the Orders.

                 The Bank's Trust Committee and Trust Investment Committee
         presently includes directors Holbrooke, Champion, Sharpe, Price and
         four non-director officers.  The Committee oversees the





                                      -33-
   41
         Bank's trust operations, and reviews and recommends to the Board
         policies and procedures for such operations, including policies on
         trust department investments.

                 The Company's 401(k) and ESOP Committee presently includes
         directors Casey and Sharpe, three non-director senior officers and one
         non-director consultant.  This committee is responsible for the
         management and the administration of these ERISA plans.



COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

         The Board of Directors of the Company indefinitely suspended the
payment of all directors' fees in the fourth quarter of 1992.  It is currently
intended that director fees will be re-instated subject to regulatory
considerations.  Mr. Freed's responsibilities as Executive Director of Tigamas
Holdings, Pte., Ltd. during 1993 included among other things the management of
the Principal Stockholder's investment in the Company, and monitoring of the
investment through Mr. Freed's role as a director of the Company and the Bank.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         Decisions on the compensation of the Company's and the Bank's
executives are generally made by the four-member Personnel/Compensation
Committee.  Three members of the Personnel/Compensation Committee are members
of the Board of Directors of the Company; the fourth member of the
Personnel/Compensation Committee is the Director of Human Resources of the
Bank, who is not a member of the Board of Directors.  All decisions by the
Personnel/Compensation Committee relating to the compensation of the Company's
and the Bank's executive officers are reviewed by the Company's and the Bank's
full Boards of Directors, except for decisions about awards under certain of
the Company's stock-based compensation plans, which are made solely by the
Committee in order for the grants or awards under such plans to satisfy Rule
16b-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.  Set forth below
is a report of the Personnel/Compensation Committee addressing the Company's
compensation policies for 1993 as they affected the Chief Executive Officer of
the Company and the Bank serving at the end of 1993, and the other two most
highly-compensated executive officers of the Company and the Bank at the end of
1993 who had total compensation in excess of $100,000, and two additional
highly-compensated executive officers who would have qualified for disclosure
if they had not terminated employment, (collectively, the "Named Executives").
The Named Executives compensation in 1993 is shown in the "Executive
Compensation Tables" below.  All of the members of the Personnel/Compensation
Committee other than Mrs. Casey have joined the committee since the end of
1993, and their report is based on their best knowledge as to the compensation
philosophy and practices of the Personnel/Compensation Committee in 1993.

     PERSONNEL/COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON 1993 EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY

         The compensation policies adopted by the Personnel/Compensation
Committee in 1992 and approved by the Board of Directors of the Bank, and
continued in practice during 1993, were designed to provide competitive levels
of compensation, reward improvements in corporate performance, recognize
above-average individual achievements and initiative, and thereby assist the
Bank in attracting and retaining qualified employees.

         As noted above, the Personnel/Compensation Committee either approved
or recommended to the Board of Directors payment amounts and award levels for
all executives of the Bank including the Named Executives.





                                      -34-
   42
With regard to compensation actions affecting Mr. Prentice, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of the Bank in 1992 and 1993, and Mr. Kent Price, Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of the Bank in 1993, all of the non-employee
members of the Board of Directors acted as the approving body.

         The Company and the Bank experienced significant financial losses in
1991, 1992 and 1993, and, in connection therewith, the Named Executives were
required to devote a substantial and unusual amount of time and effort in
dealing with non-performing assets, raising new capital, responding to
regulatory concerns and implementing changes in operating systems and controls.
Consequently, the use of traditional corporate performance measures such as
earnings per share or increases in book value to determine executive
compensation was not considered to be in the Company's best interests.
Therefore, there was no direct relationship in 1992 or 1993 between executive
compensation and the Company's financial performance, either as compared to the
Company's prior performance or as compared to the banking companies with which
the Company competes for executive talent.  Instead, the 1992 and 1993
executive compensation programs of the Bank were designed to provide
compensation which would allow the Bank to attract and retain talented and
experienced executives necessary for management of the Bank's turnaround
program.  The focus of the executive compensation program was on base salary,
although some effort was made to provide longer term incentives through the
grant of stock options.  None of the Named Executives, with the exception of
Mr. Criss, received a cash bonus in 1992 or 1993.

         Going forward, in addition to the philosophies described above, the
Committee will also be guided by the terms of the FDIC Order in setting
executive compensation.  The FDIC Order provides that, without the prior
written approval of the FDIC, the Bank may not (a) pay a bonus to an executive
officer, or (b) provide compensation to an executive officer at a rate
exceeding his or her average rate of compensation (excluding bonuses, stock
options and profit-sharing) during the 12 calendar months preceding the months
in which the Bank first became undercapitalized.

SALARIES

         In 1992, the Personnel/Compensation Committee retained an outside
consulting firm to review the cash compensation of the Named Executives.  The
consulting firm collected information on executive compensation from banking
industry salary surveys and from public data disclosed by a group of bank
holding companies determined by the consulting firm to be comparable to the
Company and competitive with the Company regarding the hiring of executive
talent.  This peer group consisted of 15 bank holding companies located in
California with assets between $325 and $700 million.  The consulting firm
advised the Personnel/Compensation Committee that the salaries of the
executives of the Bank were within the fiftieth (50th) percentile of comparable
institutions with respect to total cash compensation.  Individual executive
base salaries were established in accordance with job functions,
responsibilities, and stated performance objectives, in a manner consistent
with external market data.  As officers of a financially troubled institution,
operating as directed by a regulatory enforcement action, the Named Executives
during 1992 and 1993 were charged with the responsibility for (i) identifying
and working to resolve asset quality problems; and (ii) developing and
executing an operating plan to deal with asset problems and comply with the
terms and conditions of the Memorandum of Understanding entered into with the
FDIC and the State Banking Department during the fourth quarter of 1991.

STOCK AWARDS

         The Bank's Incentive Stock Option Plan (the"Stock Plan") expired in
1992.  Options granted prior to the expiration date remain in effect and
exercisable during the ten-year term of the option.  During 1993, the Board
adopted the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993 Non-Employee
Directors Stock Option Plan.  However, no options were granted during 1993
under these plans or otherwise, however, upon approval of PROPOSAL SIX, options
shall be granted to each of Messrs. Price and Champion, effective September 30,
1993, pursuant to their employment agreements, to purchase 1,976,615 shares of
Class A Common Stock of the





                                      -35-
   43
Company at $0.50 per share (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock
split described in PROPOSAL FOUR).


              THE MEMBERS OF THE PERSONNEL/COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

Donna Miller Casey    Carl D. Gustavson    Linda M. Tanner   Willard D. Sharpe


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES

         SUMMARY OF 1991-1993 COMPENSATION.  The following table sets forth the
annual compensation, long-term compensation and other compensation paid to each
of the Named Executives.  Compensation is listed as of December 31, 1993,
December 31, 1992 and December 31, 1991.  Mr. Prentice and Mr. Adams have
terminated employment with the Bank and Company, all other positions listed on
the table are positions held by the Named Executives as of December 31, 1993.


                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE




                                       ANNUAL COMPENSATION                           LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                               ------------------------------------  ---------------------------------------------------
                                                                               AWARDS                  PAYOUT
                                                                     ------------------------  -------------------------
                                                                     Restricted 
                                                       Other Annual     Stock                    LTIP      All Other
Name and                        Salary      Bonus      Compensation    Award(s)   Options/SARs  Payout   Compensation(7)
principal position      Year     ($)         ($)            ($)         ($)           (#)         ($)          ($) 
- - ------------------      ----   --------   --------     ------------  ----------   ------------  ------   ---------------
                                                                                 
(a)                     (b)    (c)        (d)          (e)           (f)          (g)           (h)      (i)
Chairman/CEO - Former   1993   $166,672          0           490           0              0      0            7,944
Thayer T. Prentice      1992    250,000          0        14,967           0              0      0            5,345
                        1991    134,585     69,167(1)      5,200           0         87,489      0            5,245
                                                                                                 
Chairman/CEO            1993     55,000          0        31,026(2)        0      1,976,615(8)   0              170
Kent D. Price           1992          0          0             0           0                     0                0
                        1991          0          0             0           0              0      0                0
                                                                                          0      
EVP/CFO - Former        1993    112,239          0       121,648(3)        0              0      0            1,178
William H. Adams        1992    135,385          0        23,898           0         35,000      0            1,766
                        1991    128,000    207,386(1)     25,408       9,153(6)       8,000      0            4,095
                                                                                                 
President/COO           1993    178,077          0         4,180(4)        0              0      0              759
Rodney D. Freed         1992          0          0             0           0              0      0                0
                        1991          0          0             0           0              0      0                0
                                                                                                 
EVP/CCO                 1993    125,000     63,097         3,000(5)        0              0      0            1,014
C. William Criss, Jr.   1992     77,724          0        13,560           0              0      0              507
                        1991          0          0             0           0              0      0                0
   
- - ----------
(1)      Includes certain extraordinary payments in connection with the
         Company's and the Bank's standardization of employment arrangements.





                                      -36-
   44
(2)      During the last fiscal year Mr. Price's "Other annual compensation"
         consisted solely of consulting fees paid prior to October 1993 and
         Regulatory approval of Mr. Price's positions held.

(3)      During the last fiscal year Mr. Adams' "Other annual compensation"
         consisted primarily of a severance payment of $87,500, a payout from a
         split dollar life insurance policy of $27,674, consulting fees paid of
         $3,475 and an auto allowance at a rate of $500 per month.  All auto
         allowances were eliminated as of July 1, 1993.

(4)      During the last fiscal year Mr. Freed's "Other annual compensation"
         consisted primarily of allowances for an auto allowance at a rate of
         $500 per month.  All auto allowances were eliminated as of July 1,
         1993.  Mr. Freed was also reimbursed for moving costs related to his
         relocation from Singapore.

(5)      During the last fiscal year Mr. Criss' "Other annual compensation"
         consisted solely of an auto allowance at a rate of $500 per month.
         All auto allowances were eliminated as of July 1, 1993.

(6)      2,034 shares x $1.125 (market price at 12/31/93)= $2,288.25.  No
         vesting schedule applicable on this stock.  Restricted stock is
         entitled to dividend payments.  The Company has suspended payment of
         dividends on its Class A Common Stock.

(7)      "All other compensation" consists of group term life insurance
         coverage and in the case of Mr. Prentice the addition of the premium
         cost of an additional term life policy and in the case of Mr. Adams
         the addition of the premium cost of split dollar life insurance.

(8)      These options shall be granted to Mr. Price, effective September 30,
         1993 pursuant to his employment agreement, upon stockholder approval
         of PROPOSAL SIX.

         OPTION GRANT TABLE.  No stock option grants were made during 1993,
however, upon approval of PROPOSAL SIX, options shall be granted to each of
Messrs. Price and Champion, effective September 30, 1993, pursuant to their
employment agreements, to purchase 1,976,615 shares of Class A Common Stock of
the Company at $0.50 per share (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse
stock split described in PROPOSAL FOUR).

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND PARTICIPATION IN COMPENSATION DECISIONS

         The Company's Personnel/Compensation Committee, which during 1993
consisted of Messrs. Prentice, Parrott, Rosetti, Mrs. Casey and Ms. Underwood,
and currently consists of Mrs. Casey, Ms. Tanner, Mr. Gustavson and Mr. Sharpe,
makes decisions with respect to the compensation of executive officers.  There
are no Compensation Committee Interlocks as that term is defined under Item
402(j) of Regulation S-K as promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended, among the Committee members.  Mr. Prentice was an executive
officer of the Bank, serving as its Chairman, President and Chief Executive
Officer.  Ms. Underwood was an executive officer of the Bank serving as its
Executive Vice President-Administration.  Ms. Tanner is an officer of the Bank
serving as Director of Human Resources.

EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE-IN-CONTROL
ARRANGEMENTS

         EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT OF MR. PRENTICE.  The Bank entered into an
employment agreement with Mr. Prentice which, as amended on July 7, 1992,
provided, among other things, for Mr. Prentice to receive an annual salary of
at least $250,000 per year, payable in accordance with the Bank's usual payment
practices.  Under the agreement, Mr. Prentice's term of employment would have
continued until December 31, 1997.  However, Mr. Prentice resigned for personal
reasons on August 31, 1993, and agreed to the termination of his employment
agreement without the receipt of any additional compensation.  Mr. Prentice's
Indemnification Agreements, described in "Certain Transactions" below, continue
in effect.

         TERMINATION AGREEMENTS WITH CERTAIN FORMER EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE
BANK.  During the fourth quarter of 1991 and the first quarter of 1992 certain
executive officers resigned from their employment with the Bank.  Effective
November 1, 1991, Mr. Stephens resigned as Chairman, Chief Executive Officer
and President of the Bank, while retaining those positions with the Company.
It was agreed that Mr. Stephens would not receive a salary as Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and President of the Company, but that he would be entitled
to certain





                                      -37-

   45
administrative support and ancillary benefits.  Mr. Stephens resigned as
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President of the Company in February 1993
and as a director of the Company in March 1993, and no longer receives any
administrative support or ancillary benefits from the Company or the Bank.

         In connection with the change in management of the Company and the
Bank in August 1993, the Company and the Bank entered into Separation
Agreements with each of William H. Adams, Marlene M. Underwood and Patrick S.
Day on August 4, 1993, under which these officers resigned all of their
positions with the Company and the Bank, released all claims against the
Company and the Bank, and received severance payments of $87,500, $52,500 and
$52,500 respectively.

         In connection with the sale of the Bank's Sacramento Office, as an
inducement to the key personnel of that office to remain with the Bank and
complete the sale, the Bank entered into retention agreements with Mr. Martin
and four other officers who are not executive officers, providing for the
payment of a total of $100,000 ($40,000 for Mr. Martin) if such officers are
terminated by American River Bank, the purchaser of the office, within six
months of completion of the sale.  The Bank's definitive agreement with
American River Bank provided that American River Bank will assume the Bank's
liabilities under such retention agreements in return for a $100,000 reduction
in the purchase price that American River Bank is required to pay.  If the
actual amounts paid out by American River Bank under the retention agreements
are less than $100,000, American River Bank will refund the difference to the
Bank.

         EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS WITH MESSRS. CHAMPION AND PRICE.  The Company
and the Bank have entered into employment agreements (the "Employment
Agreements") with Messrs. Price and Champion, effective September 10, 1993 and
August 16, 1993, respectively, which provide for the service of Mr. Price and
Mr. Champion as, respectively, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Vice
Chairman and Chief Financial Officer of the Company and the Bank, and for the
service of Mr. Champion as Chief Investment Officer of the Bank.  The
Employment Agreements have an initial term of three years and renew
automatically on each anniversary thereafter for a one year term, unless either
party has provided written notice of intent not to renew the Employment
Agreements.  The Employment Agreements provide for a base annual salary of
$350,000 but, until the completion by the Company of one or more financings
after August 1, 1993 in which the Company receives gross proceeds of
$15,000,000 or more, the base annual salary shall be paid at a reduced rate of
$220,000.   The Employment Agreements also provide for bonuses under an Annual
Performance Bonus Plan to be adopted effective when and if the Bank is restored
to profitability.

         The Employment Agreements provide that the Board of Directors shall
adopt an executive stock option plan and, subject to stockholder approval of
the plan, shall grant each of Messrs. Price and Champion options under the plan
to acquire shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock equal to 4% of the
fully-diluted shares of Class A Common Stock, with additional options to be
granted in the future as necessary to maintain the 4% ratio.  Although such
options have not yet been granted, assuming stockholder approval of the plan at
the Annual Meeting, the effective date of the initial grant of options to
Messrs. Price and Champion would be September 30, 1993.  For purposes of
determining the number of fully-diluted shares, Warrants would not be counted
until they become exercisable.  Based on the current capitalization of the
Company, each of Mr. Price and Mr. Champion would receive options to purchase
1,976,615 shares of the Company, effective September 30, 1993.  The options
granted to Messrs. Price and Champion would vest over a ten-year period, with
25% vesting on the first anniversary of the employment agreements, 15% vesting
on each of the three following anniversaries, and 5% vesting annually
thereafter until all options have vested.  The exercise price of the options to
be granted effective September 30, 1993 would be $0.50 per share (the effective
price of the September Investment by Mr. Masagung), and the exercise price of
subsequent anti-dilution options would be the then-current fair market value of
the Class A Common Stock.

         The Employment Agreements further provide that, in the event of a
Termination due to a Change in Control, as such terms are defined in such
Employment Agreements, if at the time of the Change in Control the





                                      -38-

   46
fair market value of the Class A Common Stock is more than twice its book
value, Messrs. Price and Champion shall each receive their annual salary
through the Termination Date (as such term is defined in the Employment
Agreements), and their most recent annual bonus prorated through the
Termination Date, plus an additional three years of salary and bonus (provided
that such additional salary and bonus shall not be paid if the Bank is in a
"troubled condition" as defined in the Employment Agreements), and all stock
options previously granted shall vest immediately.  In the event of a
Termination of Messrs. Price and Champion by the Company without cause, or a
Termination of employment by Messrs. Price and Champion for cause, under the
Employment Agreements Messrs. Price and Champion would each receive their
salary and prorated bonus through the Termination Date, and an additional one
year of salary and bonus (or, if the Bank is in "troubled condition," their
salary and prorated bonus through the Termination Date and an additional six
months of salary and bonus), and all stock options previously granted shall
vest immediately.  For this purpose, Messrs. Price and Champion would be deemed
to have cause to terminate their Employment Agreement in the event of (a) any
adverse change in their positions or place of employment without their prior
consent, or (b) any material failure of the Company or the Bank to perform
their obligations under the Employment Agreements.

         Under the Employment Agreements, Messrs. Price and Champion are
indemnified by the Company and the Bank from any liability or expense arising
as a result of actions taken by the Company or the Bank, or events relating to
the business of the Company or the Bank, occurring prior to the execution of
the Employment Agreements.  Subject to certain limitations, Messrs. Price and
Champion are also indemnified by the Company and the Bank from any liability or
expense arising as a result of actions taken by the Company or the Bank, or
events relating to the business of the Company or the Bank, occurring after the
execution of the Employment Agreements, unless such liability or expense is due
to the officer's bad faith or gross negligence.

DESCRIPTION OF BENEFIT PLANS

         STOCK OPTION PLANS.  The Company had two stock option plans that
expired in February 1992 (collectively, the "Prior Stock Option Plans").  Each
option granted prior to the termination of such plans remains in effect and is
exercisable during the term of such option.  All options granted under the
Prior Stock Options Plans are currently out-of-the-money.  During 1993, the
Board adopted the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993 Non-Employee
Directors Stock Option Plan.  For a description of these plans, see "PROPOSAL
SIX: Approval of the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993 Non-Employee
Directors Stock Option Plan."   No options were granted during 1993 under these
plans or otherwise, however, upon approval of PROPOSAL SIX, options shall be
granted to Messrs. Price and Champion, effective September 30, 1993, pursuant
to their employment agreements, to purchase 1,976,615 shares of Class A Common
Stock at $0.50 per share (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock
split described in PROPOSAL FOUR).

         EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN.  The Company established the Bank of
San Francisco Company Holding Company Employee Stock Ownership Plan (the
"ESOP") in 1985.  The ESOP is non-contributory and has received a favorable
determination letter stating that it is qualified under Section 401(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code.  Every employee of the Company and its affiliates who
has completed one year of service is a participant in the ESOP.  The ESOP
provides benefits to a participant, primarily in the form of Class A Common
Stock, upon the retirement, death, disability or termination of employment of
the participant.  The Company and its affiliates make contributions to the ESOP
in amounts determined by the Company, in its sole discretion, subject to
certain loan agreements entered into by the ESOP that require the Company to
contribute to the ESOP amounts sufficient to enable the ESOP to meet its
obligations under those loan agreements.  Such contributions may be in cash or
in other property, including Class A Common Stock.  At December 31, 1993, the
Company had contributed a total of $1.8 million to the ESOP since the ESOP's
establishment in 1985, including $120,000, $240,000 and $240,000 in 1993, 1992
and 1991, respectively.





                                      -39-

   47
         During 1985, the ESOP borrowed $500,000 from a third party financial
institution at 90% of the institution's then-current prime rate.  Repayment of
the principal was scheduled in seven annual installments of $71,000 through
June 30, 1992 and was completed as scheduled.  The proceeds from the borrowing,
which was not guaranteed by the Company, were used to purchase 62,500 shares of
Class A Common Stock at a price of $8.00 per share.  The stock purchased was
pledged as collateral for the loan.  During 1988, the ESOP established a loan
for $650,000 from a third party financial institution at 95% of the
then-current prime rate.  At December 31, 1988, the ESOP had drawn $325,000
from the loan agreement.  Repayment of the principal is scheduled in quarterly
payments of $23,000 through March 31, 1995.  Payment on this loan started in
the fourth quarter of 1988.  The proceeds from the borrowing were used to
purchase 28,571 shares of Series B Preferred Stock at a price of $7.00 per
share, and the remaining amount to purchase Class A Common Stock throughout the
year.  The loan was collateralized by the unallocated shares of stock held in
the ESOP.  In addition, the Company has guaranteed the loan and has
collateralized the guaranty with cash or cash equivalent investments.  During
1989, the ESOP drew the remaining $325,000 from the loan agreement.  The
proceeds from the borrowing were used to purchase 50,000 shares of Class A
Common Stock at a price of $5.00 per share, and the remaining amount was used
during 1990 to purchase an additional 8,700 shares of Class A Common Stock  at
an average price of $8.64 per share.  During 1992, the ESOP did not purchase
any shares of Class A Common Stock.  Company contributions were used in 1992,
and are being used presently, by the ESOP to pay installments on the ESOP's
indebtedness to the third party financial institutions.

         Shares held by the ESOP are allocated to participants' accounts
annually as payments under the loan agreement between the ESOP and the
financial institutions are made.  Contributions to the ESOP for a given year,
to the extent they are not used to repay borrowings of the ESOP, are allocated
to each participant's account in proportion to the participant's yearly
compensation.  Of the amount in a participant's account, 20% is vested after
two (2) years of service, 40% after three (3) years of service, 60% after four
(4) years of service, 80% after five (5) years of service, and 100% after six
(6) years of service.

         401(K) PROFIT SHARING PLAN.  In 1986 the Company established a 401(k)
Profit Sharing Plan (the "Plan") which is intended to qualify under Sections
401(a) and 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code.  The Plan permits each
participating employee with six months of service to contribute to the Plan
through payroll deductions ("salary deferral contributions") of from 2% to 16%
of the participant's eligible compensation from the Company and its
subsidiaries, thereby deferring taxes on all or a portion of these amounts.
Under the Plan, the Company currently will match a participant's tax deferred
contributions by an amount equal to 100% of such contribution for each year,
except that the matching contribution by the Company for the participant may
not exceed 2% of the participant's eligible compensation for that year.

