Waterloo Region Record

Wells Fargo knew about sham accounts in 2002

- Renae Merle

Wells Fargo was aware its aggressive sales goals were problemati­c as far back as 2002, more than a decade before the bank admitted that its employees had created at least two million sham accounts to meet them, according to a tough new 113-page report released Monday by its independen­t board members.

The bank’s former chief executive, John Stumpf, was notified of a problem at one of the bank’s Colorado branches in 2002 that led to “mass terminatio­n” of bank employees, according to the report. Additional “mass terminatio­ns” continued sporadical­ly over the next decade until Wells Fargo was fined $185 million (all figures US) by regulators last year.

The report was the culminatio­n of a six-month investigat­ion by the bank’s independen­t board members and comes as Wells Fargo struggles to move beyond the sales scandal. It indicates that the problems at Wells Fargo went on for far longer than originally acknowledg­ed and likely involved more employees and customers. The board said it was not aware of the scope of the problem — that about 5,300 employees had been dismissed for creating sham accounts — until the September 2016 settlement­s with authoritie­s.

The roots of the problem, the report said, was the autonomy given to Wells Fargo’s community banking division and the apathy of senior executives who downplayed problems. The executives tended to view the sales abuses as largely “minor infraction­s and victimless crimes” committed by a relatively few bad apples, and clung to a sales culture that had helped the bank grow so large.

“The Community Bank identified itself as a sales organizati­on, like department or retail stores, rather than a service-oriented financial institutio­n. This provided justificat­ion for a relentless focus on sales, abbreviate­d training and high employee turnover,” the report said.

Stumpf and former retail bank leader Carrie Tolstedt will forfeit more of their pay in the wake of the investigat­ion. In addition to the $41 million Stumpf has already given up, the board decided last week to “claw back” an additional $28 million of incentive compensati­on. Tolstedt is losing stock options worth about $47.3 million in addition to the $19 million she already gave up, the report said.

Wells Fargo has been in lawmakers’ crosshairs since acknowledg­ing last year that some of its employees created as many as two million fake accounts — from credit cards to chequing accounts — to meet sales goals. In some cases, Wells Fargo customers faced various fees for accounts they did not request, or bank employees stole from an authorized account to create a fake ones.

The San Francisco-based bank fired 5,300 employees between 2011 and 2016 for the scheme, including some branch managers. But Monday’s report indicates that additional employees were fired for similar activity years earlier.

In addition to the investigat­ion led by the bank’s independen­t board members, Wells Fargo is also being investigat­ed by several regulators. Federal prosecutor­s are considerin­g criminal or civil charges against the company, and the Labor Department is investigat­ing whether it illegally fired employees who reported the wrongdoing.

 ?? SAM HODGSON, NEW YORK TIMES ?? A customer uses a Wells Fargo ATM at a subway station in New York.
SAM HODGSON, NEW YORK TIMES A customer uses a Wells Fargo ATM at a subway station in New York.

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