Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bank ‘can’t promise’ end to scandals

- By Laura J. Keller

The battering Wells Fargo & Co. has taken over the past year from multiple scandals in its consumer operations might not be Tim S loan says.

“We’ ve been very focused on opening every drawer and turning over every rock in the company,” Sloan said this past week at an investor conference in New York, where many of the questions focused on recent damage to the bank’s reputation. “I can’t promise you that it’ s exactly over with .”

S loan ,57, said other problems could be found by consultant­s the San Franciscob­ased lender hired to review business units outside the retail bank, where a sales scandal erupted a year ago. While Wells Fargo will spend an “elevated” amount on consultant­s during the third quarter, those expenses should ease during the final quarter of 2017, according to a presentati­on on its website. The lender previously said it was spending $70 million to $80 million a quarter.

Wells Fargo remains in hot water with customers and politician­s over its fake accounts scandal after revealing a few weeks ago that possibly a million more customers were affected than earlier estimated. The lender is also facing legal backlash from borrowers who said they were charged fees for the bank to lock in promised rates on new mortgages and others who were hurt by its auto-lending division billing for unwanted car insurance.

Wells Fargo said last month it would pay $10.7 million to compensate customers for employees opening accounts in their names without permission. That includes $7 million of refunds and $3.7 million for what it described as the “complaints process/mediation.” The firm may also pay as much as $80 million to those affected by the auto insurance debacle, with extra money for as many as 20,000 who lost cars.

Wells Fargo has finished combing through more than 165 million deposit and credit-card accounts to find those that may have been unauthoriz­ed, Sloan said. Changes such as eliminatin­g sales incentives and reducing layers of management “will limit the likelihood” of further damage to the bank’ s reputation, he said.

“We will be reporting more progress in the months ahead that will no doubt result in additional headlines ,” S loan said .“And I certainly can’t promise perfection in the future .”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States