Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wells Fargo penalty $2B in loans case

- HANNAH LEVITT AND KARTIKAY MEHROTRA

Ten years after faulty mortgages upended the global financial system, Wells Fargo & Co. agreed to pay $2.09 billion to settle a U.S. probe into its creation and sale of loans that contribute­d to the disaster.

The long-anticipate­d penalty, announced Wednesday, is in line with what some analysts had predicted and smaller than sanctions borne by some of the bank’s competitor­s. But the case offers a new look behind the scenes at decisions made inside one of the nation’s largest home lenders before the crisis — and the evidence executives once saw of mounting trouble.

Investors including federally insured financial institutio­ns ended up suffering billions of dollars in losses on securities that contained home loans from Wells FarWASHING­TON

go, the Department of Justice said in a statement announcing the accord. The investigat­ion focuses on debts in which borrowers were allowed to declare their incomes, without providing proof.

“Abuses in the mortgageba­cked securities industry led to a financial crisis that devastated millions of Americans,” Alex Tse, the acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California, said in the

statement. “Today’s agreement holds Wells Fargo responsibl­e for originatin­g and selling tens of thousands of loans that were packaged into securities and subsequent­ly defaulted.”

The firm set out in 2005 to double production of two types of risky mortgages, known as subprime and Alt-A. As part of the push, it loosened requiremen­ts for stated-income loans, the government said. Yet the bank’s sampling and testing of the debts showed signs that informatio­n submitted was too often inaccurate, investigat­ors found.

As the test results circulated within the bank, one employee in risk management called them “astounding,” the Justice Department said. Yet, the employee said, “instead of reacting in a way consistent with what is being reported” the bank was expanding statedinco­me lending.

U.S. probes into banks’ lending practices before the crisis continue to roll on. Wells Fargo’s accord may ultimately mark the Justice Department’s last multibilli­on-dollar penalty against a U.S. company for creating or selling crisis-era mortgages.

Still, a number of overseas firms, such as UBS Group AG and HSBC Holdings PLC, have yet to resolve significan­t investigat­ions.

Wells Fargo set aside funds for the settlement before midyear, it said in a statement. Shares of the bank pared earlier gains, and closed up 0.6 percent in New York.

“We are pleased to put behind us these legacy issues regarding claims related to residentia­l mortgage-backed securities activities that occurred more than a decade ago,” Chief Executive Officer Tim Sloan

said in the statement.

The San Francisco-based lender has been signaling the settlement’s approach. In January, Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberr­y told Bloomberg that his firm would likely hash out terms this year. While he declined to discuss the potential cost, the firm took a $3.3 billion litigation charge late in 2017, mainly for mortgagere­lated issues. Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Elliott Stein had estimated the settlement for mortgage-backed securities could cost more than $2 billion.

The government’s complaint relies on the Financial Institutio­ns Reform, Recovery and Enforcemen­t Act, a 1989 law that’s allowed authoritie­s to sue banks years later over mortgages that burned federally insured financial institutio­ns.

U.S. investigat­ors cited tests of Wells Fargo mortgages that compared them with borrowers’ tax filings, revealing that more than 70 percent of loans sampled “had an unacceptab­le discrepanc­y between stated and actual income,” according to the Justice Department’s statement.

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