         The Company may also make additional contributions to the Plan in such
amounts as may be determined by the Company's Board of Directors.  Any such
additional contributions are allocated among Plan participants based upon their
compensation levels.  The Company's contribution vests 100% after a participant
has completed five years of participation in the Plan, with vesting of 20% per
year for each of years one through five.  In addition, the Company's
contribution vests upon a participant's retirement at age 65 or upon a
participant's death or permanent disability.  Participants are entitled to
receive their salary deferral contributions and vested benefits under the Plan
upon termination of employment, retirement, death or disability.  Participants
have the right to allocate their salary deferral contributions among four
different investment funds.  The amounts shown as salaries in the Summary
Compensation Table above include salary deferral contributions made by Mr.
Prentice.

         EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN.  Under the Company's Employee Stock
Purchase Plan (the "Stock Purchase Plan"), which took effect on July 1, 1990,
any employee (other than "Ineligible Employees", which include individuals who
hold the offices of Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, President,
Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President or Chief Financial Officer of
the Company or its subsidiaries), who has completed at least two years of
service with the Company or any subsidiary and customarily works for the





                                      -40-

   48
Company or any subsidiary more than 20 hours per week is eligible to
participate.  Under the Stock Purchase Plan, a participant may purchase from
the Company during each "purchase period" up to a number of shares of Class A
Common Stock to be determined by the Company prior to the first day of any
purchase period, the purchase price for such shares being not less than the
lesser of (i) 85% of the fair market value of such shares on the first day of
the purchase period or (ii) 85% of the fair market value of such  shares on the
last day of the purchase period.  Upon the purchase by a participant of shares,
the Company will award to the participant an equal number of shares, which
awarded shares will be subject to a five-year restriction on transfer and
subject to forfeiture in the event the participant's employment is terminated
for any reason during such five-year period.  A total of 50,000 shares of Class
A Common Stock (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split
described in PROPOSAL FOUR) is available under the Stock Purchase Plan.  The
Company suspended the Stock Purchase Plan effective January 1, 1992 as a result
of the Company's financial performance.

CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

         The Bank has had and expects to continue to have banking transactions
with many of the directors and executive officers of the Company and the Bank
(and their associates).  Loans by the Bank to any director or executive officer
of the Company or any of its subsidiaries (or any associate of such persons)
have been made in the ordinary course of business on substantially the same
terms, including interest rates and collateral, as those prevailing at the time
for comparable transactions with other persons, and, except as set forth in the
following paragraph, have not involved more than the normal risk of collection
or presented other unfavorable features.  Loans by the Bank to any director,
executive officer or principal stockholder of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries (as such persons are defined by regulation) are subject to
limitations under California and federal law.  Among other things, a loan by
the Bank to a director, executive officer, or principal stockholder of the
Company or any of its subsidiaries must be on non-preferential terms and, if
all loans to a given person exceed $25,000, such loans must be approved in
advance by the Bank's Board of Directors.  The aggregate balance of such loans
at December 31, 1993 was $496,000 representing approximately 2.8% of
shareholders' equity at such date.

         An unsecured line of credit loan in the amount of $174,000 (the
highest outstanding indebtedness of which since December 31, 1992 was $185,700)
to William J. Rosetti, a former director of the Company and the Bank (who
resigned as a director in September 1993), which had been renewed in 1992
without the required prior board approval, was charged off in December 1993.
The interest rate on such loan was 8.00% per annum.  This loan was the single
largest unsecured loan charged off in 1993.  In addition, a loan in the amount
of $761,800 (the highest outstanding indebtedness of which since December 31,
1992 was $794,134) secured by a fourth deed of trust on commercial property to
an entity for the purpose of real estate investment, and guaranteed by the same
former director, was classified as non-accrual during the second quarter of
1993 and charged off in December 1993.  The interest rate on such loan was
8.00% per annum.  Such charge-off was the single largest real estate mortgage
loan charged off in 1993.  The Bank is owed as of the Record Date approximately
$91,398 under a third loan guaranteed by such former director, with interest at
the rate of 8.75% per annum, which is fully performing.

         The Bank and an affiliate of Donald R. Stephens, a former Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive Officer of the Company who resigned as a director
of the Company in March 1993, are each 50% partners in Bank of San Francisco
Capital Partners ("Capital Partners").  The purpose of Capital Partners is to
participate in real estate syndications.  Capital Partners has one limited
partnership  operating and subscribed with Capital Partners as the general
partner.  Capital Partners had no earnings in 1993 and is no longer an active
business.

         Bank of San Francisco Building Company, a California limited
partnership (the "Building Partnership"), was formed in 1987 to hold the lease
on, rehabilitate, and lease space in the building at 550 Montgomery Street, San
Francisco, which presently serves as the headquarters of the Company and the
Bank.  The Bank currently leases 75,488 square feet from the Building
Partnership under an operating lease expiring in 2022 with an option for an
additional 14 years, at a minimum annual net rental payment of approximately
$1,622,000.  BSFRI, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bank, is the general
partner of the Building Partnership, and the Bank and a trust controlled by





                                      -41-

   49
Donald R. Stephens (the "D.R. Stephens affiliate") are among the limited
partners.  BSFRI has a general partnership interest of 2.5% and receives 25% to
35% of the cash available for distribution, depending upon the level of cash
return to the limited partners, if a cash distribution is made.  The Bank has a
limited partnership interest of 34.5%.  The D.R. Stephens affiliate has a
limited partnership interest of 13.5%.  Officers and directors of the Company
hold limited partnership interests which aggregate approximately 6.2%.  During
1993, rent paid by the Bank to the Building Partnership was approximately
$1,641,700.  Also during 1993, the Bank, BSFRI and the D.R. Stephens affiliate
received distributions of $207,407.40, $14,814.65, and approximately
$89,838.00, respectively, from the Building Partnership.  The Bank's and
BSFRI's equity in the Building Partnership during 1993 totaled approximately
$2,011,400 and $156,122, respectively.  As part of the series of transactions
in which the Building Partnership was formed, the Building Partnership entered
into an agreement with an affiliate of Donald R.  Stephens to provide property
management services for the 550 Montgomery Street building for a fee of 5% of
gross rental receipts, with the term of the agreement continuing until at least
October 31, 2010.  During 1993, the Building Partnership paid such affiliate
approximately $94,815.61 for providing such services.  The Bank and the Company
contemplate making an offer to the limited partners of the Building Partnership
to purchase its units of limited partnership interest.  See "Possible
Additional Sales of Securities."

         The Company entered into Amended and Restated Indemnification
Agreements with all of the directors and executive officers of the Company
serving in October 1991, which provide for the Company to indemnify its
officers and directors to the fullest extent permitted under Delaware law.  In
addition, the Bank entered into Indemnification Agreements with all of its
directors and executive officers serving in November 1991, which provide for
the Bank to indemnify its officers and directors to the fullest extent
permitted under California law.  The Bank obtained an irrevocable standby
letter of credit in the amount of $300,000 issued by Bank of America NT&SA on
December 30, 1991 on behalf of Thayer T. Prentice, who at the time served as
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Bank and a
director of the Company, as collateral for the Bank's obligations under its
Indemnification Agreement with Mr. Prentice.  In addition, Mr. Prentice entered
into an indemnification arrangement with Mr. Stephens, which is similar to Mr.
Prentice's Indemnification Agreement with the Bank.  Mr. Stephens obtained an
irrevocable standby letter of credit issued by Security Pacific National Bank
on behalf of Mr. Prentice in the amount of $200,000, as collateral for his
obligations under this indemnification arrangement with Mr. Prentice.  Mr.
Prentice resigned his positions with the Bank and the Company on August 31,
1993.

         Under their Employment Agreements, Messrs. Price and Champion would be
indemnified by the Company and the Bank from any liability or expense arising
as a result of actions taken by the Company or the Bank, or events relating to
the business of the Company or the Bank, occurring prior to the execution of
the Employment Agreements.  Subject to certain limitations, Messrs. Price and
Champion would also be indemnified by the Company and the Bank from any
liability or expense arising as a result of actions taken by the Company or the
Bank, or events relating to the business of the Company or the Bank, occurring
after the execution of the Employment Agreements, unless such liability or
expense is due to the officer's bad faith or gross negligence.



     PROPOSAL TWO:  AUTHORIZATION OF CONVERSION OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK
           AND AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE
        AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK AND REQUIRE
            CONVERSION OF CERTAIN SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK


INTRODUCTION

         In order to comply with the October 29 Letter Agreement which requires
the Company to submit to its stockholders a proposal to authorize the
conversion of Series C Preferred Stock into Class A Common Stock and Warrants
on the terms provided in the Series C Certificate of Designation, the Board of
Directors of the Company





                                      -42-

   50
has unanimously adopted a resolution that submits for stockholder approval at
the Annual Meeting a proposal to authorize such conversion, to amend the
Certificate of Incorporation to increase the number of authorized shares of
Class A Common Stock to 400,000,000, and to amend the Series C Certificate of
Designation to provide for mandatory conversion of all outstanding shares of
Series C Preferred Stock on May 31, 1994.  A copy of the Company's Certificate
of Amendment of Certificate of Incorporation, which will be filed if PROPOSAL
TWO is approved in order to effect the increase in the authorized  number of
shares of Class A Common Stock and the mandatory conversion of shares of Series
C Preferred Stock outstanding on May 31, 1994, is attached hereto as Appendix
B.  A vote in favor of PROPOSAL TWO will constitute a vote in favor of the
proposed amendment of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation, including the
Series C Certificate of Designation, as shown in said Appendix.

REASONS FOR APPROVING PROPOSAL TWO

         As described in more detail in "Background Information" above, the
Principal Stockholder desired to purchase Class A Common Stock in October 1992,
and the Board of Directors would have approved the sale of Class A Common Stock
to him at that time if that sale could have been accomplished in a timely
fashion.  When the Company and the Principal Stockholder agreed to a
transaction involving the Series C Preferred Stock which would be convertible
into Class A Common Stock and Warrants, subject to obtaining stockholder
approval of the conversion feature, the Board of Directors agreed to recommend
to the stockholders that they approve the conversion feature.  Not only is
approval of the conversion feature a matter of fairness to the Principal
Stockholder, who provided critically-needed capital to the Company upon very
short notice, management also believes that causing the conversion of the
Series C Preferred Stock (coupled with the reverse stock split discussed in
PROPOSAL FOUR below) will greatly simplify the capital structure of the Company
and perhaps make it easier to raise additional capital in the future.

         Although dividends on the Series C Preferred Stock are not cumulative
and it is highly unlikely that the Company will pay dividends on any class of
its capital stock in the foreseeable future, conversion of the Series C
Preferred Stock will eliminate the requirement that dividends at the rate of 9%
per annum be paid on the Series C Preferred Stock in any given year before
dividends can be paid on the Class A Common Stock, and will eliminate the
liquidation preference of $20.00 per share that would otherwise be paid on the
Series C Preferred Stock on the dissolution and liquidation of the Company.
These dividend and liquidation preferences of the Series C Preferred Stock may
make an investment in the Company's Class A Common Stock less attractive.

         In addition, although capital attributable to noncumulative preferred
stock such as the Series C Preferred Stock is normally included in Tier 1
capital for the Company and the Bank under FRB and FDIC regulatory minimum
capital requirements, the applicable regulations of both agencies also indicate
that it is desirable from a supervisory standpoint that voting common equity
remain the dominant form of Tier 1 capital.  Therefore, the Board of Directors
believes that conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock may be looked upon
favorably by regulatory authorities.

OWNERSHIP OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK

         At present, the Principal Stockholder owns all of the 900,000 shares
of Series C Preferred Stock that are issued and outstanding.  However, Mr.
Kaharudin Latief of Jakarta, Indonesia, is currently in the process of
notifying the FRB and applying to the California State Banking Department for
approval to acquire shares of the Company.  If and when he receives regulatory
clearance, Mr. Latief plans to acquire from the Principal Stockholder 300,000
shares of Series C Preferred Stock (or the shares of Class A Common Stock and
Warrants into which such shares of Series C Preferred Stock are converted).
Thus, while as of the date of this Proxy Statement, Mr. Latief has not acquired
any shares of Series C Preferred Stock, it is possible that as of the date of
the Annual Meeting or prior to May 31, 1994 (the date on which shares of Series
C Preferred Stock will be automatically converted if this PROPOSAL TWO is
approved by the Company's stockholders),  Mr. Latief will own a significant
number of shares





                                      -43-

   51
of Series C Preferred Stock.  Mr. Latief plans to pay for the shares acquired
from the Principal Stockholder through cancellation of an unsecured, personal
loan in the amount of $6,000,000 which Mr. Latief previously extended to the
Principal Stockholder.

         If the proposals are approved by the stockholders of the Company, the
Company anticipates that it will subsequently file with the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC") a registration statement for the purpose of
registering a secondary offering by the holders thereof of (i) all of the
shares of Class A Common Stock currently owned by the Principal Stockholder,
(ii) the 286,000 shares of Class A Common Stock issued and sold to Stephens
upon cancellation of the Subordinated Term Note, (iii) all of the shares of
Class A Common Stock that may be issued upon exercise of the Anti-dilution
Warrants to acquire up to 102,207 shares of Class A Common Stock held by the
Principal Stockholder pursuant to the Amended Stock Purchase Agreement, (iv)
all of the shares of Class A Common Stock and shares of Class A Common Stock
that may be acquired upon exercise of the Warrants into which the Series C
Preferred Stock (whether currently outstanding or sold pursuant to an exercise
of the Series C Preferred Stock Option or otherwise) may be converted and (v)
all of the shares of Class A Common Stock and shares of Class A Common Stock
that may be acquired upon exercise of the Unit Warrants or issuable pursuant to
the terms of the Rights, that may be acquired pursuant to the Private
Placement.  There can be no assurance that any such registration statement will
become effective or that it will be effective at any particular time.  If such
a registration statement does become and remains effective, the holders of such
shares of Class A Common Stock would be able to sell them from time to time as
they deem appropriate, in the open market or otherwise, which would increase
the "float" of the Class A Common Stock (i.e., the number of shares that can
trade without restriction in the public capital  markets).  Sales pursuant to
such a secondary offering would not increase the Company's capital.

DESCRIPTION OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK

         The principal features of the Series C Certificate of Designation
pursuant to which the Series C Preferred Stock was established are as follows:

         1.      Dividends.  Holders of shares of Series C Preferred Stock are
entitled to receive, if, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of the
Company, an annual cash dividend of One Dollar and Eighty Cents ($1.80) per
share, payable semi-annually in April and October of each year, before any
dividends can be paid on the common stock of the Company.  Dividends on the
Series C Preferred Stock are junior to payment of dividends at the stated
annual rate of Fifty-Six Cents ($.56) per share on the Series B Preferred
Stock.  Dividends on the Series C Preferred Stock are not cumulative and the
Board of Directors has the right at any time to eliminate or defer such
dividends during any fiscal year of the Company.  Management anticipates that
no dividends will be paid on the Series C Preferred Stock unless and until the
financial condition and operations of the Company and the Bank improve
significantly, which management does not believe will occur in the near future.
Moreover, if PROPOSAL TWO is approved at the Annual Meeting, all shares of
Series C Preferred Stock will be mandatorily converted into shares of Class A
Common Stock and Warrants as described below on May 31, 1994.  See "Conversion"
below.  Thus, if PROPOSAL TWO is approved, it is likely that no dividends will
ever be paid on the Series C Preferred Stock.  Even if PROPOSAL TWO is not
approved, it is highly unlikely that the Company will pay dividends on the
Series C Preferred Stock in the foreseeable future.

         2.      Voting Rights.  Subject to applicable law, the holders of
shares of Series C Preferred Stock are entitled to one vote per each share of
Series C Preferred Stock on all matters on which stockholders are entitled to
vote, including the election of directors.  Holders of shares of Series C
Preferred Stock generally vote with the holders of shares of Class A Common
Stock, Class B Common Stock and the Series B Preferred Stock as a single class,
except that the holders of shares of the Series C Preferred Stock are entitled
to vote as a separate Class on any modifications to the rights of the holders
of shares of Series C Preferred Stock and otherwise as required by law.





                                      -44-

   52
         3.      Liquidation Preference.  In the event of any liquidation,
dissolution, receivership, bankruptcy or winding up of the Company, voluntarily
or involuntarily, the holders of shares of Series C Preferred Stock are
entitled to receive the sum of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per share, plus any
declared but unpaid dividends thereon, before any distributions will be made to
the holders of shares of Class A Common Stock, Class B Common Stock (of which
no shares are currently issued and outstanding) or any other Class of stock
junior in preference upon liquidation, but after distributions at the rate of
Seven Dollars ($7.00) per share on the Series B Preferred Stock and after or
concurrent with distributions to be made at the stated rate on any other
preferred stock of any Series ranking on a parity with or senior in preference
upon liquidation to the Series C Preferred Shares.

         4.      Conversion.  Shares of the Series C Preferred Stock are not
currently convertible but will become so if the conversion feature is approved
by the holders of a majority of the Class A Common Stock and Series B Preferred
Stock (voting as a single class) at the Annual Meeting.  If the conversion
feature of the Series C Preferred Stock is so approved, each share of Series C
Preferred Stock will become convertible into:  (i) forty (40) shares of Class A
Common Stock (i.e., such shares will be converted at a conversion price of
Fifty Cents ($0.50) per share of Class A Common Stock); and (ii) forty (40)
warrants (the "Warrants"), each of which will entitle the holder thereof to
purchase one share of Class A Common Stock at Fifty Cents ($0.50) per share,
which Warrants shall expire on December 31, 1995.  Moreover, if PROPOSAL TWO is
approved at the Annual Meeting, the Series C Preferred Stock outstanding on May
31, 1994 will be mandatorily converted into Class A Common Stock and Warrants
on the terms described above.

EFFECT OF CONVERSION

         The Principal Stockholder currently owns 5,600,000 or 62.9% of the
issued and outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock and 900,000 or 100% of
the issued and outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock.  He currently
does not own any of the 16,591 issued and outstanding shares of Series B
Preferred Stock.  Before any conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock, the
Principal Stockholder owns 66.2% of the total number of issued and outstanding
shares of capital stock of the Company and thus controls 66.2% of the voting
power of the Company's stockholders.  If the conversion feature of the Series C
Preferred Stock is approved by the stockholders at the Annual Meeting and if
the Principal Stockholder converts all of the shares of Series C Preferred
Stock owned by him into Class A Common Stock and Warrants as described above
(as he will be required to do on May 31, 1994), he would receive 36,000,000
shares of Class A Common Stock and would then own approximately 92.6% of the
voting power of the Company's stockholders, assuming he does not sell any
shares to Mr. Latief.  THUS, IF THE CONVERSION FEATURE OF THE SERIES C
PREFERRED STOCK IS APPROVED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING, THE PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDER'S
VOTING POWER AND CONTROL OVER THE COMPANY WILL BE SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASED.  The
Principal Stockholder's control would increase further if the Principal
Stockholder also exercises all of said Warrants to purchase additional shares
of Class A Common Stock at a purchase price of Fifty Cents ($.50) per share
(the Company understands that the Principal Stockholder currently does not
contemplate exercising any Warrants), in which case he would receive an
additional 36,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock and would then own
approximately 95.9% of all issued and outstanding shares of capital stock.

         Subject to the dilutive effect of the Private Placement, as a result
of his ownership of Class A Common Stock and Series C Preferred Stock, the
Principal Stockholder has, and will in all likelihood continue to have for the
near future, sufficient voting power to enable him to exercise control over
virtually all aspects of the operations of the Company and the Bank except to
the extent that he sells securities owned by him or other parties purchase
additional securities.  See "Ownership of Series C Preferred Stock," "Proposed
Registration of Securities," "PROPOSAL THREE: Increase in Number of Authorized
Shares of Preferred Stock" and "PROPOSAL FIVE: Authorization for Issuance of
Additional Shares of Class A Common Stock, Warrants and Rights."





                                      -45-

   53
REQUIRED CONVERSION OF CERTAIN SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK

         The Series C Certificate of Designation currently provides that,
subject to obtaining the approval of the stockholders of the Company, all of
the shares of Series C Preferred Stock that are issued and outstanding on June
30, 1993 will automatically be converted into shares of Class A Common Stock
and Warrants as described above as of that date.  The June 30 automatic
conversion date was established on the assumption that the Company would be
able to hold its 1993 annual meeting of stockholders prior to that date.  The
Company has delayed its Annual Meeting, and has issued shares of Series C
Preferred Stock to the Principal Stockholder after June 30, 1993.

         Because the June 30, 1993 projected conversion date has passed, and
because management believes it is in the best interests of the Company and its
stockholders for all Series C Preferred Stock that has been or will be issued
to be converted into Class A Common Stock and Warrants, the Board believes it
is advisable to amend the Series C Certificate of Designation to delete the
provision referring to mandatory conversion on June 30, 1993, and to provide
instead that any shares of Series C Preferred Stock outstanding on May 31, 1994
shall automatically be converted to Class A Common Stock and Warrants.
Accordingly, a vote in favor of PROPOSAL TWO will constitute a vote in favor of
an amendment to the Series C Certificate of Designation to provide that any
shares of Series C Preferred Stock that are outstanding on May 31, 1994 will
mandatorily be converted into Class A Common Stock and Warrants on the terms
otherwise described in the Series C Certificate of Designation.

NECESSARY INCREASE OF AUTHORIZED SHARES TO IMPLEMENT CONVERSION

         If PROPOSAL TWO is approved by the stockholders at the Annual Meeting,
the conversion feature of the Series C Preferred  Stock will become fully
operative and it will be necessary for the Company to reserve a sufficient
number of shares of Class A Common Stock to be issued upon the conversion of
the Series C Preferred Stock and the possible exercise of the Warrants.  The
Company's Certificate of Incorporation currently provides for authorized
capital of 20,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock, 28,635 shares of Class B
Common Stock (none of which have been issued) and 2,500,000 shares of Preferred
Stock, of which 437,500 shares have been designated as Series B Preferred Stock
and 1,800,000 shares have been designated as Series C Preferred Stock.  As of
the Record Date, the Company had 8,899,932 shares of Class A Common Stock,
16,591 shares of Series B Preferred Stock and 900,000 shares of Series C
Preferred Stock issued and outstanding.

