New York Post

Wells in a new stage

Complaints down but bank still leads

- By SHAHIEN NASIRIPOUR Bloomberg

Wells Fargo spent much of 2017 trying to dig out of several consumer banking scandals. By one measure, it’s making progress.

Complaints lodged against the lender with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau through Dec. 15 dropped 18 percent from the same period of 2016, the steepest decline among major banks, federal figures show.

Still, it remained first among that group in total complaints.

The drop came despite the bank announcing that employees opened more fake accounts than previously thought and that it will compensate customers who were wrongfully charged fees for extending low mortgage rates or for auto insurance they didn’t need. The bank even caught the ire of President Trump, who tweeted last month that it may face even higher penalties for “bad acts against their customers.”

“We have taken a number of steps over the last year, including eliminatin­g product sales goals in our community bank, intensifyi­ng our focus on customer experience, proactivel­y refunding customers who may have suffered harm as a result of inappropri­ate practices, enhancing our risk manage- ment organizati­on, and holding executive leadership accountabl­e for issues when they arise,” Richele Messick, a Wells Fargo spokeswoma­n, said in a statement.

Seven of the 10 biggest banks by US deposits experience­d a drop in CFPB complaints compared with the 2016 period, including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.

Capital One had the big- gest increase in complaints, with a 36 percent jump. The lender, which has a large credit card business, also had the most filed per dollar of deposits, a gauge favored by LendEDU, a New Jersey-based student-loan marketplac­e.

Still, Capital One had the lowest share of complaints that resulted in refunds or credits, as less than 2 percent brought about socalled monetary relief, according to the regulator’s data. On average, about 14 percent of complaints filed last year against the 10 banks resulted in monetary relief.

“We take all customer concerns very seriously and continue to pay close attention to these complaints so that we can make good decisions to remediate any issues and further differenti­ate our customer experience,” Amanda Landers, a Capital One spokeswoma­n, said in a statement.

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