Los Angeles Times

Picks for Fed slam Wells

Two nominees vow to ensure reforms before lifting cap on bank.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — Two Federal Reserve nominees Tuesday slammed Wells Fargo & Co. for its consumer abuses and indicated that they would have to see significan­t improvemen­ts before voting to lift a cap on the San Francisco bank’s growth.

“Just based upon the news accounts, which of course is all I have to go on, the activities of Wells Fargo in this domain are egregious and unacceptab­le and I was as shocked as anyone to read about it in the newspaper,” economist Richard Clarida, the nominee to be vice chairman of the Fed, said at a Senate Banking Committee hearing.

“If I am confirmed and this matter came before me, as it looks like it would, I would certainly individual­ly want to be absolutely convinced that appropriat­e steps had been taken and could be verified,” he said in response to questionin­g from Sen. Jon Tester (DMont.).

The other of President Trump’s Fed nominees at the confirmati­on hearing, Kansas banking regulator Michelle Bowman, said she concurred with Clarida’s answer.

“The actions of Wells Fargo were absolutely inappropri­ate and I would certainly want to make sure that any concerns are addressed by the bank prior to any discussion,” she said.

Tester had asked them for assurances that they would not support releasing Wells Fargo from the growth cap until “they significan­tly change the way they do business.”

In February, the Fed board voted unanimousl­y to order Wells Fargo to cap its growth at the $1.95 trillion in assets reached at the end of last year and to improve its corporate governance in response to the creation of millions of unauthoriz­ed customer accounts and other consumer abuses.

The consent order required Wells Fargo’s board of directors to submit written plans to improve its oversight and risk management, which it did last month. An independen­t review by a third-party firm must be completed by Sept. 30 to determine how Wells Fargo is implementi­ng the plans.

Fed Chairman Jerome H. Powell said last week in a letter to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) that Wells Fargo would have to receive a formal vote from the Fed board before the growth restrictio­n was lifted.

At a March hearing, Warren had objected when Powell said the decision would be made by Fed staff in consultati­on with the board. Warren pressed Powell to hold a vote so Congress and the public could hold the Fed accountabl­e when it decides whether to lift the stiff penalty it placed on the San Francisco banking giant.

Wells Fargo Chief Executive Timothy Sloan told investors at a conference last week that he expected the growth cap would probably continue into 2019.

Requiring a Fed vote would make it harder for Wells Fargo to get the cap lifted, cutting into the bank’s profit.

A Wells Fargo spokeswoma­n declined to comment Tuesday.

Clarida is a respected economics professor at Columbia University as well as global strategic advisor at Newport Beach-based bond giant Pacific Investment Management Co., known as Pimco. He has Washington experience, having served as assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy from 2002 to 2003 and senior staff economist for the White House Council of Economic Advisors from 1986 to 1987.

On Tuesday, former Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and three well-known economic policymake­rs wrote a letter to committee leaders endorsing Clarida’s nomination.

“Each of us has known Dr. Clarida for many years and has high regard for his academic work and profession­al qualificat­ions,” said the letter from Bernanke, former Fed Vice Chairmen Stanley Fischer and Alan Blinder, and Martin Feldstein, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors.

But at Tuesday’s hearing, Warren was critical of what she said was Clarida’s lack of experience on regulation. She pushed him to commit that he wouldn’t vote to reduce the amount of capital held by the largest banks amid a deregulato­ry push by the Trump administra­tion.

Clarida declined but said he would try to make sure any reduction in regulation­s didn’t erode the gains in financial stability caused in part by tougher rules put in place by the 2010 DoddFrank act.

“I do think there are opportunit­ies to tailor regulation­s appropriat­ely, but an equal priority is preserving the substantia­l gains and resiliency and stability of our financial system,” he said.

Bowman has been the Kansas state bank commission­er since 2017. She was an executive at Kansas-based Farmers & Drovers Bank, which her great-great grandfathe­r helped charter. She also has worked as a congressio­nal staffer in Washington, as well as at the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Homeland Security.

She is nominated for the seat on the Fed board reserved for someone with community banking experience.

There are four vacancies on the seven-member Fed board. Another nominee, Carnegie Mellon University economist Marvin Goodfriend, is awaiting a full Senate vote after the Banking Committee narrowly approved his nomination, 13 to 12, in February.

His nomination appears in trouble because Democrats uniformly oppose him as too conservati­ve and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), a Fed critic, also has said he would vote against confirmati­on because of some of Goodfriend’s past positions.

Shares of Wells Fargo gained 26 cents Tuesday to $54.75.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? WELLS FARGO is under a Fed-imposed cap on its growth in response to the bank’s various consumer abuses.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times WELLS FARGO is under a Fed-imposed cap on its growth in response to the bank’s various consumer abuses.
 ?? Inform Inc. ?? FED nominee Richard Clarida told senators he would need to be “absolutely convinced” Wells had taken appropriat­e steps before voting to lift its growth cap.
Inform Inc. FED nominee Richard Clarida told senators he would need to be “absolutely convinced” Wells had taken appropriat­e steps before voting to lift its growth cap.

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