Los Angeles Times

A departure at Wells Fargo

Bank officials are set to be grilled by a House panel over an ‘egregious pattern of consumer abuses.’

- bloomberg

Ahead of a House hearing on the bank’s misdeeds, its board chairwoman steps down.

Betsy Duke stepped down as chairwoman of Wells Fargo & Co. ahead of a dramatic congressio­nal hearing set for this week examining the board’s role in the bank’s scandals.

Democrats atop the House Financial Services Committee made no secret of their intent to target Duke and other past and current leaders, issuing a scathing report last week on the bank’s interactio­ns with regulators.

On Monday morning, Wells Fargo said Duke had resigned, replaced by Charles Noski. James Quigley will also leave the bank’s board.

Duke, 67, who had been the most senior woman in U.S. finance, will have her chance to address the criticism. She and Quigley are scheduled to testify to the panel of lawmakers, whose bipartisan lashings already helped prompt two previous chief executives to step down.

“Since we were made aware of the egregious harms suffered by Wells Fargo’s customers, we were and remain fiercely determined to do right by them and to strengthen the bank’s culture and controls,” Duke and Quigley said in a statement Monday. “We believe that our decision will facilitate the bank’s and the new CEO’s ability to turn the page.”

The hearings are scheduled to begin Tuesday with an appearance by Chief Exective Charles Scharf less than five months into his tenure. The panel will seek his thoughts on next steps for what it calls “the bank that broke America’s trust.”

Duke, who had been on the board since 2015, and Quigley, who joined in 2013, are to appear Wednesday. They will be grilled on “the role of the board of directors in the bank’s egregious pattern of consumer abuses.”

“Duke and Quigley failed in their responsibi­lity as board members,” committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles) told journalist­s last week, saying she planned to call for their resignatio­ns.

It’s a panel that has repeatedly dragged bank leaders to Capitol Hill for uncomforta­ble questions on a broad range of topics.

Last year, seven bankers — including Scharf in his previous role as CEO of Bank of New York Mellon Corp. — faced queries on everything from China to climate change to gun makers to people living in Guam.

“The knives will be out,” Capital Alpha Partners analyst Ian Katz said. “They need to come prepared.”

The public is likely to get a tale of two Wells Fargos. The board has been touting its turnaround efforts after a series of scandals that began with the 2016 revelation that employees opened millions of potentiall­y fake accounts to hit sales targets.

 ?? Joshua Roberts Getty Images ?? BETSY DUKE was the most senior woman in the U.S. finance industry.
Joshua Roberts Getty Images BETSY DUKE was the most senior woman in the U.S. finance industry.

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