         In order to reserve a sufficient number of shares of Class A Common
Stock to be issued if all of the outstanding Series C Preferred Stock owned by
the Principal Stockholder is converted and all of the Warrants are exercised,
and if the options which the Company has agreed in the Employment Agreements to
grant to Messrs. Price and Champion are granted, it will be necessary to amend
the Company's Certificate of Incorporation to authorize the Company to issue a
total of at least 90,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock.  In order to
increase the ability of the Company to raise capital in the future by issuing
shares of Class A Common Stock or securities convertible into Class A Common
Stock, and because the Company is contemplating a private placement of at least
$15 million in which the Principal Stockholder's ownership of the Company could
be reduced significantly, possibly even to below 25%, the Company is proposing
to increase the total number of authorized shares significantly above
90,000,000, to 400,000,000.  See "PROPOSAL THREE-Increase in Number of
Authorized Shares of Preferred Stock" below for a description of the Company's
preliminary planning for such private placement.

         However, if PROPOSAL FOUR below and its one-for-ten reverse stock
split is adopted along with PROPOSAL TWO, the interplay of this PROPOSAL TWO
with PROPOSAL FOUR would result in a total of 40,000,000 authorized shares of
Class A Common Stock and approximately 9,000,000 shares outstanding or reserved
for issuance, leaving approximately 31,000,000 shares available for issuance.
The Company is  required by its Certificate of Incorporation to seek
stockholder approval of an issuance of authorized shares of Class A Common
Stock if (a) the issuance requires amendment of the terms of the Class A Common
Stock or of the Certificates of Designation of the Series B Preferred Stock or
the Series C Preferred Stock, or (b) the issuance is





                                      -46-

   54
not approved by a unanimous vote of the Company's Board of Directors.  In
addition, under the AMEX Rules, if the Company issues common stock constituting
20% or more of the then-outstanding common stock for less than the greater of
book or market value of the common stock without obtaining stockholder approval
pursuant to a proxy solicitation conducted in accordance with SEC rules, the
Company could be subject to action by the AMEX to delist the Class A Common
Stock.

         Although the Company is submitting the Private Placement for the
approval of the stockholders, the Company is unable to predict whether any
Class A Common Stock it may issue in the future will meet these AMEX criteria.
Therefore, if PROPOSAL TWO is approved, the Company could issue Common Stock
without further authorization by stockholders of the Company.  Holders of the
Class A Common Stock of the Company do not have preemptive rights to subscribe
to any additional capital stock issued by the Company.  If PROPOSAL TWO is
approved and some or all of the approximately 310,000,000 shares of Class A
Common Stock (approximately 31,000,000 shares if the 1-for-10 reverse stock
split described in PROPOSAL FOUR is adopted) available for issuance as a result
are subsequently issued, the holdings of existing stockholders, already diluted
significantly by the conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock, would be
diluted even further.  For example, a person holding 1% of the Class A Common
Stock currently would hold only 0.2% of the Class A Common Stock assuming that
the 900,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock are converted and no Warrants
are exercised, and would hold only 0.1% of the Class A Common Stock if an
additional 30,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock are authorized and issued
to persons other than the stockholder.

RIGHTS OF DISSENTING STOCKHOLDERS

         Under the Delaware General Corporation Law, stockholders of the
Company are not entitled to any rights of appraisal or dissenters' rights in
connection with the adoption of PROPOSAL TWO:  AUTHORIZATION OF CONVERSION OF
SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK AND AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO
INCREASE AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK AND REQUIRE
CONVERSION OF CERTAIN SHARES OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK.

            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
        PROPOSAL TWO:  AUTHORIZATION OF CONVERSION OF SERIES C PREFERRED
             STOCK AND AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO
              INCREASE THE AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A
             COMMON STOCK, AND REQUIRE CONVERSION OF CERTAIN SHARES
                          OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK



           PROPOSAL THREE: AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE
               OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE THE AUTHORIZED NUMBER
                          OF SHARES OF PREFERRED STOCK

INCREASE IN NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF PREFERRED STOCK

         As stated above, the Certificate of Incorporation currently authorizes
the issuance of 2,500,000 shares of Preferred Stock, with such rights,
preferences and privileges as established by the Board of Directors in a
certificate of designation relating to such Preferred Stock.  The Company has
already designated 437,500 shares of Series B Preferred Stock and 1,800,000
shares of Series C Preferred Stock, so only 262,500 shares of Preferred Stock
remain undesignated under the current Certificate of Incorporation.  The
Company is proposing to increase the number of authorized shares of Preferred
Stock to 5,000,000 in order to provide the Company with increased flexibility
to raise capital by issuing Preferred Stock with characteristics different than
those of the Series B and





                                      -47-

   55
Series C Preferred Stock.  A copy of the Company's Certificate of Amendment of
Certificate of Incorporation, which will be filed if PROPOSAL THREE is approved
in order to effect the increase in the authorized  number of shares of
Preferred Stock, is attached hereto as Appendix C.  A vote in favor of PROPOSAL
THREE will constitute a vote in favor of the proposed amendment of the
Company's Certificate of Incorporation as shown in said Appendix.

         The Company is required by the terms of its Certificate of
Incorporation to seek stockholder approval of an issuance of Preferred Stock if
(a) the issuance requires amendment of the Certificates of Designation of the
Series B Preferred Stock or the Series C Preferred Stock, or (b) the issuance
is not approved by a unanimous vote of the Company's Board of Directors.  In
addition, under the AMEX Rules, if the Company issues securities that are
convertible into common stock equal to 20% or more of the then-outstanding
common stock, and are sold for less than the greater of book or market value of
the common stock, without obtaining stockholder approval pursuant to a proxy
solicitation conducted in accordance with SEC rules, the Company could be
subject to action by the AMEX to delist the Class A Common Stock.  If PROPOSAL
THREE is approved and Preferred Stock is issued, the amount and terms of the
securities to be issued, including dividend or interest rates, conversion
prices, voting rights, redemption prices, maturity dates, and similar matters
could be determined by the Board of Directors and the securities could be
issued without further authorization by stockholders of the Company.  Even if
stockholder approval is required, due to the extent of the Principal
Stockholder's voting power, if he were to vote all of his shares in favor of
the issuance of securities, passage of the proposal would be assured.  If
PROPOSAL THREE is approved and some or all of the additional 2,500,000 shares
of Preferred Stock available for issuance as a result are subsequently issued,
the holdings of existing stockholders, already diluted significantly by the
conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock (assuming passage of PROPOSAL TWO),
could be diluted even further.



            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
           PROPOSAL THREE: AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE
               OF INCORPORATION TO INCREASE THE AUTHORIZED NUMBER
                          OF SHARES OF PREFERRED STOCK



           PROPOSAL FOUR:  AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT
                   OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION, INCLUDING
                      AUTHORIZATION OF REVERSE STOCK SPLIT

INTRODUCTION

         The Board of Directors of the Company has unanimously adopted a
resolution that submits for stockholder approval at the Annual Meeting an
amendment (the "Amendment") to the Company's Certificate of Incorporation that
would (a) reclassify the Class B Common Stock as and into Class A Common Stock,
(b) effect a 1-for-10 reverse stock split of the Class A Common Stock and
thereby  decrease the authorized number of shares of the Company's Class A
Common Stock to 40,000,000 (the "Reverse Split") (assuming approval of PROPOSAL
TWO -- see the next succeeding paragraph), (c) change the name of the Company
to The San Francisco Company, (d) delete from the Certificate Article Fifth,
which only provides the name and address of the incorporator of the Company and
is no longer necessary, (e) update Article Fifteenth of the Certificate (which
would become Article Fourteenth), and (f) restate the Certificate in its
entirety.  A copy of the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of
Incorporation is attached hereto as Appendix D.  A vote in favor of PROPOSAL
FOUR will constitute a vote in favor of the proposed amendments and restatement
as shown in said Appendix.





                                      -48-

   56
         If the Amendment is approved by the stockholders of the Company, the
Board of Directors will then vote upon the Amendment.  Management of the
Company anticipates that the Amendment will be approved by the Board of
Directors if PROPOSAL TWO is approved by the stockholders of the Company.  If
PROPOSAL TWO is not approved by the stockholders of the Company, the Board of
Directors will not approve the Reverse Split, although it anticipates that it
will approve the other items in the Amendment.  If the Board of Directors
approves the Amendment, then pursuant to the Amendment each ten shares of Class
A Common Stock outstanding at the effective date of the Reverse Split (the
"Effective Date") will be converted into one post-Reverse Split share of the
Company's Class A Common Stock (the "New Common Stock").  The Effective Date
will be the date on which the Amendment is filed with the Secretary of State of
the State of Delaware.  No fractional shares will be issued; rather,
stockholders who would otherwise be entitled to a fractional share as a result
of the Reverse Split will receive cash in the amount described below.

SERIES B PREFERRED STOCK; RECLASSIFICATION OF CLASS B COMMON STOCK

         At present the holders of Series B Preferred Stock are entitled at any
time to convert their shares of Series B Preferred Stock into Class B Common
Stock of the Company at the conversion ratio of one share of Series B Preferred
Stock for one share of Class B Common Stock, upon payment of a conversion fee
of Seven Dollars ($7.00) per share, subject to adjustment under certain
conditions.

         There are 16,591 Series B Preferred Shares outstanding.  There are no
shares of Class B Common Stock outstanding.  In order to equitably reflect the
conversion rights of the Series B Preferred Stock in light of the Reverse
Split, the Company proposes that, pursuant to the Amendment, shares of Class B
Common Stock be reclassified as and into Class A Common Stock.  As a result,
there will be no authorized Class B Common Stock and the only common stock of
the Company which will be authorized will be Class A Common Stock.
Accordingly, as a result of the conversion adjustment provisions of the Series
B Preferred Stock, following the Reverse Split, each share of Series B
Preferred Stock will be convertible into one-tenth of one share of Class A
Common Stock.  This reclassification is not deemed by the Company to alter or
change any of the relative powers, preferences or special rights of the holders
of Series B Preferred Stock since in all respects the shares of Class B Common
Stock and the shares of Class A Common Stock are equivalent.  Because no shares
of Class B Common Stock are presently outstanding, the only method to
practicably avoid the inequity is to reclassify the Class B Common Stock.  The
reclassification merely prevents the inequitable result of the Class A Common
Stock being adjusted as a result of the Reverse Split without a similar
adjustment in Class B Common Stock.

REASONS FOR APPROVING THE REVERSE SPLIT

         Assuming that all of the currently outstanding shares of Series C
Preferred Stock are converted into shares of Class A Common Stock and Warrants,
the Company would have outstanding a total of 44,899,932 shares of Class A
Common Stock and Warrants to purchase an additional 36,000,000 shares of Class
A Common Stock.  The Principal Stockholder also holds the Anti-dilution
Warrants entitling him to purchase up to 102,207 shares of Class A Common
Stock.

         While management of the Company believes that the actual issuances of
Series C Preferred Stock have been in the best interests of the Company and its
stockholders, it also believes that upon conversion of the Series C Preferred
Stock, there will be too many shares of Class A Common Stock issued and
outstanding for a corporation of the Company's size.  Even if the Company
returns to profitability, it will likely report very low earnings per share and
book value per share because there will be so many shares of Class A Common
Stock outstanding.  This could have an adverse effect on the marketability and
trading price of the Class A Common Stock.





                                      -49-

   57
         Many brokerage firms are reluctant to recommend lower priced stocks
for their clients, and the policies and practices of a number of brokerage
houses tend to discourage individual brokers within those firms from dealing in
lower priced stocks.  Management of the Company also believes that certain
institutional investors are reluctant to invest in lower priced stocks.  In
addition, the brokerage commission on the purchase or sale of a stock with a
relatively low price per share generally tends to represent a higher percentage
of the sales price than the brokerage commission charged on a stock with a
relatively high price per share, to the detriment of the holders of the Class A
Common Stock and the market for the Class A Common Stock.  Finally, the Board
of Directors believes that the raising of new capital may be facilitated if the
price and book value per share of the Class A Common Stock can be increased.
The Board of Directors believes that these issues are best addressed by an
increase in the price per share of the Class A Common Stock that is anticipated
as a result of the proposed Reverse Split, although no assurances can be given
that such an increase will occur if the Reverse Split is implemented, or that
such price per share, if it does rise, will rise in proportion to the Reverse
Split or that any such rise will be sustained for a significant period.

         In addition, even if the Reverse Split is implemented, there can be no
assurance that brokerage firms will be more inclined to recommend the Class A
Common Stock or that institutional investors will be more inclined to invest in
the Class A Common Stock or that an increased price will facilitate any
possible raising of additional capital.  If the market value of the Class A
Common Stock does not adjust proportionately, a significant loss of stockholder
value could result.  In addition, a Reverse Split reduces the number of shares
of Class A Common Stock outstanding, thereby adversely affecting liquidity and
possibly depressing the price of the Class A Common Stock.  The Reverse Split
also would cause the Class A Common Stock to have fewer than 300 round lot
shareholders of record, which under guidelines adopted by AMEX would normally
lead AMEX to consider delisting the Class A Common Stock.  Such delisting could
severely impair the marketability of the Class A Common Stock.  Nevertheless,
the Company believes that, because it meets other listing guidelines adopted by
the AMEX, the Reverse Split is not likely to cause the AMEX to initiate
proceedings for delisting the Class A Common Stock.  For the reasons set forth
above, the Board of Directors believes that stockholder approval of the
Amendment to effect the Reverse Split is advisable at this time.

VESTING DISCRETION IN THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         At present, the Board of Directors expects to direct management to
file the Amendment as promptly as practicable if approved by stockholders of
the Company.  However, the Board would not be obligated to direct management to
file the Amendment, and would direct management not to file the portion of the
Amendment related to the Reverse Split if PROPOSAL TWO with respect to the
conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock is not approved by the stockholders.


GENERAL EFFECT OF REVERSE SPLIT

         The New Common Stock will not be different from the Common Stock, and
the holders of the New Common Stock or options or warrants to purchase the New
Common Stock will have the same relative rights following the Effective Date as
they had prior thereto.  The Reverse Split will not affect the number of shares
of Series B Preferred Stock that are issued and outstanding at the Effective
Date and the voting rights of the Series B Preferred Stock will not be adjusted
for the Reverse Split.  The ratio at which such Series B Preferred Stock can be
converted will be adjusted proportionately for the Reverse Split, as is
described in more detail below.

         The following table shows the effect of the Reverse Split on the
aggregate number of shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock, Series B
Preferred Stock, and Series C Preferred Stock and on the stockholders' equity
section of the Company's balance sheet, on a pro forma basis, as of December
31, 1993, assuming that PROPOSAL TWO had been adopted on or prior to that date,
that all of the shares of Series C





                                      -50-

   58
Preferred Stock outstanding as of that date had been converted into shares of
Class A Common Stock and Warrants, and that none of the Warrants had been
exercised to purchase additional shares of Class A Common Stock:




                                                             PRIOR TO                 AFTER
                                                         PROPOSED REVERSE       PROPOSED REVERSE
                                                              SPLIT                 SPLIT(2)
Number of Shares(1)                                      ----------------       ----------------
                                                                          
Class A Common Stock
       Authorized . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .        400,000,000              40,000,000
       Issued and outstanding . . . . . . . . . .         44,899,932               4,489,993
       Available for issuance . . . . . . . . . .        355,100,068              35,510,007

Preferred Stock
       Authorized . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          2,500,000               2,500,000(3)
       Series B Preferred Stock
              Designated  . . . . . . . . . . . .            437,500                 437,500
              Issued  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             16,591                  16,591
              Available for issuance  . . . . . .            420,909                 420,909

       Series C Preferred Stock
              Designated  . . . . . . . . . . . .          1,800,000               1,800,000
              Issued  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                  0                       0
              Available for issuance  . . . . . .          1,800,000               1,800,000

       Undesignated Preferred Stock available
       for issuance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .            262,500                 262,500(3)

Stockholders' Equity

       Series B Preferred Stock . . . . . . . . .        $   116,137             $   116,137
       Series C Preferred Stock . . . . . . . . .                  0                       0
       Class A Common Stock . . . . . . . . . . .            448,999                  44,900
       Additional paid-in capital . . . . . . . .         52,217,373              52,621,472
       Deficit  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .        (35,101,000)           (35,101,000)
       Employee purchase and option plans . . . .           (166,000)              (166,000)
       Total stockholders' equity . . . . . . . .         17,455,000             17,455,000
       Stockholders' equity per common share
       outstanding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .              $0.39                  $3.90


_____________________

(1)      The pro forma number of shares outstanding and stockholders' equity as
         of December 31, 1993 reflects the conversion of 900,000 shares of
         Series C Preferred Stock into 36,000,000 shares of Class A Common
         Stock and Warrants to purchase an additional 36,000,000 shares of
         Class A Common Stock, and assumes such Warrants are not exercised, as
         the Company has been informed that the Principal Stockholder has no
         present intention to exercise the Warrants.  Said pro forma number
         does not reflect (a) any shares of Class A Common Stock that may be
         issued upon exercise of the Anti-dilution Warrants to acquire up to
         102,207 shares of Class A Common Stock which the Principal Stockholder
         acquired under the May 1992 Amended Stock Purchase Agreement, or (b)
         any shares of Class A Common Stock that may be issued pursuant to
         options granted under the Prior Stock Option Plans or the New Stock
         Option Plans,





                                      -51-

   59
(2)      The number of shares shown above as being outstanding after the
         Reverse Split do not reflect any adjustments that may result from the
         repurchase of fractional shares.

(3)      The number of shares of Preferred Stock available for issuance will be
         increased as a result of the approval of PROPOSAL THREE.

EFFECT ON REGISTRATION

         The Class A Common Stock is currently registered under Section 12(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended (the "1934 Act"), and as a
result, the Company is subject to the periodic  reporting and other
requirements of the 1934 Act.  The Reverse Split will not affect the
registration of the Class A Common Stock under the 1934 Act.

EFFECT ON THE MARKET FOR THE COMMON STOCK

         The Company's Class A Common Stock is listed on the American Stock
Exchange under the symbol "BOF."  The closing sale price for the Class A Common
Stock on the American Stock Exchange on February 18, 1994, was $1.69.  The
following table sets forth the high and low closing sale prices for the Class A
Common Stock on the American Stock Exchange for each calendar quarter during
1992 and 1993.





 QUARTER                                1993                      1992
 -------                        ------------------         -------------------
                                                             
                                 High          Low          High          Low
 First                          $3.50         1.25         $4.13         2.75
 Second                          2.68         1.12          4.13         2.38
 Third                           1.62         1.00          4.25         2.00
 Fourth                          1.33          .75          2.25          1.0



         The shares of Series B Preferred Stock were listed on the American
Stock Exchange at the time of their issuance in October 1988.  In March 1990,
the Company received approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission to
delist the Series B Preferred Stock, pursuant to Rule 12d2-2(d), under the 1934
Act.  The primary reason for the delisting of the Series B Preferred Stock was
the limited trading activity of the stock.  As a result, there is no public
market for the Series B Preferred Stock.  However, the Company has established
procedures to assist stockholders of the Series B Preferred Stock in the event
that they wish to transfer their shares.  The Series C Preferred Stock has
never been listed on any exchange or traded in any other public market.

         Management anticipates that after the Effective Date, the market price
of shares of New Common Stock will increase as a result of the decrease in the
number of shares outstanding.  However, there is no assurance that such an
increase will occur and, if so, it cannot be predicted whether any such
increase will be in proportion to the Reverse Split.  The Reverse Split also
would cause the Class A Common Stock to have fewer than 300 round lot
shareholders of record, which under guidelines adopted by AMEX would normally
lead AMEX to consider delisting the Class A Common Stock.  Such delisting could
severely impair the marketability of the Class A Common Stock.  Nevertheless,
the Company believes that, because it meets other listing guidelines adopted by
the AMEX, the Reverse Split is not likely to cause the AMEX to initiate
proceedings for delisting the Class A Common Stock.

EFFECT ON OPTIONS, WARRANTS AND CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES

         Pursuant to anti-dilution provisions set forth in the Prior Stock
Option Plans and the New Stock Option Plans, the number of shares that may be
issued under the New Stock Option Plans (including options to be granted





                                      -52-

   60
to Messrs. Price and Champion under their Employment Agreements), and the
number of shares issuable upon the exercise of outstanding options granted
under the Prior Stock Option Plans and the New Stock Option Plans, will be
decreased in proportion to the Reverse Split, and the exercise price per share
of such outstanding options will be proportionately increased.  Outstanding
options under the Prior Stock Option Plans and the New Stock Option Plans will
be rounded to the nearest whole share, and no cash payment will be made in
respect of any fractional shares.

         Thus, for example, if an employee of the Company owns an option to
purchase 5,000 shares of Class A Common Stock of the Company at $2.00 per
share, then on and as of the Effective Date, the terms of the option will be
adjusted so that the option represents the right to purchase 500 shares of New
Common Stock at an exercise price of $20.00 per share.  No payment will be made
in respect of the rounding of any extra fractional share.

         Assuming that none, or less than all of the Warrants will be exercised
upon conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock, the remaining Warrants would
be affected by the Reverse Split.  The Company also has outstanding the
Anti-dilution Warrants to acquire up to 102,207 shares of Class A Common Stock,
which were issued to the Principal Stockholder in connection with the Amended
Stock Purchase Agreement.  Under the anti-dilution provisions of the Warrants
and the Anti-dilution Warrants, the number of shares issuable upon the exercise
of the warrants will decrease in proportion to the Reverse Split, and the
exercise price of such warrants will increase proportionately.  For example,
each Warrant would entitle the holder to purchase four (instead of 40) shares
of Class A Common Stock, at $5.00 (rather than $0.50) per share.

         The shares of Series B Preferred Stock are convertible into shares of
Class B Common Stock upon payment of a conversion fee of $7.00 per share.
Under the anti-dilution provisions of the Certificate of Designations of
Rights, Preferences and Privileges related to the Series B Preferred Stock, the
number of shares of Class B Common Stock issuable upon the conversion of the
Series B Preferred Stock will decrease in proportion to the Reverse Split and
the conversion fee will increase proportionately.  As described above, pursuant
to the Amendment all Class B Common Stock would be reclassified as and into
Class A Common Stock.  Finally, under the anti-dilution provisions of the
Series C Certificate of Designations, the number of shares of Class A Common
Stock and Warrants into which outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock
may be converted will decrease in proportion to the Reverse Split, and the
exercise price of the Warrants will increase proportionately.  Thus any shares
of Series C Preferred Stock issued after the effective date of the Reverse
Split would be convertible into four shares of Class A Common Stock and four
Warrants each entitling the holder thereof to purchase shares of Class A Common
Stock at a price of $5.00 per share.

