Santa Fe New Mexican

Regulators set to fine Wells Fargo $1 billion

- By Renae Merle

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators are preparing to fine megabank Wells Fargo about $1 billion for misbehavio­r in its auto and mortgage businesses, according to two people familiar with the negotiatio­ns.

The settlement, which could be announced as soon as Friday, would be the most aggressive move by regulators during the Trump administra­tion to punish a big bank. It also escalates problems at Wells Fargo, which has been under intense federal scrutiny since admitting in 2016 that it had opened millions of sham accounts customers didn’t want.

The regulators — the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency — have been investigat­ing Wells Fargo for months after it acknowledg­ed charging thousands of customers for auto insurance they didn’t need, driving some to default on their loans and lose their cars through repossessi­on. Wells Fargo also admitted that it had charged some customers improper fees to lock in an interest rate for a mortgage. The combined $1 billion fine would be among the largest ever levied by either regulator.

Wells Fargo, which disclosed last week that it faced a hefty fine, and the OCC declined to comment. The CFPB did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Big banks such as Wells Fargo have looked forward to a resurgence during the Trump administra­tion. President Donald Trump has appointed businessfr­iendly regulators and has supported legislatio­n in Congress to roll back rules that the industry has complained went too far.

But the president has made a point of stressing that he would not shy away from punishing bad behavior. “Fines and penalties against Wells Fargo Bank for their bad acts against their customers and others will not be dropped, as has been incorrectl­y reported, but will be pursued and, if anything, substantia­lly increased,” Trump said in a tweet in December. “I will cut Regs but make penalties severe when caught cheating.”

The enforcemen­t action will be the first announced by the CFPB since Mick Mulvaney took control of the agency as acting director late last year. Democrats have criticized Mulvaney, who is also director of the Office of Management and Budget, for appearing to abandon the agency’s job of punishing financial institutio­ns and instead focusing on rolling back some of the agency’s most aggressive regulation­s.

The anticipate­d fine “does send a signal that when a bank continues to have many serious problems and cannot solve them and they do serious harm to customers, Trump’s CFPB and other agencies will act,” said Carl Tobias, a professor at the University of Richmond’s T.C. Williams School of Law.

“One big question is whether this is a one-off, given what Trump and Mulvaney have been doing to defang the CFPB,” he added.

The expected $1 billion fine is large, but it is hardly crippling for Wells Fargo, which has more than $1 trillion in assets. In fact, last week the bank reported that its quarterly profits had surged to $5.9 billion, in part because of the corporate tax cut passed by Congress last year.

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