EXCHANGE OF STOCK CERTIFICATES AND LIQUIDATION OF FRACTIONAL SHARES

         As soon as practicable after the Effective Date, the stockholders will
be notified and requested to surrender their certificates representing shares
of Class A Common Stock to the Company's transfer agent so that certificates
representing the appropriate number of shares of New Common Stock, together
with a cash payment in lieu of any fractional share, may be issued in exchange
therefor.  As a result of the "cash-out" of fractional shares, stockholders
holding fewer than 10 shares will receive only cash and will no longer hold any
Class A Common Stock.  Based on the number of stockholders of record of the
Class A Common Stock as of the Record Date, the Reverse Split would cause a
reduction in the number of stockholders of record from 466 to 443.

         No scrip or fractional certificates will be issued in connection with
the proposed Reverse Split.  Rather, the Company will pay cash in lieu of any
fraction of a share that any stockholder would otherwise receive.  The price
for such fractional share will be based upon the average of the closing prices
per share on the AMEX for the Class A Common Stock for the ten trading days
immediately preceding the Effective Date of the Reverse Split.





                                      -53-

   61
FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

         A summary of the material federal income tax consequences of the
proposed Reverse Split is set forth below.  The following discussion is based
upon present federal tax law and does not purport to be a complete discussion
of such consequences for all stockholders in all circumstances, nor does it
address state, local or foreign tax consequences or considerations.
ACCORDINGLY, STOCKHOLDERS ARE ADVISED TO CONSULT THEIR OWN TAX ADVISORS FOR
MORE DETAILED INFORMATION REGARDING THE EFFECTS OF THE PROPOSED REVERSE SPLIT
ON THEIR INDIVIDUAL TAX STATUSES.

         1.      The proposed Reverse Split will not be a taxable transaction
                 to the Company.

         2.      A stockholder will not recognize any gain or loss as a result
of the Reverse Split unless the stockholder receives cash in lieu of a
fractional share.  Although it is impossible to predict with certainty the tax
consequences to any stockholder who receives cash in lieu of a fractional
share, such stockholder, depending on the circumstances, will either (i)
recognize gain or loss as a result of the Company's purchase of a fractional
share based upon the amount realized for the fractional share less the holder's
proportionate adjusted basis in such fractional share, or (ii) recognize
dividend income in an amount not in excess of the amount of proceeds received
from the sale of the fractional share.

         3.      The aggregate tax basis of the New Common Stock received by a
stockholder pursuant to the Reverse Split will equal the aggregate tax basis of
the stockholder's Class A Common Stock prior to the Effective Date (except that
such basis will be reduced by any basis allocated to a fractional share
redeemed by the Company with respect to which the stockholder recognizes gain
or loss as described in clause (i) of paragraph 2 above).  The holding period
of the New Common Stock received by the stockholder will include the holding
period of the stockholder's Class A Common Stock before the Reverse Split,
provided the shares of Class A Common Stock were a capital asset in the hands
of such stockholder.

         Special taxation and withholding rules may apply to any stockholder
that is a nonresident alien or a foreign corporation.  Those rules are beyond
the scope of this discussion and should be discussed with a personal tax
advisor.  Stockholders will be required to provide their social security or
other taxpayer identification numbers (or, in some instances, certain other
information) to the transfer agent in connection with the Reverse Split to
avoid backup withholding requirements that might otherwise apply.  See
"Exchange of Certificates and Liquidation of Fractional Shares."  The letter of
transmittal will require each stockholder to deliver such information when the
Class A Common Stock certificates are surrendered following the Effective Date
of the Amendment.  Failure to provide such information may result in backup
withholding.

UPDATING OF EXEMPTIONS TO RESTRICTIONS ON ISSUANCE OF STOCK

         At the Special Meeting of Stockholders on July 6, 1992 at which the
Principal Stockholder's initial purchase of Class A Common Stock was approved,
the stockholders authorized an amendment adding Article Fifteenth to the
Certificate to protect the Principal Stockholder's interests by limiting the
Company's ability to issue additional securities and thus dilute his ownership
position.  Article Fifteenth provides that the Company may not issue any
securities without the approval of the stockholders or of a unanimous Board of
Directors, except for (a) issuance of the Class A Common Stock (1) upon the
exercise of options under the Company's 1982 Incentive Stock Option Plan and
1982 Stock Option Plan (the "1982 Option Plans"), which options were
outstanding as of July 13, 1992, (2) upon the conversion of Series B Preferred
Stock, or (3) upon the exercise of warrants outstanding as of July 13, 1992;
and (b) issuance of the Class A Common Stock upon conversion of Series B
Preferred Stock.  Article Fifteenth became effective on July 13, 1992.

         Since the date of this amendment, additional options were issued under
the 1982 Option Plans, the 1982 Option Plans have expired, and the Company has
adopted, subject to the stockholders' approval of PROPOSAL





                                      -54-

   62
SIX, new option plans similar in purpose to the 1982 Option Plans.  In
addition, since July 1992, the Company has issued 900,000 shares of Series C
Preferred Stock convertible into Class A Common Stock and Warrants.  In order
to permit the exercise of Warrants and the exercise of post-July 13, 1992
options without having to call a meeting of the Board of Directors for each
such conversion or exercise, the Company is proposing to amend Article
Fifteenth (shown as Article Fourteenth in the Amended and Restated Certificate
of Incorporation attached as Appendix D) to (a) permit the exercise without
specific Board or stockholder approval of warrants to purchase Class A Common
Stock which are outstanding as of June 30, 1994 (which, assuming PROPOSAL TWO
is approved, would be the date of the mandatory conversion of outstanding
Series C Preferred Stock into shares of Class A Common Stock and Warrants), and
(b) permit the exercise without specific Board or stockholder approval of
options issued under the 1982 Option Plans or the New Stock Option Plans, in
accordance with the terms of the options, regardless of the date such options
were granted.  The reference to the Class B Common Stock will be deleted
pursuant to the reclassification of Class B Common Stock as and into Class A
Common Stock.  Approval of the unanimous Board of Directors or of the
stockholders of the Company would still be required for each new issuance of
Preferred Stock or Warrants after June 30, 1994 and, subject to the exceptions
in Article Fifteenth, as amended, for each new issuance of Class A Common
Stock.

CHANGE IN COMPANY NAME AND RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

         As part of PROPOSAL FOUR, the Company is proposing to change the name
of the Company to "The San Francisco Company."  The Company believes that this
name is simpler and easier for the public to use than "Bank of San Francisco
Company Holding Company," will increase identification of the Company with its
Bay Area target market, and will better allow the Company to market itself as a
provider of services in addition to traditional retail banking services.  The
Company also believes that the amendments to its Certificate of Incorporation
described in this PROPOSAL FOUR present an ideal opportunity to incorporate the
various amendments to the Certificate over the years into a single Restated
Certificate of Incorporation that will be easier to use both for the Company
and for the several constituencies that may be interested in reviewing the
Certificate of Incorporation.

RIGHTS OF DISSENTING STOCKHOLDERS

         Under the Delaware General Corporation Law, stockholders of the
Company are not entitled to any rights of appraisal or dissenters' rights in
connection with the adoption of PROPOSAL FOUR: AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT AND
RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION, INCLUDING AUTHORIZATION OF REVERSE
STOCK SPLIT

            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
                 PROPOSAL FOUR:  AUTHORIZATION OF AMENDMENT AND
             RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION, INCLUDING
                      AUTHORIZATION OF REVERSE STOCK SPLIT



          PROPOSAL FIVE:  AUTHORIZATION OF THE ISSUANCE OF ADDITIONAL
              SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK, WARRANTS AND RIGHTS

INTRODUCTION

         As discussed above, the Company is attempting to raise additional
capital in order to obtain greater assurance that the Company and the Bank will
be able to meet their minimum capital requirements on an on-going basis in the
coming months and as a precaution against prolonged or increased uncertainty in
the economy in general and the real estate market in particular.  In addition,
the Company is seeking to raise capital in order to initiate the Bank's new
strategic focus and permit management to pursue perceived opportunities both
domestically and in the





                                      -55-

   63
Asian markets which is discussed in the Company's 1993 Annual Report.  The
Company is seeking to raise net proceeds of a minimum of $15,000,000 and a
maximum of approximately $23,500,000 (if the entire allotment for
oversubscription is sold) of such additional capital in the Private Placement.
Because of the regulatory considerations discussed above, the Board of
Directors of the Company believes it is critical to the Company and the Bank to
raise a substantial portion of this additional capital as soon as possible.

         The Company and the Bank have retained the Placement Agents to assist
and advise the Company with respect to the Company's capital raising efforts.
The Company has prepared and is the process of distributing a private placement
memorandum in connection with the Private Placement.  See "Background" for
additional information regarding the regulatory position of the Company and the
Bank and the need for the Private Placement.

DESCRIPTION OF UNITS

         In the Private Placement, the Company is offering for sale up to
8,125,000 units (the "Units"), each consisting of (i) one share of Class A
Common Stock, (ii) one warrant, entitling the holder thereof to purchase one
share of Class A Common Stock at a purchase price of $5.00 per share (the
"Warrants"), and (iii) one right entitling the holder thereof to receive,
without payment of additional consideration, an amount of shares of Class A
Common Stock in periodic distributions based upon the resolution value of
certain problem assets currently held in the Bank's portfolio (the "Rights").
The purpose of the Right is to insulate the investors in the Private Placement,
to a limited extent, from the effects on the Company and the Bank of
deteriorations in the value of the Company's problem assets.  The Company is
offering the Units at a price of $3.20 per Unit (the "Unit Price").  The
foregoing assumes approval of the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in
PROPOSAL FOUR.  ASSUMING (I) THE SALE OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE
PRIVATE PLACEMENT, BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY OF THE WARRANTS OR THE UNIT
WARRANTS AND (III) NO SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE RIGHTS, THE SHARES
ISSUED IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT WILL REPRESENT 54.0% OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF
OUTSTANDING SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT.

         RIGHTS.  Please refer to page 23 under the caption "Determinations by
the Board of Directors" for a description of the Rights.

         WARRANTS.  The Company will issue, in respect of each Unit purchased
in the Private Placement, a Warrant to purchase one share of Class A Common
Stock at a purchase price of $5.00 per share (the "Exercise Price") (after
giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in PROPOSAL FOUR).
Each Warrant will permit the holder thereof to exercise, in whole or in part,
the purchase rights represented by the Warrant on or before December 31, 1995.

         REGISTRATION RIGHTS.  Holders of (i) Class A Common Stock issued
pursuant to the Private Placement, (ii) Adjustment Shares and (iii) Class A
Common Stock acquired by exercise of the Warrants (collectively, "Registerable
Securities") will be entitled to certain registration rights in respect of such
Registerable Securities. The Company anticipates that it will file a
registration statement for the purpose of registering a secondary offering by
the holders of the Registerable Securities and certain other persons, including
the Principal Stockholder, as referred to in PROPOSAL TWO above.

         There can be no assurance that any such registration statement will
become effective or that it will be effective at any particular time.  If such
a registration statement does become and remains effective, the holders of such
shares of Class A Common Stock would be able to sell them from time to time as
they deem appropriate, in the open market or otherwise, which would increase
the "float" of the Class A Common Stock (i.e., the number of shares that can
trade without restriction in the public capital  markets).  Sales pursuant to
such a secondary offering would not increase the Company's capital.





                                      -56-

   64
POTENTIAL DILUTIVE IMPACT OF PRIVATE PLACEMENT

         The Private Placement will have a substantial dilutive impact on the
percentage of ownership of the current holders of the Company's equity
securities.  FOLLOWING THE CONVERSION OF ALL THE CURRENTLY OUTSTANDING SHARES
OF SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK INTO CLASS A COMMON STOCK AND WARRANTS, AND
ASSUMING (I) THE SALE OF THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF UNITS IN THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT,
BUT (II) NO EXERCISE OF ANY OF THE WARRANTS OR THE UNIT WARRANTS AND (III) NO
SHARES ARE ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE RIGHTS, THE SHARES ISSUED IN THE PRIVATE
PLACEMENT WILL REPRESENT 54.0% OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING SHARES OF
CLASS A COMMON STOCK AFTER THE PRIVATE PLACEMENT.

         The following table sets forth the relative percentage ownership of
the Company's Class A Common Stock following the conversion of the 900,000
shares of Series C Preferred Stock and assuming (i) the sale of Units in the
Private Placement as set forth in the table, (ii) no exercise of any of the
Warrants or the Unit Warrants and (iii) no shares are issued pursuant to the
Rights.

                     Percentage of Class A Common Stock (1)



                                                             Purchasers
                                                                    in the Private     Current Public
         Dilution Event           Masagung (2)        Latief           Placement        Stockholders
         --------------           ------------        ------        --------------      ------------
                                                                                
  Minimum Offering
  Amount Attained                    42.6%              0%               54.0%              3.4%
                                                                                                

  Maximum Offering 
  Amount Plus Allotment for          33.0%              0%               64.4%              2.6%
  Oversubscriptions

  Latief Purchase and
  Maximum Offering                   23.5%              9.5%             64.4%              2.6%
  Amount Plus Allotment for
  Oversubscriptions


         (1)     Based on a Unit Price of $3.20.
         (2)     Assumes that neither Mr. Putra Masagung nor Mr. Latief
                 purchase Units in the Private Placement.

RIGHTS OF DISSENTING STOCKHOLDERS

         Under the Delaware General Corporation Law, stockholders of the
Company are not entitled to any rights of appraisal or dissenters' rights in
connection with the adoption of PROPOSAL FIVE:  AUTHORIZATION OF THE ISSUANCE
OF ADDITIONAL SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK, WARRANTS AND RIGHTS

            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
          PROPOSAL FIVE:  AUTHORIZATION OF THE ISSUANCE OF ADDITIONAL
              SHARES OF CLASS A COMMON STOCK, WARRANTS AND RIGHTS





                                      -57-

   65
              PROPOSAL SIX:  APPROVAL OF THE 1993 EXECUTIVE STOCK
       OPTION PLAN AND THE 1993 NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN

         The Board of Directors of the Company believes that a stock option
incentive program is an important factor in attracting, retaining, and
motivating highly qualified employees who will dedicate their productive
efforts towards the advancement of the interests of the Company and the Bank.

         In 1982, the Board of Directors and the stockholders of the Company
adopted and approved an incentive stock option plan and a non-qualified stock
option plan which were in effect until February, 1992 when they expired by
their terms.  See "Executive Compensation - Description of Benefit Plans."  The
Board of Directors has approved and is submitting to the stockholders for
approval the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan (the "Executive Plan") and the
1993 Non-Employee Directors Stock Option Plan (the "Directors Plan").  Options
granted under the Executive Plan may be either incentive stock options which
qualify for favorable tax treatment to the optionee, or non-qualified stock
options which do not qualify for favorable tax treatment to the optionee but
may be granted on terms and conditions that are more varied than for incentive
stock options.  The two plans are regarded by the Board of Directors as
complementary parts of a single stock option incentive program and thus are
presented together for stockholder consideration.

         The Executive Plan will cover a total of 11,000,000 shares of Class A
Common Stock, and the Directors Plan will cover a total of 500,000 shares of
Class A Common Stock.  If PROPOSAL FOUR with respect to the Reverse Split is
approved, the Executive Plan and the Directors Plan (collectively, the "New
Stock Option Plans") will cover 1,100,000 and 50,000 shares of Class A Common
Stock, respectively.  In each case, the number of options available for grant
is subject to adjustment to prevent dilution.  Each option granted under either
of the New Stock Option Plans must be evidenced by a stock option agreement
between the Company and the optionee.

         The employment agreements which the Company has entered into with
Messrs. Price and Champion, as described in PROPOSAL ONE-Employment Contracts
and Termination of Employment and Change-in-Control Arrangements, provide that
the Board of Directors shall, subject to stockholder approval of this PROPOSAL
SIX, grant each of Messrs. Price and Champion options under the Executive Plan
to acquire shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock equal to 4% of the
fully-diluted shares of Class A Common Stock, with additional options to be
granted in the future as necessary to maintain the 4% ratio.  The effective
date of the initial grant of options to Messrs. Price and Champion would be
September 30, 1993.  For purposes of determining the number of fully-diluted
shares, Warrants would not be counted until they become exercisable.  Based on
the current capitalization of the Company, if this PROPOSAL SIX is approved,
each of Mr. Price and Mr. Champion would receive options to purchase 1,976,615
shares of the Company, effective September 30, 1993.

         The options granted to Messrs. Price and Champion would vest over a
ten-year period, with 25% vesting on the first anniversary of the employment
agreements, 15% vesting on each of the three following anniversaries, and 5%
vesting annually thereafter until all options have vested.  The exercise price
of the options to be granted effective September 30, 1993 would be $0.50 per
share (the effective price of the September Investment by the Principal
Stockholder) (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split
described in PROPOSAL FOUR), and the exercise price of subsequent anti-dilution
options would be the then-current fair market value of the Class A Common
Stock.

         Other than options to be granted to Messrs. Price and Champion under
their Employment Agreements, and automatic grants to non-employee directors
under the Directors Plan, the Board of Directors is unable to determine at this
time the number and value of any stock options that will be granted in the
future under the New Stock Option Plans to other participants.  Awards under
the Executive Plan will be discretionary and will be based on the performance
of the Company, the officer's job performance, the importance of his or her
position, and his or her contribution to the organization's goals for the award
period (which goals in the short term are likely to focus more





                                      -58-

   66
on capital raising, compliance with regulatory requirements, and improvements
in financial performance than on financial performance comparative to other
bank holding companies).

         Set forth below are descriptions of the principal terms and conditions
of the New Stock Option Plans.  The following descriptions are summaries and do
not purport to be fully descriptive and reference should be made to the actual
New Stock Option Plans for more detailed information.  Copies of the Executive
Plan and the Directors Plan are attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendices
E and F, respectively.

ELIGIBILITY TO PARTICIPATE IN PLANS

         The Executive Plan

         Options under the Executive Plan may be granted to key employees
(including directors who are also employees) and consultants of the Company and
its subsidiaries who are selected at the discretion of the committee of
independent directors (the "Executive Plan Committee") appointed to administer
the Executive Plan.  If no Executive Plan Committee is appointed, all of the
independent directors as a group will automatically constitute the Executive
Plan Committee.  Independent directors may not receive grants under the
Executive Plan.

         The Directors Plan

         Options under the Directors Plan are granted to all non-employee
directors of the Company.  On April 1, 1994, each non-employee director then
serving shall have been granted options to acquire 50,000 shares of Class A
Common Stock (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split
described in PROPOSAL FOUR) (subject to approval of this PROPOSAL SIX).  Each
non-employee director who is newly appointed or elected subsequent to April 1,
1994 shall, upon the date of such appointment or election, automatically be
granted options covering that number of shares of Class A Common Stock
(exclusive of fractional shares) equal to the product of 50,000 (without giving
effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in PROPOSAL FOUR)
multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is the number of days remaining
until the following April 1, and the denominator of which is 365.  Each
non-employee director who receives an initial grant of options under the
Directors Plan on April 1, 1994 or thereafter and is serving on the subsequent
April 1 shall automatically be granted options to acquire 25,000 shares of
Class A Common Stock (without giving effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split
described in PROPOSAL FOUR).

PURCHASE PRICE OF SHARES ISSUABLE UPON EXERCISE OF OPTIONS

         The Executive Plan

         The exercise price of options under the Executive Plan must be at
least the fair market value of the shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock
as of the date the option is granted, except that the exercise price of an
incentive stock option granted to a holder of 10% of the voting power of the
Company must be no less than 110% of fair market value.  The fair market value
of shares will be the price which the Executive Plan Committee, acting in good
faith, determines would apply to a sale of Class A Common Stock between a
willing buyer and a willing seller, in accordance with the terms of the
Executive Plan.

         The Directors Plan

         The exercise price of options under the Directors Plan will be the
fair market value of the shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock as of the
date of grant.  The fair market value will be the closing sale price of a share
of Class A Common Stock as reported on the AMEX, another stock exchange or the
National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System or, if
shares of Class A Common Stock are no longer traded on  a stock exchange or on
NASDAQ, the average of the bid and asked prices in over-the-counter trading.





                                      -59-

   67
PAYMENTS UNDER THE PLANS

         All shares purchased pursuant to an option under the Executive Plan
must be paid for in cash.  All shares purchased pursuant to an option under the
Directors Plan must be paid for in cash or by tendering shares of the Class A
Common Stock, or a combination thereof, upon exercise of the option.  Shares
tendered are valued at their fair market value on the date of exercise.

TERMS OF OPTIONS AND EXERCISABILITY

         The terms of options granted under the Executive Plan may not exceed
ten years, provided that in the case of a holder of 10% of the voting power of
the Company, the exercise of an incentive stock option shall not be permitted
more than five years after the date of grant.  The Executive Plan Committee has
the right to provide for the vesting of options in installments and at such
times and subject to the satisfaction of such conditions as it may determine.

         Options granted under the Directors Plan will have a term of ten
years.  One-half of the number of any options granted under the Directors Plan
will be exercisable upon the expiration of one full year of service as a
non-employee director following the date of grant, and the remaining one-half
will become exercisable upon the expiration of two years from the date of
grant.

TRANSFER OF OPTIONS

         Options granted under either of the New Stock Option Plans are not
transferable except by will or the laws of descent.  Therefore, during the
lifetime of an option holder, an option may be exercised only by the option
holder (or his or her personal representative in the case of disability).

TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT OR DIRECTOR STATUS

         In the event that the holder of options under the Directors Plan
ceases to be a director for any reason, all options held by the holder that are
not exercisable within 30 days after the date of such termination shall expire.
All options exercisable within 30 days after termination shall be exercisable
until the earlier to occur of (a) one year from termination, or (b) five years
from the date of grant.

         In the event of termination of employment, all options granted under
the Executive Plan may be exercised only as provided in the option agreement
between the Company and the optionee.  In the event of termination for a reason
other than death or disability, incentive stock options must be exercised
within no more than three months after termination.  In the event of
termination as a result of death or disability, incentive stock options must be
exercised within twelve months after termination.

DILUTION AND OTHER ADJUSTMENTS

         With respect to both New Stock Option Plans, if the number of shares
of the Company's Class A Common Stock is increased or decreased or if such
shares are changed into a different security, with or without consideration,
through a corporate reorganization, stock split or similar transaction, the
number of shares subject to options and the exercise price shall be adjusted
accordingly.





                                      -60-

   68
FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS

         The Executive Plan

         Options granted under the Executive Plan may be either incentive stock
options in accordance with the provisions of Section 422 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or non-qualified stock options that do not
meet the requirements of Section 422.  In the case of an incentive stock
option, the optionee will realize no taxable income upon either the grant or
exercise of an incentive stock option, nor will the Company obtain any
deduction from its taxable income.  Upon subsequent disposition of shares
acquired pursuant to the exercise of an incentive stock option, if the shares
have not been disposed of prior to two years from the date of grant nor within
one year from the date of exercise, the excess, if any, of the sales price of
the shares upon disposition over the exercise price of the option will be
treated as long-term capital gain to the optionee.

         If the shares acquired pursuant to the exercise of an incentive stock
option are disposed of prior to the expiration of the required holding period,
the optionee realizes ordinary income to the extent of the lesser of the
excess, if any, of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise
over the exercise price of the option or the gain realized on sale, and the
Company will be allowed a deduction to the extent of the ordinary income
recognized by the optionee.  In addition, if the shares have been held for more
than 12 months, the excess, if any, of the sales price of the shares upon
disposition over the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise
will be treated as long-term capital gain to the optionee; if the shares have
been held for 12 months or less, the excess, if any, of the sales price of the
shares upon disposition over the fair market value of the shares on the date of
exercise will be treated as short-term capital gain to the optionee.

         Upon the grant of a non-qualified option, no taxable income will be
realized by the optionee nor will any deduction from the Company's taxable
income be allowed.  Upon the exercise of a non-qualified stock option, the
excess, if any, of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise
over the exercise price of the option will be treated as ordinary income to the
optionee, and the Company will be allowed a deduction to the extent of the
ordinary income recognized by the optionee, assuming the Company complies with
applicable federal income tax withholding requirements.  Upon subsequent
disposition of shares acquired pursuant to the exercise of a non-qualified
stock option, if the shares have been held for more than 12 months, the excess,
if any, of the sales price of the shares upon disposition over the fair market
value of the shares on the date of exercise will be treated as long-term
capital gain to the optionee; if the shares have been held for 12 months or
less, the excess, if any, of the sales price of the shares upon disposition
over the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise will be
treated as short-term capital gain to the optionee.

         The Directors Plan

         All options granted under the Directors Plan will be treated for
federal income tax purposes  as non-qualified stock options.

ADMINISTRATION, MODIFICATION AND TERMINATION OF THE PLANS

         The Executive Plan is administered by the Executive Plan Committee,
which is composed of non-employee directors.  The Directors Plan is
administered by the Board of Directors.  The New Stock Option Plan
administrators administer the New Stock Option Plans in accordance with the
terms and conditions thereof, interpret the New Stock Option Plans and make
appropriate determinations under the New Stock Option Plans, including as to
the Executive Plan the employees to whom options shall be granted, the number
of options to be granted to each employee, the exercise price of each option,
any vesting period or other conditions to exercise and the period during which
each option may be exercised.  Awards under the Executive Plan will be
discretionary based on employees' job performance, contribution to the
Company's goals for the award period, and the importance of the employee's
position to the Company, except that the Company has agreed to grant to each of
Messrs. Price and Champion





                                      -61-

   69
options under the Executive Plan to purchase up to 4% of the fully-diluted
Class A Common Shares of the Company.

         The New Stock Option Plan Committees may amend the New Stock Option
Plans, except that stockholder approval is required to (i) increase the number
of shares available under the New Stock Option Plans other than for
anti-dilution purposes, or (ii) reduce the exercise prices of options granted
thereunder below those specified in the New Stock Option Plans.  The Directors
Plan may not be amended more than once every six months.

         The Executive Plan will terminate in 2003 unless earlier terminated.
The Directors Plan will terminate at such time as the Board, in its discretion,
so determines.  Upon termination of each New Stock Option Plan, no more options
may be granted under such New Stock Option Plan, although termination will not
affect the options previously granted under the New Stock Option Plan.

         The following table shows grants made during 1993 for the individuals
and groups set forth below under the Executive Plan and are subject to
stockholder approval of this PROPOSAL SIX:

                           OPTIONS GRANTED UNDER THE
                    1993 EXECUTIVE STOCK OPTION PLAN IN 1993



                                                           NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A
                                                         COMMON STOCK UNDERLYING OPTIONS
                   NAME AND POSITION                          GRANTED IN 1993(1)(2)
                   -----------------                          ---------------------
                                                                 
 Kent D. Price                                                      1,976,615
          Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the
          Company and the Bank
 Stephen R. Champion                                                1,976,615
          Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer
          of the Company and the Bank and Chief
          Investment Officer of the Bank

 Executive Officer Group                                            3,953,230

 Non-Executive Officer Director Group                                        0
 Non-Executive Officer Employee Group                                        0
- - ---------------------                                                         


(1)      Does not give effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in
         PROPOSAL FOUR.

(2)      The options were granted effective September 30, 1993.  The options
         vest over a ten-year period, with 25% vesting on the first anniversary
         of the employment agreements of Messrs. Price and Champion, 15%
         vesting over the three following anniversaries, and 5% vesting
         annually thereafter until all options have vested.  The table does not
         include additional options required to be granted pursuant to the
         employment agreements of Messrs. Price and Champion to maintain their
         options at 4% of the fully-diluted shares of Class A Common Stock upon
         the issuance of shares in the future.





                                      -62-

   70
         No grants of options were made during 1993 under the Directors Plan.
The following table shows grants made during the period from January 1994
through April 1994 for the individuals and groups set forth below under the
Directors Plan and are subject to stockholder approval of this PROPOSAL SIX:

                           OPTIONS GRANTED UNDER THE
                     1993 NONEMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK PLAN
                               THROUGH APRIL 1994



                                                  NUMBER OF SHARES OF CLASS A
                                                COMMON STOCK UNDERLYING OPTIONS
          NAME AND POSITION                     GRANTED THROUGH APRIL 1994(1)(2)
          -----------------                     --------------------------------
                                                        
 Donna Miller Casey                                         50,000
          Director of the Company and Bank        
                                                  
 Carl D. Gustavson                                          50,000
          Director of the Company and Bank        
                                                  
 David R. Holbrooke                                         50,000
          Director of the Company and Bank        
                                                  
 Willard D. Sharpe                                          50,000
          Director of the Company and Bank        

 Gordon B. Swanson                                          50,000
          Director of the Company and Bank        
                                                  
 Executive Officer Group                                         0
                                                  
 Non-Executive Officer Director Group                      250,000
                                                  
 Non-Executive Officer Employee Group                            0
- - ---------------------                                                       


(1)      Does not give effect to the 1-for-10 reverse stock split described in
         PROPOSAL FOUR.

(2)      The options were granted effective April 1, 1994.  The options vest
         over a two-year period, with 50% vesting on the expiration of one full
         year of service as a Nonemployee Director following the date of the
         grant of such stock option, and the remaining 50% vesting on the
         expiration of two full years of service as a Nonemployee Director
         following the date of the grant of such option.


            THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
        PROPOSAL SIX:  APPROVAL OF THE 1993 EXECUTIVE STOCK OPTION PLAN
             AND THE 1993 NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN



                   PROPOSAL SEVEN:  RATIFICATION OF SELECTION
                OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR 1993 AND 1994

         The firm of KPMG Peat Marwick, independent public accountants, was
appointed in June 1990 to audit the books and records of the Company and the
Bank for 1990 and also audited the books and records of the Company and the
Bank in 1991, 1992 and 1993.  Audit services performed by KPMG Peat Marwick
during 1992





                                      -63-

   71
and 1993 consisted of examining financial statements, preparing management
letters and tax returns and consulting on accounting matters.

         The selection of an independent accounting firm to provide audit
services for the Company has been approved  annually by the Company's Board of
Directors.  The Board desires to have KPMG Peat Marwick continue as the
independent accounting firm for the Company for the current 1994 fiscal year.
Accordingly, stockholders are being asked to act upon a proposal to ratify the
Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat Marwick for both 1993 and 1994.  If
stockholders do not approve this proposal, the Board of Directors will
reconsider its selection of an accounting firm.

         KPMG Peat Marwick has advised the Company that one or more of its
representatives will be present at the Annual Meeting to make a statement if
they so desire and to respond to appropriate questions.

                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
                   PROPOSAL SEVEN:  RATIFICATION OF SELECTION
                OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR 1993 AND 1994



                             STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

         The deadline for stockholders to submit proposals to be considered for
inclusion in the Company's proxy statement and form of proxy for the 1995
annual meeting of stockholders is January 7, 1995.

                             OTHER PROPOSED ACTION

         The Board of Directors is not aware of other business which will come
before the Annual Meeting, but if any such matters are properly presented,
proxies solicited hereby will be voted, at the proxy holder's discretion, upon
the direction of management.  All shares represented by duly executed proxies
will be voted at the Annual Meeting.

                                   BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY


                                           LINDA M. TANNER
                                           Assistant Secretary

San Francisco, California
May 7, 1994





                                      -64-

   72



                                                                      APPENDIX A

MONTGOMERY
SECURITIES                                                 600 MONTGOMERY STREET
                                                         SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111
                                                                  (415) 627-2000


November 20, 1992

Members of the Board of Directors
Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company
550 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA 94111

Ms. Casey and Gentlemen:

         We understand that Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company, a
Delaware corporation (the "Company"), and Putra Masagung, a private investor
who is a citizen of Indonesia (the "Purchaser") have entered into a
Subscription Agreement, dated as of October 29, 1992, as amended as of November
20, 1992 (the "Agreement") pursuant to which (i) the Company will issue and
sell up to 500,000 shares of its 9% Series C Perpetual Preferred Stock, $0.01
par value per share (the "Series C Preferred Stock"), to the Purchaser at
$20.00 per share in two closings, with the number of shares required to be
purchased by the Purchaser at each closing subject to reduction in the event
the Company sells shares of Series C Preferred Stock to executive officers and
directors of the Company other than the Purchaser; (ii) the Company granted to
the Purchaser an option to purchase up to an additional 400,000 shares of the
Series C Preferred Stock at a price of $20.00 per share, exercisable in full or
in part at any time on or before December 31, 1993; and (iii) the Purchaser
also agreed to purchase, at the Company's option, either (a) at least
$2,000,000 of Class A Common Stock of the Company, or of rights to subscribe
for shares of such Class A Common Stock, which the Company is currently
proposing to offer to its stockholders in a rights offering to be completed no
later than March 31, 1993 or (b) an additional 100,000 shares of Series C
Preferred Stock at $20.00 per share (collectively the "Transaction").

         You have asked for our opinion as to whether the consideration to be
received by the Company from the Purchaser in the Transaction as contemplated
by the Agreement, when taken as a whole, is fair to the current stockholders of
the Company (other than the Purchaser and the other executive officers and
directors of the Company and the Bank) from a financial point of view, as of
the date hereof.

         We understand that the Company may issue shares of Series C Preferred
Stock or other equity securities of the Company in connection with a possible
repurchase of limited partnership interests in Bank of San Francisco Building
Company (the "Partnership") from certain officers, directors and/or
shareholders of the Company. We understand that a subsidiary of the Bank is the
general partner of the Partnership, which owns the building in which the
Company's headquarters are located. With your permission, we are not rendering
any opinion with respect to the consideration to be received by the Company for
such Series C Preferred Stock or other equity securities in any such
transactions.

         In connection with our opinion, we have, among other things: (i)
reviewed certain publicly available financial and other data with respect to
the Company, including the consolidated financial statements for recent years
and interim periods to date and certain other relevant financial and operating
data relating to the Company made available to us from published sources and
from the internal records of the Company; (ii) reviewed the Agreement; (iii)
reviewed the Certificate of Designations of Rights, Preferences, Privileges and
Restrictions of the Series C Preferred Stock, as amended (the "Certificate")
and attached as Exhibit A to the Agreement; (iv) reviewed certain historical
market prices and trading volumes of the Company's Class A Common Stock on the
   73
Members of the Board of Directors
Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company
Page 2

American Stock Exchange; (v) compared the Company from a financial point of
view with certain other companies in the financial services industry which we
deemed relevant; (vi) considered the financial terms, to the extent publicly
available, of selected recent transactions of financial institutions which we
deemed to be comparable, in whole or in part, to the Transaction, (vii)
reviewed and discussed with representatives of the management of the Company
certain information of a business and financial nature regarding the Company,
furnished to us by them, including financial forecasts and related assumptions
of the Company; (viii) made inquiries regarding and discussed the Agreement,
the Certificate, the Transaction, and other matters related thereto with the
Company and its counsel and accountants; and (ix) performed such other analyses
and examinations as we have deemed appropriate.

         In connection with our review, we have not independently verified any
of the foregoing information, have relied on all such information and assumed
that all such information is complete and accurate in all material respects.
With respect to the Company's financial forecasts provided to us by management,
we have assumed for purposes of our opinion that they have been reasonably
prepared on bases reflecting the best available estimates and judgments of the
Company's management at the time of preparation as to the future financial
performance of the Company and that they provide a reasonable basis upon which
we can form our opinion. We have also assumed that there has been no material
change in the Company's assets, financial condition, results of operations,
business or prospects since the date of the last financial statements made
available to us. We have relied on advice of counsel to the Company as to all
legal matters with respect to the Company, the Certificate, the Transaction,
and the Agreement. In addition, we have not made an independent evaluation,
appraisal or physical inspection of the assets or individual properties of the
Company nor have we been furnished with any such appraisals. Further, our
opinion is based on economic, monetary and market conditions existing as of the
date hereof.

         In the ordinary course of our business we may trade the equity
securities of the Company for our own account and for the accounts of customers
and, accordingly, may at any time hold a long or short position in such
securities. We have also performed various investment banking services for the
Company in the past.

         Based upon the foregoing, and in reliance thereon, it is our opinion
that, as of the date hereof, the consideration to be received by the Company
from the Purchaser in the Transaction as contemplated by the Agreement, when
taken as a whole, is fair to the current stockholders of the Company (other
than the Purchaser and the other executive officers and directors of the
Company and the Bank) from a financial point of view.

         This opinion is furnished pursuant to our engagement letter, dated
October 28, 1992, and is solely for the benefit of the Board of Directors of
the Company. Except as provided in such engagement letter, this opinion may not
be used or referred to by the Company, or quoted or disclosed to any person in
any manner without our prior written consent.

                          Very truly yours,

                          MONTGOMERY SECURITIES
   74
                                                                      APPENDIX B

                            CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT
                                       OF
                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY

                 Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company, a corporation
organized and existing under and by virtue of the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware (the "Corporation"),

                 DOES HEREBY CERTIFY:

                 FIRST:  That at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the
Corporation held on May __, 1994, resolutions were duly adopted setting forth
proposed amendments to the Corporation's Certificate of Incorporation, as
amended (the "Certificate of Incorporation"), and to the Amended and Restated
Certificate of Designations of Rights, Preferences, Privileges and Restrictions
of the Corporation's 9% Series C Perpetual Preferred Stock (the "Certificate of
Designations"), declaring said amendments to be advisable, and directing that
said amendments be considered by the stockholders of the Corporation at their
1994 annual meeting.

                 SECOND:  That thereafter, the 1994 annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Corporation was duly called and held on May 23, 1994, upon
notice in accordance with Section 222 of the General Corporation Law of the
State of Delaware, at which meeting the necessary number of shares as required
by statute were voted in favor of said amendments.

                 THIRD:  That said amendments to the Certificate of
Incorporation and the Certificate of Designations included as a part thereof
are as follows:

         I.      AMENDMENT TO THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

A.       ARTICLE FOURTH.  CAPITAL STOCK.

         Paragraph A of Article Fourth of the Corporation's Certificate of
Incorporation is hereby amended to read in its entirety as follows:

                 FOURTH.  Capital Stock.

                 A.       This corporation is authorized to issue three classes
                          of shares, which shall be known as Preferred Stock,
                          Class A Common Stock and Class B Common Stock.  The
                          total number of shares of stock of all classes that
                          this corporation is authorized to issue is Four
                          Hundred Two Million Five Hundred 
                          
   75
                          Twenty-Eight Thousand Six Hundred Thirty-Five 
                          (402,528,635).  Each share of each class of stock of
                          this corporation shall have a par value of $0.01.  
                          The total number of shares of Preferred Stock which
                          this corporation is authorized to issue is Two 
                          Million Five Hundred Thousand (2,500,000).  The 
                          total number of shares of Class A Common Stock which
                          this corporation is authorized to issue is Four 
                          Hundred Million (400,000,000).  The total number of 
                          shares of Class B Common Stock which this corporation
                          is authorized to issue is Twenty-Eight Thousand Six 
                          Hundred Thirty-Five (28,635).

         II.     AMENDMENT TO THE CERTIFICATE OF DESIGNATIONS

                 Subsection (b) of Section VI of the Corporation's Certificate
of Designations is hereby amended in its entirety to read as follows:

                 (b)      Requirement to Convert.  Each share of the Series C
                          Preferred Stock issued and outstanding as of May 31,
                          1994 which has not been converted in accordance with
                          Section VI(a) above shall automatically be converted
                          at the office of the Corporation or of a transfer
                          agent for the Series C Preferred Stock on the terms
                          described in Section VI(a) above on May 31, 1994.


                 FOURTH:  That thereafter, the annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Corporation was duly called and held on May 23, 1994, upon
notice in accordance with Section 222 of the General Corporation Law of
Delaware, at which meeting the necessary number of shares as required by
statute were voted in favor of the amendments.

                 FIFTH:  That the foregoing amendments were duly adopted in
accordance with the provisions of Section 242 of the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware.





                                      -2-
   76
                 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has caused this
Certificate to be signed by its President and Secretary this __________ day of
_____, 1994.

                        BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY
                        HOLDING COMPANY, a Delaware 
                        corporation




                        By: ________________________
                            Rodney D. Freed,
                            President




ATTEST:


     ____________________
     Secretary





                                      -3-
   77
                                                                      APPENDIX C

                            CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT
                                       OF
                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY


                 Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company, a corporation
organized and existing under and by virtue of the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware (the "Corporation"),

                 DOES HEREBY CERTIFY:

                 FIRST:  That at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the
Corporation held on May __, 1994, resolutions were duly adopted setting forth a
proposed amendment to the Corporation's Certificate of Incorporation, as
amended (the "Certificate of Incorporation"), declaring said amendment to be
advisable, and directing that said amendment be considered by the stockholders
of the Corporation at their 1994 annual meeting.

                 SECOND:  That thereafter, the 1994 annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Corporation was duly called and held on May 23, 1994, upon
notice in accordance with Section 222 of the General Corporation Law of the
State of Delaware, at which meeting the necessary number of shares as required
by statute were voted in favor of said amendment.

                 THIRD:  That said amendment to the Certificate of
Incorporation is as follows:

         AMENDMENT TO THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

         Paragraph A of Article Fourth of the Corporation's Certificate of
Incorporation is hereby amended to read in its entirety as follows:

                 FOURTH.  Capital Stock.

                          A.      This corporation is authorized to issue three
                                  classes of shares, which shall be known as
                                  Preferred Stock, Class A Common Stock and
                                  Class B Common Stock.  The total number of
                                  shares of stock of all classes that this
                                  corporation is authorized to issue is Four
                                  Hundred Five Million Twenty-Eight Thousand
                                  Six Hundred Thirty-Five (405,028,635).  Each
                                  share of each class of stock of this





                                      -1-
   78
                                  corporation shall have a par value of $0.01.
                                  The total number of shares of Preferred Stock
                                  which this corporation is authorized to issue
                                  is Five Million (5,000,000).  The total
                                  number of shares of Class A Common Stock
                                  which this corporation is authorized to issue
                                  is Four Hundred Million (400,000,000).  The
                                  total number of shares of Class B Common
                                  Stock which this corporation is authorized to
                                  issue is Twenty-Eight Thousand Six Hundred
                                  Thirty-Five (28,635).

                 FOURTH:  That thereafter, the annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Corporation was duly called and held on May 23, 1994, upon
notice in accordance with Section 222 of the General Corporation Law of
Delaware, at which meeting the necessary number of shares as required by
statute were voted in favor of the amendment.

                 FIFTH:  That the foregoing amendment was duly adopted in
accordance with the provisions of Section 242 of the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware.

                 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has caused this
Certificate to be signed by its President and Secretary this ___________ day of
_____, 1994.


                        BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY
                        HOLDING COMPANY, a Delaware 
                        corporation



                        By: ________________________
                            Rodney D. Freed,
                            President




ATTEST:



____________________
_______________,
Secretary





                                      -2-
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                                                                      APPENDIX D

                              AMENDED AND RESTATED
                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                           THE SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY


         This Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation is the
Certificate of Incorporation for The San Francisco Company, formerly named the
Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company, and originally named the Bank of
San Francisco (Delaware) Holding Company in the original certificate of
incorporation filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on the 24th day of
June, 1988.

         This Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation has been duly
adopted in compliance with Section 245 of the General Corporation Law of the
State of Delaware by resolution of the Board of Directors of the corporation,
and approved by the stockholders of the corporation in compliance with Section
242 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware at the 1994 annual
meeting of the stockholders duly called and held on May 23, 1994, upon notice
in accordance with Section 222 of the General Corporation Law of the State of
Delaware, at which meeting the necessary number of shares as required by
statute voted in favor of the amendments and the restatement as follows:

         FIRST.  Name.  The name of the corporation is The San Francisco
Company.

         SECOND. Registered Office.  The address of the registered office of
the corporation in the State of Delaware is 1209 Orange Street, in the City of
Wilmington, County of New Castle.  The name of the registered agent of the
corporation at such address is The Corporation Trust Company.

         THIRD.  Purpose.  The purpose of the corporation is to engage in any
lawful act or activity for which corporations may be organized under the
General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware.

         FOURTH. Capital Stock.

         A.      This corporation is authorized to issue two classes of shares,
which shall be known as Preferred Stock and Class A Common Stock.  Prior to the
date of this Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, the corporation
was also authorized to issue an additional class of shares known as Class B
Common Stock.  There are no shares of Class B Common Stock issued and
outstanding.  Each authorized share of Class B Common Stock of this corporation
is hereby reclassified as and into one share of





                                      -1-
   80
Class A Common Stock of this corporation.  The total number of shares of stock
of all classes that this corporation is authorized to issue is Forty-Five
Million (45,000,000).  Each share of each class of stock of this corporation
shall have a par value of $0.01.  The total number of shares of Preferred Stock
which this corporation is authorized to issue is Five Million (5,000,000).  The
total number of shares of Class A Common Stock which this corporation is
authorized to issue is Forty Million (40,000,000).

         B.      The Preferred Stock of this corporation may be issued as a
class, without series or, if so determined from time to time by the Board of
Directors, in one or more series, each series to be expressly designated by a
distinguishing number, letter or title.  The Preferred Stock, and each series
thereof, shall have such voting powers and other rights, privileges,
preferences and restrictions as shall be set forth in the resolutions of the
Board of Directors providing for the issuance of such Preferred Stock.  There
is hereby expressly granted to the Board of Directors of this corporation the
authority to determine, fix, alter or revoke any and all of the rights,
preferences, privileges and restrictions and other terms of the Preferred Stock
and any series thereof, and the number of shares constituting any series and
the designation thereof, and to increase or decrease the number of shares of
any series subsequent to the issuance of shares of that series, but not below
the number of shares of such series then outstanding, or to eliminate entirely
any series if there no longer are any outstanding shares of such series (and,
thereupon, the shares previously designated for such series shall become
authorized but undesignated shares).  In case the number of shares of any
series shall be so decreased, the shares constituting such decrease shall
resume the status they had prior to the adoption of the resolution originally
setting forth the number of shares of such series.

                 1.       Dividend Rights.  Subject to the limitations
prescribed herein and any further limitations in accordance herewith, holders
of shares of Class A Common Stock shall be entitled to receive, when and as
declared by the Board of Directors of the corporation, out of the assets or
funds of the corporation which are by law available therefor, dividends payable
in cash, or in property, or in shares of Common Stock, or in shares of any
series of Preferred Stock, or in any combination thereof.  No dividends,
however, other than dividends payable in shares of Class A Common Stock, shall
be paid on the Class A Common Stock if dividends in full on all outstanding
shares of Preferred Stock to which the holders thereof are  entitled shall not
have been paid or declared and set apart for payment.





                                      -2-
   81
                 2.       Voting Rights.

                          (a)     Except as expressly provided herein, at every
meeting of stockholders of the corporation, every holder of Class A Common
Stock shall be entitled to one vote in person or by proxy for each share of
Class A Common Stock outstanding in his name on the transfer books of the
corporation.

                          (b)     The holders of Class A Common Stock shall
vote together with the holders of any series of Preferred Stock entitled to
vote in the election of directors generally, voting together as a single class,
to elect all of the directors to be elected at any meeting of stockholders
called for the election of directors, subject to the provisions of any
resolution or resolutions of the Board of Directors adopted pursuant to Article
Fourth hereof creating any series of Preferred Stock and relating to the rights
of the holders of such Preferred Stock to elect additional directors in
specified circumstances.

         FIFTH.  Board of Directors.

         A.      The business and affairs of the corporation shall be managed
by or under the direction of the Board of Directors.  Subject to the provisions
of any resolution or resolutions of the Board of Directors adopted pursuant to
Article Fourth hereof creating any series of Preferred Stock and relating to
the rights of the holders of such Preferred Stock to elect additional directors
under specified circumstances, the number of directors which shall constitute
the whole board of directors of this corporation shall be determined in
accordance with the Bylaws (or amendment thereof) of the corporation.

         B.      Nomination of candidates for election to the Board of
Directors shall be made as provided in the Bylaws of the corporation.

         C.      The Board of Directors, other than those who may be elected by
the holders of any series of Preferred Stock created by any resolution or
resolutions of the Board of Directors adopted pursuant to Article Fourth hereof
who are not entitled to vote for the election of directors generally, shall be
and is divided into three classes:  Class I, Class II and Class III, which
shall be as nearly equal in number as possible.  Each director shall serve for
a term ending on the date of the third annual meeting of stockholders following
the annual meeting at which the director was elected.  Notwithstanding the
foregoing provisions of this Article Fifth, each director shall serve until his
successor is duly elected and qualified or until his death, resignation or
removal.

         D.      Subject to the provisions of any resolution or resolutions of
the Board of Directors adopted pursuant to Article





                                      -3-
   82
Fourth hereof creating any series of Preferred Stock and relating to the rights
of the holders of such Preferred Stock to elect additional directors under
specified circumstances, the newly-created or eliminated directorships
resulting from such increase or decrease shall be apportioned by the board of
directors among the three classes of directors so as to maintain such classes
as nearly equal in number as possible.  No decrease in the number of directors
constituting the Board of Directors shall shorten the term of any incumbent
director.

         E.      Subject to the provisions of any resolution or resolutions of
the Board of Directors adopted pursuant to Article Fourth hereof creating any
series of Preferred Stock and relating to the rights of the holders of such
Preferred Stock to elect additional directors under specified circumstances,
the newly-created directorships resulting from any increase in the number of
directors and any vacancies on the Board of Directors resulting from death,
resignation, disqualification, removal or other cause shall be filled by the
affirmative vote of a majority of the remaining directors then in office (and
not by the stockholders), even though less than a quorum of the Board of
Directors, or by the sole remaining director.  Any director elected in
accordance with the preceding sentence shall hold office for the remainder of
the full term of the class of directors in which the new directorship was
created or the vacancy occurred and until such director's successor shall have
been elected and qualified.

         SIXTH.  Bylaws.  In furtherance and not in limitation of the powers
conferred by statute, the Board of Directors is expressly authorized to adopt,
amend, alter or repeal the Bylaws of the corporation subject to any particular
provisions concerning amendment set forth in this Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation or the Bylaws of the corporation.

         SEVENTH.         Elimination of Certain Liability of Directors.  No
director of the corporation shall be personally liable to the corporation or
its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a
director, except for liability (i) for any breach of the director's duty of
loyalty to the corporation or its stockholders, (ii) for acts or omissions not
in good faith or which involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of
law, (iii) under Section 174 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, or (iv)
for any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal
benefit.  No amendment to or repeal of this provision shall apply to or have
any effect on the liability or alleged liability of any director of the
corporation for or with respect to any acts or omissions of such director
occurring prior to such amendment.

         EIGHTH. Stockholder Meetings.  Special meetings of the stockholders
for any purpose of purposes whatsoever may be called





                                      -4-
   83
at any time only by the Board of Directors, the Chairman of the Board, or the
President of the corporation, or by the holders of shares entitled to cast not
less than 10% of the votes at such meeting.

         NINTH.  Location of Books and Records.  The books of the corporation
may (subject to any statutory requirements) be kept outside the State of
Delaware as may be designated by the Board of Directors or in the Bylaws of the
corporation.

         TENTH.  Supermajority Vote.  Subject to the provisions of Article
Eleventh hereof, the affirmative vote of the holders of no less than 66-2/3% of
the outstanding voting stock of the corporation shall be required for the
approval or authorization of any (i) merger or consolidation of the corporation
with or into any other corporation, or (ii) the sale, lease, exchange or other
disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the corporation to or
with any other corporation, person or other entity; provided, however, that
such 66-2/3% voting requirement shall not be applicable if the Board of
Directors of the corporation shall have approved such a transaction described
in clause (i) or (ii) by a resolution adopted by 66-2/3% of the members of the
Board of Directors.  This Article Tenth shall not be altered, amended or
repealed except by the affirmative vote of the holders of not less than 66-2/3%
of the stock of the corporation issued and outstanding having voting power,
given at a stockholders' meeting duly called for that purpose, upon a proposal
adopted by the Board of Directors.

         ELEVENTH.  Equal Price Protection.

         A.      Definitions.  For the purposes of this Article Eleventh:

                 1.       "Affiliate shall mean any person who, directly or
indirectly, controls, in controlled by, or is under common control with another
person.

                 2.       "Announcement Date" shall mean the date of the first
public announcement of a proposed Business Combination.

                 3.       "Associate" means (i) with respect to a corporation
or association, any officer or director thereof or of a subsidiary thereof,
(ii) with respect to a partnership, any general partner thereof or any limited
partner thereof having a 10 percent ownership interest in such partnership,
(iii) with respect to a business trust, any officer or trustee thereof or of
any subsidiary thereof, (iv) with respect to any other trust or an estate, any
trustee, executor or similar fiduciary and any person who has a substantial
interest as a beneficiary of such trust or estate, (v) with respect to a
natural person, the spouses and children thereof and any other relative thereof
or of





                                      -5-
   84
the spouse thereof who has the same home, and (vi) any Affiliate of any such
person.

                 4.       "Beneficial Owner" shall mean, as to any share of
Voting Stock, a person:

                                  (a)      who beneficially owns, directly or
indirectly, such shares; or

                                  (b)      who has (i) the right to acquire
such shares from any other person (whether such right is exercisable
immediately or only after the passage of time) pursuant to any agreement,
arrangement or understanding or upon the exercise of conversion rights,
exchange rights, warrants or options, or otherwise; (ii) the right to vote or
to direct the voting thereof pursuant to any agreement, arrangement or
understanding; or

                                  (c)      which is beneficially owned,
directly or indirectly, by any other person with which such person or any of
its Affiliates or Associates has any agreement, arrangement or understanding
for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting or disposing of any shares of
Voting Stock.

                 5.       "Business Combination" shall mean any transaction
which is referred to in any one or more of subparagraphs 1 through 5 of
paragraph B of this Article Eleventh.

                 6.       "Determination Date" shall mean the date on which an
Interested Stockholder became an Interested Stockholder.

                 7.       "Disinterested Director" shall mean any member of the
Board of Directors of the corporation who is neither an Affiliate nor an
Associate of, and not a nominee of, an Interested Stockholder involved in a
Business Combination, or an Affiliate or Associate of such Interested
Stockholder; and who (i) was a member of the Board of Directors prior to the
time that such Interested Stockholder became such, or (ii) is a successor of
such a member who was nominated to succeed such a member by a majority of
Disinterested Directors then on the Board.

                 8.       "Fair Market Value" means (i) in the case of stock,
the highest closing sale price during the 30-day period immediately preceding
the date in question of a share of such stock on the Composite Tape for New
York Stock Exchange-Listed Stocks, or, if such stock is not quoted on the
Composite Tape, on the New York Stock Exchange, or, if such stock is not listed
on such Exchange, on the principal United States securities exchange registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 on which such stock is listed, or, if
such stock is not listed on any such exchange, the highest closing bid
quotation with respect to a share of such stock during the 30-day period
preceding the date in question on the National Association of Securities
Dealers,





                                      -6-
   85
Inc. Automated Quotations System or any system then in use, or if no such
quotations are available, the fair market value on the date in questions of a
share of such stock as determined in good faith by a majority of the
Disinterested Directors then in office, in each case with respect to any class
of stock, appropriately adjusted for any dividend or distribution in shares of
such stock or any stock split or reclassification of outstanding shares of such
stock into a greater number of shares of such stock or any combination or
reclassification of outstanding shares of such stock into a greater number of
shares of such stock into a smaller number of shares of such stock; and (ii) in
the case of property other than cash or stock, the fair market value of such
property on the date in question as determined in good faith by a majority of
the Disinterested Directors then in office.

                 9.       References to "highest per share price" shall in each
case with respect to any class of stock reflect an appropriate adjustment for
any dividend or distribution in shares of such stock or any stock split or
reclassification of outstanding shares of such stock or any combination or
reclassification of outstanding shares of such stock into a smaller number of
shares of such stock.

                 10.      "Interested Stockholder" shall mean any Person (other
than the corporation, any Subsidiary, any pension, saving or other employee
benefit plan for the benefit of employees of the corporation and/or any
Subsidiary) who or which:

                                  (a)      is the beneficial owner, directly or
indirectly, of more than 10% of the combined voting power of the then
outstanding Voting Stock;

                                  (b)      is an Affiliate of the corporation
and at any time within the five-year period immediately prior to the date in
question was the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of 10% or more of
the voting power of the then outstanding Voting Stock; or

                                  (c)      is a assignee of or has otherwise
succeeded to the beneficial ownership of any shares of Voting Stock which were
at any time within the five-year period immediately prior to the date in
question beneficially owned by an Interested Stockholder, if such assignment or
succession shall have occurred in the course of a transaction or series of
transactions not involving a public offering within the meaning of the
Securities Act of 1933.

         Any reference to an Interested Stockholder involved in a Business
Combination shall also refer to any Affiliates or Associates thereof, any
predecessor thereto, and all members of any partnership, syndicate or group
which includes such





                                      -7-
   86
Interested Stockholder.  For purposes of determining whether a person is an
Interested Stockholder, the number of shares of Voting Stock deemed to be
outstanding shall include shares deemed owned through application of definition
3 above but shall not include any other shares of Voting Stock which may be
issuable pursuant to any agreement, arrangement or understanding, or upon
exercise of conversion rights, warrants or options, or otherwise.

                 11.      "Person" shall mean any individual, firm, trust,
partnership, association, corporation or other entity.

                 12.      "Subsidiary" shall mean any corporation of which a
majority of any class of equity security is owned, directly or indirectly, by
the corporation; provided, however, that, for the purposes of the definition of
Interested Stockholder set forth in Section A(10) of this Article, the term
"Subsidiary" shall mean only a corporation of which majority of each class of
equity security is owned, directly or indirectly, by the corporation.

                 13.      "Voting Stock" shall mean stock of all classes and
series of the corporation entitled to vote generally in the election of
directors.

         B.      Transactions Requiring 80% Affirmative Vote.  In addition to
any affirmative vote required by law, by this Amended and Restated Certificate
of Incorporation, or otherwise, and except as otherwise expressly provided in
paragraph C of this Article Eleventh, none of the following transactions shall
be consummated unless such consummation shall have been approved by the
affirmative vote of the holders of at least 80% of the combined voting power of
the then outstanding shares of Voting Stock voting together as a single class.
Such affirmative vote shall be required notwithstanding the fact that no vote
may be required, or that a lessor percentage may be specified by law, in this
Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation or otherwise:

                 1.       Any merger or consolidation of the corporation or any
Subsidiary with (a) an Interested Stockholder or (b) any other corporation
(whether or not itself an Interested Stockholder) which is, or after such
merger or consolidation would be, an Interested Stockholder or an Affiliate or
Associate of an Interested Stockholder.

                 2.       Any sale, lease, exchange, mortgage, pledge, grant of
a security interest, transfer or other disposition (in one transaction or a
series of transactions) directly or indirectly, of any assets of the
corporation (including, without limitation, any voting securities of a
subsidiary) or any Subsidiary, having an aggregate Fair Market Value of
$5,000,000 or more to or with (a) an Interested Stockholder or (b) any other
person (whether or not itself an Interested Stockholder) which is, or after
such





                                      -8-
   87
transaction would be, an Affiliate or Associate of an Interested Stockholder.

                 3.       The adoption of any plan or proposal for the
liquidation or dissolution of the corporation proposed by or on behalf of an
Interested Stockholder or any Affiliate or Associate of an Interested
Stockholder.

                 4.       The issuance or transfer by the corporation or any
Subsidiary (in one transaction or a series of transactions) of any securities
of the corporation or any Subsidiary, or both, having an aggregate Fair Market
Value of $5,000,000 or more, to (a) an Interested Stockholder or (b) any other
person (whether or not itself an Interested Stockholder) which is, or after
such issuance or transfer would be, an Affiliate or Associate of an Interested
Stockholder, except as part of a stock split or dividend in which all
stockholders of such class are treated equally, or on the conversion or
exchange of securities of the corporation or a Subsidiary acquired by the
Interested Stockholder in a transaction approved as herein provided.

                 5.       Any reclassification of securities (including any
reverse stock split) or recapitalization of the corporation, or any merger or
consolidation of the corporation with any of its Subsidiaries or any other
transaction (whether or not with or into or otherwise involving an Interested
Stockholder) which has the effect, directly or indirectly, of increasing the
proportionate share of the outstanding shares of any class of equity or
convertible securities of the corporation or any Subsidiary directly or
indirectly beneficially owned by (a) an Interested Stockholder or (b) any other
person (whether or not itself an Interested Stockholder) which is, or after
such reclassification, recapitalization, merger or consolidation or other
transaction would be, an Affiliate or Associate of an Interested Stockholder;
or as a result of which the Stockholders of the corporation would cease to be
stockholders of a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of
Delaware having, as part of its certificate of incorporation, provisions to the
same effect as this Article Eleventh.

         C.      Exceptions to 80% Affirmative Vote Requirement.  The
requirements of paragraph B of this Article Eleventh shall not be applicable to
any particular Business Combination, and such Business Combination shall
require only such affirmative vote as is required by law, by any other Article
of this Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation or otherwise, if all
of the conditions specified in either of the following paragraphs 1 or 2 are
met:





                                      -9-
   88
                 1.       Approval by Disinterested Directors.  The Business
Combination shall have been approved by a majority of the Directors of the
corporation, excluding Directors who are not Disinterested Directors.

                 2.       Price and Procedural Requirements.  All of the
following conditions have been met:

                          (a)     The aggregate amount of the cash and Fair
Market Value as of the date of the consummation of the Business Combination
(the "Consummation Date") of consideration other than cash to be received per
share by holders of Class A Common Stock and Preferred Stock in such Business
Combination shall be at least equal to the higher of the following:

                                  (i)      (if applicable) the highest per
share price (including any brokerage commission, transfer taxes and soliciting
dealers' fees) paid by the Interested Stockholder for any shares of Class A
Common Stock immediately prior to the Announcement Date or (2) in the
transaction in which it became an Interested Stockholder, whichever is higher;
and

                                  (ii)     the Fair Market Value per share of
Class A Common Stock on the Announcement Date or on the Determination Date,
whichever is higher.

                          (b)     The aggregate amount of the cash and the Fair
Market Value as of the date of the consummation of the Business Combination of
the consideration other than cash to be received per share by holders of shares
of any other class of outstanding Voting Stock shall be at least equal to the
highest of the following (it being intended that the requirements of this
clause (b) shall be required to be met with respect to every class of
outstanding Voting Stock, whether or not the Interested Stockholder has
previously acquired any shares of a particular class of Voting Stock):

                                  (i)      (if applicable) the highest per
share price (including any brokerage commission, transfer taxes and soliciting
dealers' fees) paid by the Interested Stockholder for any shares of such class
of Voting Stock acquired by it (x) within the two-year period immediately prior
to the Announcement Date or (y) in the transaction in which it became an
Interested Stockholder, whichever is higher;

                                  (ii)     the Fair Market Value per share of
such class of Voting Stock on the Announcement Date or on the Determination
Date, whichever is higher; and

                                  (iii)    (if applicable) the highest
preferential amount per share to which the holders of shares of such class of
Voting Stock are entitled in the event of any





                                     -10-
   89
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the corporation, whether voluntary or
involuntary.

                          (c)     The consideration to be received by holders
of a particular class of outstanding Voting Stock (including Class A Common
Stock) shall be in cash or in the same form as the Interested Stockholder has
previously paid for shares of such class of Voting Stock.  If the Interested
Stockholder has paid for the shares of any class of Voting Stock with varying
forms of consideration, the form of consideration for such class of Voting
Stock shall be either cash or the form used to acquire the largest number of
shares of such class of Voting Stock previously acquired by it.

                          (d)     After the Determination Date and prior to the
Consummation Date (i) except as approved by a majority of the total number of
Disinterested Directors then in office, there shall have been no failure to
declare and pay at the regular date therefor any full quarterly dividends
(whether or not cumulative) on the outstanding Preferred Stock of the
Corporation; (ii) there shall have been (x) no reduction in the annual rate of
dividends paid on the Class A Common Stock (except as necessary to reflect any
subdivision of the Class A Common Stock), except as approved by a majority of
the total number of Disinterested Directors, and (y) an increase in such annual
rate of dividends as necessary to reflect any reclassification (including any
reverse stock split), recapitalization, reorganization or any similar
transaction which has the effect of reducing the number of outstanding shares
of the Class A Common Stock, unless the failure so to increase such annual rate
is approved by a majority of the total number of Disinterested Directors; and
(iii) such Interested Stockholder shall have not become the beneficial owner of
any additional shares of Voting Stock except as part of the transaction which
results in such Interested Stockholder becoming an Interested Stockholder.

                          (e)     After the Determination Date, such Interested
Stockholder shall not have received the benefit, directly or indirectly (except
proportionately as a stockholder), of any loans, advances, guarantees, pledges
or other financial assistance or any tax credits or other tax advantages
provided by or through the corporation, whether in anticipation of or in
connection with such Business Combination or otherwise.

                          (f)     A proxy or information statement describing
the proposed Business Combination and complying with the requirements of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the rules and regulations thereunder (or
any subsequent provisions replacing such Act, rules or regulations) shall be
mailed to public stockholders of the corporation at least 30 days prior to the
consummation of such Business Combination (whether or not





                                     -11-
   90
such proxy or information statement is required to be mailed pursuant to such
Act or subsequent provisions).

                          (g)     The holders of all outstanding shares of
Voting Stock not beneficially owned by the Interested Stockholder prior to the
consummation of any Business Combination shall be entitled to receive in such
Business Combination cash or other consideration for their shares of such
Voting Stock in compliance with paragraphs 2(a), (b) and (c) of this Section C
(provided, however, that the failure of any such holders who are exercising
their statutory rights to dissent from such Business Combination and receive
payment of the fair value of their shares to exchange their shares in such
Business Combination shall not be deemed to have prevented the condition set
forth in this paragraph 2(g) from being satisfied).

         D.      The power and duty to determine for the purposes of this
Article Eleventh on the basis of information known to them after reasonable
inquiry, all facts necessary to determine compliance with this Article
Eleventh, including, without limitation, (1) whether a person is an Interested
Stockholder, (2) the number of shares of Voting Stock beneficially owned by any
person, (3) whether a person is an Affiliate or Associate of another, (4)
whether the requirements of paragraph C of this Article Eleventh have been met;
(5) whether the assets which are the subject of any Business Combination, or
the securities to be issued or transferred by the corporation or any Subsidiary
in any business Combination, have an aggregate Fair Market Value of $5,000,000
or more; and (6) such other matters with respect to which a determination is
required under this Article Eleventh shall be exercised in a manner approved by
a majority of the Board of Directors, excluding Directors who are not
Disinterested Directors.  The good faith determination with respect to such
approval by a majority of the Board of Directors, excluding Directors who are
not Disinterested Directors, on such matters shall be conclusive and binding
for all purposes of this Article Eleventh.

         E.      Nothing contained in this Article Eleventh shall be construed
to relieve an Interested Stockholder of any fiduciary obligation imposed by
law.

         F.      Notwithstanding any other Article of this Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation or the Bylaws of the corporation or the fact that
a lesser percentage may be specified by law, this Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation or the Bylaws of the corporation, the affirmative
vote of the holders of at least 80% of the combined voting power of the then
outstanding Voting Stock, voting together as a single class, shall be required
to amend, alter or adopt any provision inconsistent with or to repeal this
Article Eleventh.





                                     -12-
   91
         TWELFTH.         Amendments.  The corporation reserves the right to
amend and repeal any provision contained in this Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation, and to take other corporate action to the extent
and in the manner now or hereafter permitted or prescribed by the laws of the
State of Delaware subject to the provisions of this Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation, and all rights herein conferred on stockholders
are granted subject to this reservation.

         THIRTEENTH.      Business Combinations with Interested Stockholders.
The corporation hereby expressly elects not to be governed by Section 203 of
the Delaware General Corporation law entitled "Business Combinations with
Interested Stockholders."

         FOURTEENTH.      Issuances of Stock.  Any issuance of securities by
the corporation, except for issuances of shares of the Class A Common Stock (i)
to any person upon the exercise of any options to acquire such stock under the
Company's 1982 Incentive Stock Option Plan, 1982 Stock Option Plan, 1993
Executive Stock Option Plan and 1993 Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan,
(ii) upon the conversion of any shares of the Series B Preferred Stock, or
(iii) upon the exercise of any warrants held by any stockholder as of June 30,
1994, shall require either the unanimous approval of the Board of Directors of
the corporation or the approval of the holders of a majority of the outstanding
voting stock of the corporation.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the corporation has caused this Amended and
Restated Certificate of Incorporation to be signed by its President and
Secretary this ___ day of __________, 1994.



                        By: _____________________
                            Rodney D. Freed
                            President


ATTEST:

__________________
__________________
     Secretary





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                                                                      APPENDIX E

                        1993 EXECUTIVE STOCK OPTION PLAN
                                       OF
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY

                                    RECITAL
                                PURPOSE OF PLAN

          The purpose of this 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan of Bank of San
Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Holding Company") is to enable the
Holding Company and its Subsidiaries (as such terms are defined below) to
attract, retain and motivate their Executives (as defined below) by providing
for or increasing the proprietary interests of such Executives in the Holding
Company.

                                   SECTION 1
                                  DEFINITIONS

     As used in this Plan and all options granted hereunder, the following
definitions shall apply:

          1.1      BANK shall mean the Bank of San Francisco, a Subsidiary of
the Holding Company.

          1.2      BOARD shall mean the Board of Directors of the Holding
Company.

          1.3      CODE shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended.

          1.4      COMMITTEE shall mean (a) a committee selected by the Board
composed solely of Outside Directors and charged with the administration of the
Plan, or (b) if the Board does not select a committee, the Outside Directors of
the Board.

          1.5      COMMON STOCK shall mean the Class A Common Stock of the
Holding Company, par value $0.01 per share.

          1.6      EXCHANGE ACT shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended.

          1.7      EXECUTIVE shall mean an individual who in the judgment of
the Committee, in its sole discretion, is a key employee of the Holding Company
or its Subsidiaries, or a consultant to the Holding Company or its Subsidiaries
whose work is deemed by the Committee to be of such significance that an award
of Options is appropriate in the interests of the Holding Company, and who is
selected as a participant in the Plan.





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          1.8      FAIR MARKET VALUE shall mean the price which the Committee
acting in good faith determines through any reasonable valuation method that a
share of Common Stock would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing
seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and both having
reasonable knowledge of the relevant facts.

          1.9      HOLDING COMPANY shall mean Bank of San Francisco Company
Holding Company, a Delaware corporation.

          1.10     ISO shall mean an Option granted under the Plan which meets
the requirements of an incentive stock option under Section 422 of the Code and
which is not designated as a NQSO by the Committee; provided, however, that to
the extent the aggregate fair market value of stock with respect to which ISOs
are exercisable for the first time by an Optionee during any calendar year
(under all plans of Holding Company, Bank and any other Parent or Subsidiary of
Holding Company) exceeds $100,000, such Options shall be treated as NQSOs.

          1.11     NQSO shall mean an Option granted under the Plan which does
not meet the requirements of an incentive stock option under Section 422 of the
Code, or which is designated as an NQSO by the Committee.

          1.12     OPTION shall mean a right to purchase Common Stock granted
pursuant to the Plan.

          1.13     OPTION AGREEMENT shall mean the written agreement entered
into pursuant to this Plan through which an Option is granted to an Executive.

          1.14     OPTIONEE shall mean an Executive granted an Option under
this Plan.

          1.15     OPTION PRICE shall mean the purchase price to be paid by an
Optionee for each share of Common Stock purchased upon exercise of an Option,
determined in accordance with Section 6 of the Plan.

          1.16     OUTSIDE DIRECTOR shall mean any director of the Board who is
not (a) a current employee of Holding Company, the Bank, Parent or any
Subsidiary, (b) a former employee of such entities who is receiving
compensation for prior services (other than qualified plan benefits), (c) a
former officer of such entities or (d) a person receiving compensation from
such entities for personal services other than regular director's compensation.

          1.17     PARENT shall mean a parent corporation as defined in Section
424(e) and (g) of the Code.





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   94
          1.18     PLAN shall mean the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan of the
Holding Company.

          1.19     SECURITIES ACT shall mean the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended.

          1.20     STOCKHOLDERS shall mean the holders of the outstanding
shares of the Holding Company's common stock of all classes.

          1.21     SUBSIDIARY shall mean a subsidiary corporation as defined in
Section 424(f) and (g) of the Code.

          1.22     SUBSTANTIAL SHAREHOLDER shall mean any person who owns,
within the meaning of Section 422 and Section 424 of the Code, more than ten
percent (10%) of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of the
Holding Company or of its Parent or Subsidiary.

                                   SECTION 2
                          SHARES AVAILABLE UNDER PLAN

          Options may be granted under the Plan with respect to 11,000,000
shares of Common Stock (subject to adjustment as provided in Section 13
hereof), and all such shares of Common Stock shall be, and upon adoption of
this Plan by the Board are hereby reserved for issuance upon exercise of
Options granted under the Plan, to the extent shares are available to be
reserved.  The maximum number of shares of Common Stock for which options may
be granted to any one Executive during any calendar year shall be 3,000,000
(subject to adjustment as provided in Section 13 hereof).  The shares of Common
Stock issued upon the exercise of Options granted under the Plan shall be
authorized and unissued shares.  If any Option granted under the Plan shall
terminate, expire or be canceled as to any shares of Common Stock, new Options
may thereafter be granted covering such shares.

                                   SECTION 3
                                  ELIGIBILITY

          The persons eligible to participate in the Plan as recipients of
Options shall be Executives.  No Outside Director shall be eligible to receive
Options.  Only employees of the Holding Company or its Subsidiaries shall be
eligible to receive ISOs.

                                   SECTION 4
                                 ADMINISTRATION

          The Plan shall be administered by the Committee.  The Committee shall
consist of two or more Outside Directors, each of whom is a "disinterested
person" (as such term is defined in Rule





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16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act, as such Rule may be amended from time
to time).  The Committee shall have full and final authority in its discretion
but subject to the express provisions of the Plan, to determine from time to
time the individuals to whom Options shall be granted and the number of shares
to be covered by each proposed Option subject to the maximum amount per
Executive set forth in Section 2 hereof; to determine the Option Price of the
shares covered by each Option and the time or times at which Options shall be
granted; to set vesting schedules for Options granted under the Plan; to
interpret the Plan; to make, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating
to the Plan; to determine the terms and provisions of the instruments by which
Options shall be evidenced; and to make all other determinations necessary or
advisable for the administration of the Plan.

                                   SECTION 5
                              GRANTING OF OPTIONS

          Each grant of an Option shall be evidenced by an Option Agreement
executed by the Optionee and the Holding Company or such other instruments in
such form as the Committee shall from time to time approve, which instruments
shall (i) comply with and include expressly or by reference the terms and
conditions set forth in the Plan; (ii) shall specify whether the option is
intended to be an ISO or NQSO; and (iii) may include such other provisions not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan as the Committee shall deem
advisable; provided that, in the event of a conflict between the terms and
conditions of the Plan and any Option Agreement, the terms of the Plan shall
control.  The terms and conditions of Options granted to each Optionee need not
contain similar provisions.  The recommendation or selection of an Optionee as
a participant in any grant of Options under the Plan shall not be deemed to
entitle the Optionee to any Option prior to the time when it shall be granted
by the Committee; and the granting of any Option under the Plan shall not be
deemed either to entitle such Optionee to, or to disqualify such Optionee from,
any participation in any other grant of Options under the Plan.

                                   SECTION 6
                                  OPTION PRICE

          The Option Price per share shall be determined by the Committee at
the time the Option is granted.  The Option Price per share shall not be less
than 100% of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock upon the date of the
grant of the Option; provided, however, that with respect to an ISO granted to
a Substantial Shareholder the Option Price per share shall not be less than
110% of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock upon the date of the grant of
the ISO.





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                                   SECTION 7
                                 OPTION PERIOD

          Each Option Agreement shall specify the period for which the Option
thereunder is granted and shall provide that the Option shall expire at the end
of such period; provided, however, that the Option Agreement shall provide
that:

          (i)      The exercise of an Option shall not be permitted more than
ten (10) years after the date on which the Option is granted; and

          (ii)     In the case of a Substantial Shareholder, the exercise of an
ISO shall not be permitted more than five (5) years after the date on which the
Option is granted.

                                   SECTION 8
                              EXERCISE AND PAYMENT

          Options granted under the Plan shall become exercisable in accordance
with the terms of the Option Agreement.

          Options shall be exercised by delivering or mailing to the Committee,
or its designee, the following items:

                   (i)     A notice, in the form prescribed by the Committee,
                           specifying the number of shares to be purchased;

                  (ii)     A check payable to the Holding Company for an amount
                           equal to the full Option Price in the case of ISOs
                           and an amount equal to the full Option Price plus
                           any withholding tax required by law in the case of
                           NQSOs (if approved by the Committee, payment of the
                           Option Price required by this clause may be made by
                           delivery of Common Stock of the Holding Company
                           which will be deemed to be worth its Fair Market
                           Value on the date of delivery); and

                 (iii)     If the shares are to be issued pursuant to the
                           exemption from registration under the Securities Act
                           provided by Section 4(2) or any successor section of
                           such act, or under an exemption from any state blue
                           sky law, an "Investment Letter" in such form as may
                           be required by the Committee.

The Committee may for any reason decline to accept payment of the Option Price
and/or withholding taxes by exchange of shares of Common Stock or may impose
such limitations or restrictions on such payment as the Committee, in its sole
discretion, deems advisable.





                                      -5-
   97
          Upon compliance with this provision, the Holding Company shall
promptly deliver to the Optionee a certificate or certificates for the shares
purchased, without charge to the Optionee for issue or transfer tax.  In the
event that such shares are not registered under the Securities Act or under any
state securities law, such certificate or certificates shall bear a legend
substantially as follows:

                      "The shares represented by this Certificate have not been
                      registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended
                      (the "Act"), or the securities laws of any state, and
                      therefore may not be sold or otherwise transferred unless
                      covered by an effective registration statement under the
                      Act (or an opinion of counsel satisfactory to the Holding
                      Company that such registration is not required) and
                      compliance with any applicable state securities laws."

                                   SECTION 9
                 EXERCISE IN EVENT OF TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
                      OR RELATIONSHIP WITH HOLDING COMPANY

          In the event of the termination of an Executive's employment or
consultant relationship, Options may be exercised only in accordance with the
terms of the Option Agreement.

                                   SECTION 10
                               NONTRANSFERABILITY

          An Option shall not be assignable or transferable by the Optionee
except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution, and during the
lifetime of the Optionee the Option shall be exercisable only by the Optionee.

                                   SECTION 11
                            SECURITIES REQUIREMENTS

          Each Option shall be subject to the requirement that if at any time
the Committee shall determine, in its discretion, that the listing,
registration or qualification of the shares subject to the Option upon any
securities exchange or under any state or federal securities or other law or
regulation, or the consent or approval of any governmental regulatory body, is
necessary or desirable as a condition to or in connection with the issuance or
purchase of shares upon exercise of such Option, no such Option may be
exercised in whole or in part unless such listing, registration, qualification,
consent or approval shall have been effected or obtained free of any conditions
not acceptable to the Committee, and the holder of the Option will supply the
Holding Company with such certificates, representations and information as the
Holding Company shall request and shall otherwise cooperate with the





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Holding Company in obtaining such listing, registration, qualification, consent
or approval.

          In the case of officers and other persons subject to Section 16(b) of
the Exchange Act, the Committee may at any time impose any limitations upon the
exercise of an Option which, in the Committee's discretion, are necessary or
desirable in order to comply with Section 16(b) and the rules and regulations
thereunder.

                                   SECTION 12
                                DURATION OF PLAN

          No Option shall be granted more than ten (10) years after the date of
adoption of the Plan by the Board.  Nothing contained herein, however, shall
terminate or affect the continued existence of rights created under Options
issued hereunder and outstanding on the expiration date of the Plan, which by
their terms extend beyond such date.

                                   SECTION 13
              CAPITAL ADJUSTMENTS, REORGANIZATION AND LIQUIDATION

          13.1        CAPITAL ADJUSTMENTS.  The number of shares of Common
Stock which may be issued under the Plan, the number of shares reserved as
stated in Section 2 hereof, the maximum number of shares for which options may
be granted to any Executive per calendar year, and the number of shares of
Common Stock issuable upon exercise of outstanding Options under the Plan (as
well as the Option Price per share of Common Stock under such outstanding
Options), shall be adjusted, as may be deemed appropriate by the Committee, to
reflect any stock dividend, stock split, share combination or reclassification
or similar change in capitalization of the Holding Company.  A corresponding
change shall be made to the number of shares of Common Stock and exercise price
per share of unexercised Options.

          13.2        DISSOLUTION OR LIQUIDATION.  The dissolution or
liquidation of the Holding Company shall cause each outstanding Option to
terminate.  Any outstanding Option may be exercised up to and including the
date immediately preceding such dissolution or liquidation if it has not
otherwise expired and if it is then subject to exercise under the Option
Agreement governing such Option.

          13.3        MERGER, CONSOLIDATIONS, ETC.  The Committee may, in its
discretion, change the terms of any outstanding Option solely to the extent
necessary to effect a substitution for or assumption of the Option in the event
of any merger, consolidation, acquisition of property or stock or
reorganization.

          13.4        COMMITTEE'S DISCRETION.  The foregoing adjustments shall
be made by the Committee, whose determination in that respect shall be final,
binding and conclusive.





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                                   SECTION 14
                      AMENDMENT OR DISCONTINUANCE OF PLAN

          The Committee may from time to time, with respect to any shares
reserved for issuance under the Plan but as to which Options have not then been
granted, suspend or discontinue the Plan or amend it in any respect whatsoever;
provided, however, that no amendment shall be made which (i) except to the
extent permitted by Section 13, increases the aggregate number of shares of
Common Stock with respect to which Options may be granted under the Plan or
(ii) changes the class of persons eligible to receive Options, without approval
of the Stockholders of the Holding Company, which approval must comply with all
the applicable provisions of the corporate charter and by-laws, and the laws of
the state of incorporation.

                                   SECTION 15
                                 MISCELLANEOUS

          15.1        APPLICATION OF FUNDS.  The proceeds received by the
Holding Company from the sale of Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of
Options granted under the Plan will be used for general corporate purposes.

          15.2        RIGHT TO RECEIVE OPTIONS.  Neither the adoption of the
Plan nor any action of the Committee shall be deemed to give any person any
right to be granted an Option, or any other right hereunder, unless and until
the Committee shall have granted such person an Option, and then his rights
shall be only such as are prescribed in the instrument evidencing such Option.

          15.3        RIGHTS AS A STOCKHOLDER.  The Optionee shall have no
rights as a stockholder with respect to any shares of Common Stock covered by
his Option until the issuance of a stock certificate to him for such shares of
Common Stock.  No adjustment shall be made for dividends or other rights for
which the record date is prior to the issuance of such stock certificate,
except as provided in Section 13.

          15.4        WITHHOLDING.  The exercise of any Option granted pursuant
to this Plan shall constitute the Optionee's full and complete consent to
whatever action the Committee directs to satisfy federal and state withholding
requirements, if any, including requirements for withholding from wages as the
Committee in its discretion deems applicable to such exercise.

          15.5        APPROVAL BY STOCKHOLDERS; REGULATORY APPROVAL.  The Plan
shall take effect upon adoption of the Plan by the Board, subject to the
subsequent approval of the Plan by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
shares of Stockholders present, or represented, and entitled to vote at a
meeting duly held in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, or by
majority written consent of the shares of Stockholders entitled to vote
(provided that the Plan must be submitted to the Stockholders within twelve
(12)





                                      -8-
   100
months after its adoption by the Board).  With respect to each Executive, no
Options granted to such Executive shall be exercisable until the Employment
Agreement involving such Executive has been approved by any regulatory
authorities whose approval of the Employment Agreement is required.

          15.6        GOVERNING LAW.  The validity and construction of the Plan
and any agreements thereunder shall be governed by the laws of the State of
Delaware.

          15.7        NO EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS.  Options granted to an Executive
under the Plan shall not be affected by any change of employment or consultant
relationship among the Holding Company and any Subsidiary, so long as the
Optionee continues to be an employee of the Holding Company or of such
Subsidiary.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing in the Plan shall be deemed
to give any employee of the Holding Company or any Subsidiary the right to be
retained in employment by, or to continue as a consultant to, the Holding
Company or such Subsidiary for any period of time, and no provision of the Plan
or granting of Options under the Plan shall be deemed to interfere with the
right of the Holding Company or such Subsidiary to terminate the employment or
consultant relationship of any Optionee at any time without regard to the
effect that such discharge will have on his rights, if any, under the Plan or
under any Option granted under the Plan.

          15.8        NO RULE 16B-3 ASSURANCES.  Nothing in this Plan shall be
deemed to constitute an assurance, undertaking or representation of the Holding
Company that it falls within, or will take any steps necessary to fall within,
the exemptions from Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act relating to
short-swing profits of insiders, and the Holding Company explicitly disclaims
any such assurance, undertaking or representation.





                                      -9-
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                                                                      APPENDIX F

                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY

                  1993 NONEMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN

I.  GENERAL PROVISIONS

         1.1     Purposes of the Plan.  Bank of San Francisco Company Holding
Company (the "Company") has adopted this 1993 Nonemployee Directors Stock
Option Plan (the "Plan") to enable the Company to attract and retain the
services of experienced and knowledgeable Nonemployee Directors and to align
further their interests with those of the stockholders of the Company by
providing for or increasing the proprietary interests of the Nonemployee
Directors in the Company.

         1.2     Definitions.  The following terms, when used in this Plan,
shall have the meanings set forth in this Section 1.2:

                 (a)      "Award" means an award of any Stock Option under the
Plan.

                 (b)      "Board" or "Board of Directors" means the Board of
Directors of the Company.

                 (c)      "Change in Control" means the following and shall be
deemed to occur if any of the following events occur:

                          (i)     Any "person," as such term is used in
         Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
         amended (the "Exchange Act"), is or becomes the "beneficial owner" (as
         defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act), directly or indirectly,
         of securities of the Company representing 25% or more of the combined
         voting power of the Company's then outstanding voting securities;

                        (ii)      Individuals who, as of the date hereof,
         constitute the Board of Directors (the "Incumbent Board"), cease for
         any reason to constitute at least a majority of the Board, provided
         that any person becoming a director subsequent to the date hereof
         whose election, or nomination for election by the Company's
         stockholders, is approved by a vote of at least a majority of the
         directors then comprising the Incumbent Board (other than an election
         or nomination of an individual whose initial assumption of office is
         in connection with an actual or threatened election  contest relating
         to the election of the directors of the Company, as such terms are
         used in Rule 14a-11 of Regulation 14A promulgated under the Exchange
         Act) shall, for the purposes





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         of this Plan, be considered as though such person were a member of the
         Incumbent Board;

                        (iii)     The stockholders of the Company approve a
         merger or consolidation with any other corporation, other than

                          (A)     a merger or consolidation which would result
                 in the voting securities of the Company outstanding
                 immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by
                 remaining outstanding or by being converted into voting
                 securities of another entity) more than 50% of the combined
                 voting power of the voting securities of the Company or such
                 other entity outstanding immediately after such merger or
                 consolidation, and

                          (B)     a merger or consolidation effected to
                 implement a recapitalization of the Company (or similar
                 transaction) in which no person acquires 50% or more of the
                 combined voting power of the Company's then outstanding voting
                 securities; or

                           (iv)   The stockholders of the Company approve a
         plan of complete liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the
         sale or other disposition by the Company of all or substantially all
         of the Company's assets.

Notwithstanding the preceding provisions of this Section 1.2(c), a Change in
Control shall not be deemed to have occurred (1) if the "person" described in
the preceding provisions of this Section 1.2(c), is an underwriter or
underwriting syndicate that has acquired the ownership of 50% or more of the
combined voting power of the Company's then outstanding voting securities
solely in connection with a public offering of the Company's securities or (2)
if the "person" described in the preceding provisions of this Section 1.2(c) is
an employee stock ownership plan or other employee benefit plan maintained by
the Company (or any of its affiliated companies) that is qualified under the
provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended
("ERISA").

                 (d)      "Common Stock" means the Class A Common Stock of the
Company, par value $0.01 per share.

                 (e)      "Company" means Bank of San Francisco Company Holding
Company, a Delaware corporation, or any successor thereto.

                 (f)      "Fair Market Value" shall mean (i) if the Common
Stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange or any other established stock
exchange or is traded on the NASDAQ National Market, the closing sale price of
a share of Common Stock on such





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stock exchange or national market on the date upon which such Fair Market Value
determination is to be made, or if such date is not on a trading day, on the
immediately preceding trading day; or (ii) if the Common Stock is not listed on
an exchange, the average of the closing bid and asked prices per share for the
Common Stock in the over-the-counter market on such date.

                 (g)      "Nonemployee Director" means any member of the Board
of Directors who is not an employee of the Company or of any parent or
subsidiary corporation (as defined in Section 424 of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended) with respect to the Company.

                 (h)      "Participant" means any Nonemployee Director who
receives an Award pursuant to the terms of the Plan.

                 (i)      "Plan" means the Bank of San Francisco Company
Holding Company 1993 Nonemployee Directors Stock Option Plan, as set forth
herein, as amended from time to time.

                 (j)      "Stock Option" means a right to purchase Common Stock
which is the subject of an Award under this Plan and the provisions of Articles
II and III hereof.  Each Stock Option shall be a non-qualified stock option,
i.e., an option that does not meet the requirements of an incentive stock
option under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.

         1.3     Common Shares Subject to Plan.

                 (a)      Subject to the provisions of Sections 1.3(c) and 4.1,
the maximum number of shares of Common Stock which may be issued pursuant to
Awards under this Plan shall not exceed 500,000 shares.

                 (b)      The shares of Common Stock to be delivered under the
Plan shall be made available, at the discretion of the Board of Directors,
either from authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock, or from previously
issued shares of Common Stock reacquired by the Company, including shares
purchased in the open market.

                 (c)      Shares of Common Stock subject to the unexercised
portion of any Stock Option granted under this Plan will again become available
for grant of further Awards under this Plan if such Stock Option expires,
terminates or is cancelled.





                                      -3-
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II.  AWARDS OF STOCK OPTIONS

         2.1     Award Grants.

                 (a)      On April 1, 1994, each Nonemployee Director who is
then serving as a member of the Board of Directors shall automatically be
granted an Award consisting of Stock Options covering 50,000 shares of Common
Stock.

                 (b)      Each Nonemployee Director who is newly appointed or
elected as such after April 1 of any calendar year but prior to April 1 of the
next calendar year shall, upon the date of such appointment or election,
automatically be granted an Award consisting of Stock Options covering that
number of shares of Common Stock (exclusive of fractional shares) equal to the
product of 50,000 multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is the number
of days remaining until the following April 1 and the denominator of which is
365.

                 (c)      Each Nonemployee Director who has previously received
an Award under Sections 2.1(a) or 2.1(b) and who is serving as a member of the
Board of Directors of the Company on April 1, 1995 or on April 1 of any
calendar year thereafter for so long as the Plan remains in effect, shall
automatically be granted an Award on each of such dates, where applicable,
consisting of Stock Options covering 25,000 shares of Common Stock.

         2.2     Award Procedures.  All Nonemployee Directors shall receive
Awards under this Plan, which Awards shall be granted automatically as provided
in this Article II.  A Nonemployee Director to whom an Award has been made
shall be notified of the Award, and the Company shall promptly cause to be
prepared and executed a written agreement evidencing the Stock Options which
are the subject of such Award.

         2.3     Securities Law Requirements.  Shares of Common Stock shall not
be offered or issued under this Plan unless the offer, issuance and delivery of
such shares shall comply with all applicable provisions of law, domestic or
foreign, including, without limitation, the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
the California Corporate Securities Law of 1968, as amended, and the
requirements of any stock exchange upon which the Common Stock may then be
listed.  As a condition precedent to the issuance of shares of Common Stock
pursuant to an Award, the Company may require the Participant to take any
reasonable action to comply with such requirements.

III.  STOCK OPTIONS

         3.1     Purchase Price.  The purchase price of Common Stock issuable
upon exercise of each Stock Option shall be the Fair





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Market Value, as of the date of grant of the Stock Option, of the Common Stock
subject to such Stock Option.

         3.2     Stock Option Term.  Unless earlier exercised or terminated
pursuant to the provisions of Sections 3.3 or 3.4, each Stock Option shall
expire and no longer be exercisable on a date which is ten years after the date
of grant.

         3.3     Exercise of Stock Options.

                 (a)      Options covering 50% of the shares of Common Stock
subject to a grant of Stock Options shall become exercisable upon the
expiration of one full year of service as a Nonemployee Director of the Company
following the date of grant of such Stock Options, and may thereafter be
exercisable until the Stock Options are exercised or expire as provided in this
Article III.  Options covering the remaining 50% of the shares of Common Stock
subject to such Stock Option grant shall become exercisable upon the expiration
of two full years of service as a Nonemployee Director of the Company following
the date of grant of such Options, and may thereafter be exercisable until the
Stock Options are exercised or expire as provided in Article III.

                 (b)      At the time of the exercise of a Stock Option, the
purchase price shall be paid in full in cash, or in shares of Common Stock
valued at their Fair Market Value as of the exercise date.  No fractional
shares will be issued pursuant to the exercise of a Stock Option, nor will any
cash payment be made in lieu of fractional shares.  Holders of Stock Options
may purchase fewer than the total number of shares of Common Stock granted in a
Stock Option, provided that a partial exercise of a Stock Option may not be for
less than 100 shares, unless fewer than 100 shares remain unexercised in an
Award in which case the entire remaining Stock Option must be exercised at one
time.

         3.4     Termination of Director Status.  In the event that a holder of
Stock Options under this Plan ceases to be a director of the Company for any
reason ("Termination"), all Stock Options not exercisable on or within thirty
(30) days after the date of such Termination shall expire immediately upon such
Termination and shall not thereafter be exercisable.  All Stock Options
exercisable upon or within thirty (30) days after such Termination shall
become exercisable in accordance with their terms and shall remain exercisable
until the earlier to occur of one year from the date of Termination or five
years from the date of the grant of such Stock Option.

         3.5     Rights With Respect to Common Stock.  No Participant and no
beneficiary or other person claiming under or through such Participant will
have any right, title or interest in or to any shares of Common Stock subject
to any Stock Option unless and





                                      -5-
   106
until such Stock Option is duly exercised pursuant to the terms of this Plan.

IV.  ADJUSTMENT PROVISIONS

         4.1     Changes in Outstanding Securities.  Subject to Section 4.2
below, (i) if the outstanding shares of Common Stock of the Company are
increased, decreased or exchanged for a different number or kind of shares or
other securities of the Company, or if additional shares or new or different
shares or other securities of the Company are distributed in respect of such
shares of Common Stock (or any stock or securities received with respect to
such Common Stock), through reorganization, recapitalization, reclassification,
stock dividend, stock split, reverse stock split, spin-off or other
distribution with respect to such shares of Common Stock (or any stock or
securities received with respect to such Common Stock), or (ii) if the value of
the outstanding shares of Common Stock of the Company is reduced by reason of
an extraordinary cash dividend, an appropriate and proportionate adjustment may
be made in (x) the maximum number and kind of shares provided in Section 1.3,
(y) the number and kind of shares or other securities subject to then
outstanding Stock Options, and (z) the purchase or exercise price for each
share of Common Stock subject to an outstanding Stock Option.  In the case of
such an adjustment or adjustments, all fractional numbers of shares shall be
rounded up to the nearest whole number, and all prices shall be rounded up to
the nearest cent.

         4.2     Change of Control.  In addition to the adjustments permitted
by Section 4.1 above, upon the occurrence of a Change in Control of the Company
any outstanding Stock Options not theretofore exercisable shall immediately
become exercisable in their entirety, notwithstanding any of the other
provisions of the Plan.

         4.3     Termination Events.  Upon the dissolution or liquidation of
the Company or upon a reorganization, merger or consolidation of the Company
with one or more corporations, as a result of which the Company goes out of
existence or becomes a subsidiary of another corporation, or upon a sale of
substantially all of the property of the Company to another corporation (in
each of such cases a "Termination Event"), this Plan shall terminate.  Any
Stock Option theretofore granted under the Plan and not exercised on or prior
to the Termination Event, shall expire and terminate, unless provision be made
in writing in connection with such Termination Event for the assumption of the
Stock Option or the substitution for such Stock Option of a new option covering
the stock of a successor corporation, or a parent or subsidiary thereof or of
the Company, with appropriate adjustments as to number and kind of shares and
prices, in which





                                      -6-
   107
event such Stock Option shall continue in the manner and under the terms so
provided.

         4.4     Other Adjustments.  Adjustments under this Article IV will be
made by the Board, whose determination as to what adjustments will be made and
the extent thereof will be final, binding and conclusive.  No fractional
interests will be issued under the Plan resulting from any such adjustments.

V.  MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

         5.1     Amendment, Suspension, Termination or Interpretation of the
Plan.

                 (a)      The Board of Directors may at any time amend,
suspend, or terminate the Plan; provided, however, that no such action shall:

                            (i)   increase the maximum number of shares
         specified in Section 1.3(a), unless approved by the stockholders of
         the Company;

                           (ii)   alter, terminate or impair in any manner
         which is materially adverse to a Participant any Award previously
         granted;

                          (iii)   change the nondiscretionary manner in which
         Awards are made under Article II; or

                           (iv)   change more than once in any six-month
         period, provisions of the Plan dealing with the amount of any Award,
         the purchase price of the Common Stock which is the subject of any
         Award, the timing of the grant of any Awards, or the exercisability
         features of Awards, except to comply with amendments to ERISA or the
         Internal Revenue Code of 1986.

                 (b)      Questions of interpretation of any of the provisions
of the Plan shall be resolved by competent legal counsel for the Company
selected by the Chief Executive Officer of the Company.

         5.2     Effective Date and Duration of Plan.  This Plan (as amended
and restated) has been approved by the Board and shall become effective on
December 31, 1993, subject to its approval by the holders of majority of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock present in person or by proxy and entitled
to vote at a meeting of the stockholders of the Company.  Initial awards shall
be granted under the Plan on April 1, 1994, subject to prior stockholder
approval of the Plan.  This Plan shall terminate at such time as the Board, in
its discretion, shall determine.  No Award may be granted under the Plan after
the date of such





                                      -7-
   108
termination, but such termination shall not affect any Award theretofore
granted and any shares of Common Stock subject thereto.

         5.3     Director Status.  Nothing in this Plan or in any instrument
executed pursuant hereto shall confer upon any Nonemployee Director any right
to continue as a member of the Board of Directors of the Company or any
subsidiary thereof.

         5.4     No Entitlement to Shares.  No Nonemployee Director
(individually or as a member of a group), and no beneficiary or other person
claiming under or through such Nonemployee Director, shall have any right,
title, or interest in or to any shares of Common Stock allocated or reserved
for the purpose of the Plan or subject to any Award except as to such shares of
Common Stock, if any, as shall have been issued to such Nonemployee Director.
A Nonemployee Director's rights to any shares of Common Stock issued to the
name of such Nonemployee Director pursuant to an Award under this Plan shall be
subject to such limitations and restrictions as are set forth in or imposed
pursuant to this Plan.

         5.5     Withholding of Taxes.  The Company may make such provisions as
it deems appropriate for the withholding by the Company pursuant to federal or
state income tax laws of such amounts as the Company determines it is required
to withhold in connection with any Award.  The Company may require a
Participant to satisfy any relevant tax requirements before authorizing any
issuance of Common Stock to such Participant or payment of any other benefit
hereunder to such Participant.  Any such settlement shall be made in the form
of cash, a certified or bank cashier's check or such other form of
consideration as is satisfactory to the Board.

         5.6     Transferability.  Awards, any interest therein, and the right
to receive the proceeds thereof shall not be transferable by a Participant,
other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution.  The transfer by a
Participant to a trust created by the Participant for the benefit of the
Participant or the Participant's family which is revocable at any and all times
during the Participant's lifetime by the Participant and as to which the
Participant is the sole trustee during his or her lifetime, will not be deemed
to be a transfer for purposes of the Plan.  Under such rules and regulations as
the Committee may establish pursuant to the terms of the Plan, a beneficiary
may be designated with respect to an Award in the event of the death of a
Participant.  If the estate of the Participant is the beneficiary with respect
to an Award, any rights with respect to such Award may be transferred to the
person or persons or entity (including a trust) entitled thereto under the will
of such Participant or pursuant to the laws of descent and distribution.





                                      -8-
   109
         5.7     Other Plans.  Nothing in this Plan is intended to be a
substitute for, or shall preclude or limit the establishment or continuation
of, any other plan, practice or arrangement for the payment of compensation or
benefits to directors generally, which the Company now has or may hereafter
lawfully put into effect, including, without limitation, any retirement,
pension, insurance, stock purchase, incentive compensation or bonus plan.

         5.8     Singular, Plural; Gender  Whenever used herein, nouns in the
singular shall include the plural, and the masculine pronoun shall include the
feminine gender, as the context may require.

         5.9     Applicable Law.  This Plan shall be governed by, interpreted
under, and construed and enforced in accordance with the internal laws of the
State of Delaware.

         5.10    Successors and Assigns.  The Plan and any agreement with
respect to an Award shall be binding upon the successors and assigns of the
Company and upon each Participant and such Participant's heirs, executors,
administrators, personal representatives, permitted assignees and successors in
interest.





                                      -9-
   110
 
PROXY                        (CLASS A COMMON STOCK)                        PROXY
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY
             550 MONTGOMERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94111
   THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
 
   The undersigned holder of Class A Common Stock (the "Class A Common Stock")
of Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company") acknowledges
receipt of a copy of the Notice of 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the
Company and the accompanying Proxy Statement dated May 7, 1994, and revoking any
proxy heretofore given, hereby constitutes and appoints Rodney D. Freed and C.
William Criss, Jr., and each of them, with full power of substitution, as
attorneys-in-fact and proxies to appear and vote all of the shares of Class A
Common Stock of the Company, a Delaware corporation and bank holding company of
the Bank of San Francisco, standing in the name of the undersigned which the
undersigned could vote if personally present and acting at the Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of the Company, to be held at the Boardroom of the Company, 550
Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San Francisco, California 94111 at 3:00 p.m.
local time on May 23, 1994 or at any postponements or adjournments thereof, upon
the following items as set forth in the Notice of 1994 Annual Meeting and Proxy
Statement and to vote at the direction of management on all other matters which
may be properly presented for action at the meeting or any postponements or
adjournments thereof.
 
1. To elect as directors the nominees set forth below.
 

                                                              
        / / FOR all of the nominees listed below (except         / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all
          as marked to the contrary below).                        of the nominees listed below.

 
INSTRUCTION: TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, STRIKE A
LINE THROUGH THE NOMINEE'S NAME IN THE LIST BELOW:
 
            Class II Directors (2 year term)         Class III Directors (3 year
term)
            Kent D. Price, Steven R. Champion, Carl D. Gustavson       Rodney D.
Freed, Willard D. Sharpe
 
2. To authorize the conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock into Class A
   Common Stock and Warrants and to amend the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to increase the authorized number of shares of Class A Common
   Stock to 400,000,000 and to provide for the mandatory conversion of any
   Series C Preferred Stock outstanding on May 31, 1994.
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
3. To authorize the amendment of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation to
   increase the authorized number of shares of Preferred Stock to 5,000,000.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
4. To authorize the amendment and restatement of the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to (a) reclassify the Company's Class B Common Stock as and
   into Class A Common Stock, (b) effect a one-for-ten reverse stock split, (c)
   change the Company's name, and (d) update certain provisions of the
   Certificate of Incorporation.
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
5. To authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A Common Stock
   pursuant to a private placement.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
6. To approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993
   Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
   111
 
7. To ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat Marwick, independent
   public accountants, as the independent accounting firm for the Company during
   the fiscal years ending December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
8. Upon the management's direction, the proxy holders are authorized to vote
   upon such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.
 
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the election of directors nominated
by the Board of Directors and FOR each of the other proposals.
 
THIS PROXY CONFERS DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY WITH RESPECT TO MATTERS AS TO WHICH A
CHOICE IS NOT SPECIFIED BY THE SECURITY HOLDER. IN EXERCISING SUCH DISCRETIONARY
AUTHORITY, THE PROXIES INTEND TO VOTE FOR ALL OF THE NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR AND
IN FAVOR OF EACH OF THE PROPOSALS MENTIONED ABOVE.
 
                                                              Date:       , 1994
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       Please date and sign
                                                       exactly as your name(s)
                                                       appear(s). When signing
                                                       as attorney,
                                                       administrator, trustee,
                                                       or guardian, please give
                                                       full title as such. If
                                                       more than one trustee,
                                                       all should sign. All
                                                       joint owners should sign.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       corporation, please sign
                                                       the full corporation name
                                                       by an authorized officer.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       partnership, please sign
                                                       in the partnership name
                                                       by an authorized person.
 
                                                       I/we do / / or do not / /
                                                       expect to attend the
                                                       Annual Meeting.
 
  WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE SIGN AND RETURN
      THIS PROXY AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE IN THE ENCLOSED POSTPAID ENVELOPE.
   112
 
PROXY                      (SERIES B PREFERRED STOCK)                      PROXY
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY
             550 MONTGOMERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94111
   THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
 
   The undersigned holder of Series B Preferred Stock (the "Series B Preferred
Stock") of Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company")
acknowledges receipt of a copy of the Notice of 1994 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of the Company and the accompanying Proxy Statement dated May 7,
1994, and revoking any proxy heretofore given, hereby constitutes and appoints
Rodney D. Freed and C. William Criss, Jr., and each of them, with full power of
substitution, as attorneys-in-fact and proxies to appear and vote all of the
shares of Class A Common Stock of the Company, a Delaware corporation and bank
holding company of the Bank of San Francisco, standing in the name of the
undersigned which the undersigned could vote if personally present and acting at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Company, to be held at the Boardroom
of the Company, 550 Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San Francisco, California
94111 at 3:00 p.m. local time on May 23, 1994 or at any postponements or
adjournments thereof, upon the following items as set forth in the Notice of
1994 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement and to vote at the direction of
management on all other matters which may be properly presented for action at
the meeting or any postponements or adjournments thereof.
 
1. To elect as directors the nominees set forth below.
 

                                                              
        / / FOR all of the nominees listed below (except         / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all
          as marked to the contrary below).                        of the nominees listed below.

 
INSTRUCTION: TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, STRIKE A
LINE THROUGH THE NOMINEE'S NAME IN THE LIST BELOW:
 


                                                        
           Class II Directors (2 year term)                Class III Directors (3 year term)
Kent D. Price, Steven R. Champion, Carl D. Gustavson       Rodney D. Freed, Willard D. Sharpe

 
2. To authorize the conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock into Class A
   Common Stock and Warrants and to amend the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to increase the authorized number of shares of Class A Common
   Stock to 400,000,000 and to provide for the mandatory conversion of any
   Series C Preferred Stock outstanding on May 31, 1994.

                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
3. To authorize the amendment of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation to
   increase the authorized number of shares of Preferred Stock to 5,000,000.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
4. To authorize the amendment and restatement of the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to (a) reclassify the Company's Class B Common Stock as and
   into Class A Common Stock, (b) effect a one-for-ten reverse stock split, (c)
   change the Company's name, and (d) update certain provisions of the
   Certificate of Incorporation.
   
               / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
5. To authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A Common Stock
   pursuant to a private placement.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
   113
6. To approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993
   Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
7. To ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat Marwick, independent
   public accountants, as the independent accounting firm for the Company during
   the fiscal years ending December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
8. Upon the management's direction, the proxy holders are authorized to vote
upon such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.
 
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the election of directors nominated
by the Board of Directors and FOR each of the other proposals.
 
THIS PROXY CONFERS DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY WITH RESPECT TO MATTERS AS TO WHICH A
CHOICE IS NOT SPECIFIED BY THE SECURITY HOLDER. IN EXERCISING SUCH DISCRETIONARY
AUTHORITY, THE PROXIES INTEND TO VOTE FOR ALL OF THE NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR AND
IN FAVOR OF EACH OF THE PROPOSALS MENTIONED ABOVE.
 
                                                              Date:       , 1994
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       Please date and sign
                                                       exactly as your name(s)
                                                       appear(s). When signing
                                                       as attorney,
                                                       administrator, trustee,
                                                       or guardian, please give
                                                       full title as such. If
                                                       more than one trustee,
                                                       all should sign. All
                                                       joint owners should sign.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       corporation, please sign
                                                       the full corporation name
                                                       by an authorized officer.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       partnership, please sign
                                                       in the partnership name
                                                       by an authorized person.
 
                                                       I/we do / / or do not / /
                                                       expect to attend the
                                                       Annual Meeting.
 
  WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE SIGN AND RETURN
                                   THIS PROXY
           AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE IN THE ENCLOSED POSTPAID ENVELOPE.
   114
 
PROXY                      (SERIES C PREFERRED STOCK)                      PROXY
                 BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO COMPANY HOLDING COMPANY
             550 MONTGOMERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94111
   THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
 
   The undersigned holder of Series C Preferred Stock (the "Series C Preferred
Stock") of Bank of San Francisco Company Holding Company (the "Company")
acknowledges receipt of a copy of the Notice of 1994 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of the Company and the accompanying Proxy Statement dated May 7,
1994, and revoking any proxy heretofore given, hereby constitutes and appoints
Rodney D. Freed and C. William Criss, Jr., and each of them, with full power of
substitution, as attorneys-in-fact and proxies to appear and vote all of the
shares of Class A Common Stock of the Company, a Delaware corporation and bank
holding company of the Bank of San Francisco, standing in the name of the
undersigned which the undersigned could vote if personally present and acting at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Company, to be held at the Boardroom
of the Company, 550 Montgomery Street, 11th Floor, San Francisco, California
94111 at 3:00 p.m. local time on May 23, 1994 or at any postponements or
adjournments thereof, upon the following items as set forth in the Notice of
1994 Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement and to vote at the direction of
management on all other matters which may be properly presented for action at
the meeting or any postponements or adjournments thereof.
 
1. To elect as directors the nominees set forth below.
 

                                                              
        / / FOR all of the nominees listed below (except         / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all
            as marked to the contrary below).                        of the nominees listed below.

 
INSTRUCTION: TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, STRIKE A
LINE THROUGH THE NOMINEE'S NAME IN THE LIST BELOW:
 
       Class II Directors (2 year term)      Class III Directors (3 year term)

      Kent D. Price, Steven R. Champion,    Rodney D. Freed, Willard D. Sharpe
              Carl D. Gustavson         

2. To authorize the conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock into Class A
   Common Stock and Warrants and to amend the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to increase the authorized number of shares of Class A Common
   Stock to 400,000,000 and to provide for the mandatory conversion of any
   Series C Preferred Stock outstanding on May 31, 1994.

                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
3. To authorize the amendment of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation to
   increase the authorized number of shares of Preferred Stock to 5,000,000.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
4. To authorize the amendment and restatement of the Company's Certificate of
   Incorporation to (a) reclassify the Company's Class B Common Stock as and
   into Class A Common Stock, (b) effect a one-for-ten reverse stock split, (c)
   change the Company's name, and (d) update certain provisions of the
   Certificate of Incorporation.

                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
5. To authorize the issuance of additional shares of Class A Common Stock
   pursuant to a private placement.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN


   115
 
6. To approve and adopt the 1993 Executive Stock Option Plan and the 1993
   Nonemployee Director Stock Option Plan.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
7. To ratify the Board of Directors' selection of KPMG Peat Marwick, independent
   public accountants, as the independent accounting firm for the Company during
   the fiscal years ending December 31, 1993 and December 31, 1994.
 
                  / / FOR       / / AGAINST       / / ABSTAIN
 
8. Upon the management's direction, the proxy holders are authorized to vote
upon such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.
 
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the election of directors nominated
by the Board of Directors and FOR each of the other proposals.
 
THIS PROXY CONFERS DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY WITH RESPECT TO MATTERS AS TO WHICH A
CHOICE IS NOT SPECIFIED BY THE SECURITY HOLDER. IN EXERCISING SUCH DISCRETIONARY
AUTHORITY, THE PROXIES INTEND TO VOTE FOR ALL OF THE NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR AND
IN FAVOR OF EACH OF THE PROPOSALS MENTIONED ABOVE.
 
                                                              Date:       , 1994
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       -------------------------
                                                               Signature
 
                                                       Please date and sign
                                                       exactly as your name(s)
                                                       appear(s). When signing
                                                       as attorney,
                                                       administrator, trustee,
                                                       or guardian, please give
                                                       full title as such. If
                                                       more than one trustee,
                                                       all should sign. All
                                                       joint owners should sign.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       corporation, please sign
                                                       the full corporation name
                                                       by an authorized officer.
                                                       When signing for a
                                                       partnership, please sign
                                                       in the partnership name
                                                       by an authorized person.
 
                                                       I/we do / / or do not / /
                                                       expect to attend the
                                                       Annual Meeting.
 
  WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE SIGN AND RETURN
                                   THIS PROXY
           AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE IN THE ENCLOSED POSTPAID ENVELOPE.