Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Report: Bureau went easy on Wells Fargo

CFPB mulled $10B fine, but levied far smaller bank penalty

- By Ken Sweet Associated Press

NEW YORK — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could have fined Wells Fargo in excess of $10 billion for its illegal sales practices but instead settled for $100 million, according to the agency’s internal documents released by Congressio­nal Republican­s this week.

The CFPB also had evidence that the bank’s sales problems went back to at least 2006 — far earlier than the 2011 to 2016 timetable that Wells Fargo originally admitted to, the documents show.

“The bank knew since at least 2006 that its employees were gaming its incentive compensati­on program, yet failed to take actions sufficient to stop it,” CFPB employees wrote in a 2016 confidenti­al memo.

The documents were released as part of a politicall­y charged report by the staff of House Financial Services Committee Chairman, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas, a

critic of the CFPB who along with other House Republican­s has called for the firing of its director, Richard Cordray, an appointee of President Barack Obama, as well as new laws to curtail the bureau’s authority over the financial services industry.

It would take months for Wells Fargo to admit publicly that its sales practices problems, in which employees trying to reach unrealisti­c sales goals opened accounts without customers’ permission, dated to earlier than 2011.

At first, John Stumpf, Wells Fargo’s CEO at the time, agreed to expand its internal investigat­ion to 2009 but when testifying in front of Congress in late September 2016, he was reluctant to go back farther than that.

Eventually Wells Fargo would admit the sales practices problems were as early as 2002in a report issued by the bank’s board of directors earlier this year, roughly seven months after the CFPB’s fine.

It is not clear why the CFPB chose 2011 as the original cut-off date for getting Wells Fargo to admit its sales practices problems. A Wells Fargo spokeswoma­n declined to comment on the date issue, but said they are the company is reviewing the report.

CFPB employees estimated that, based on the 2 million fake accounts that Wells Fargo’s employees had opened, the penalty against the bank could be in excess of $10 billion before taking into account mitigating factors. That’s according to a confidenti­al memo written to Cordray in July 2016 that outlined potential sanctions the bureau could take against the bank.

CFPB employees ultimately recommende­d a $100 million fine against Wells Fargo — representi­ng the largest fine ever levied in the CFPB’s history at the time — to “sufficient­ly deter similar violations” by the bank and its competitor­s. That amount was adopted by the agency when it publicly announced its order against Wells Fargo in September.

The bank paid another $83 million in fines to the Los Angeles Attorney’s Office and the federal bank regulator the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency.

The report is meant to imply that the CFPB went easy on Wells Fargo. But Cordray accused House Republican­s of “Mondaymorn­ing quarterbac­king.”

“The fact is that the CFPB worked effectivel­y with our partners to expose the Wells Fargo scandal and .... levied our largest fine ever and secured broad, nationwide relief for consumers,” Cordray said.

 ?? FG/BAUER-GRIFFIN/GC IMAGES ?? CFPB has evidence that the Wells Fargo’s sales problems went back to at least 2006 — far earlier than the 2011 to 2016 timetable that the bank admitted to, documents show.
FG/BAUER-GRIFFIN/GC IMAGES CFPB has evidence that the Wells Fargo’s sales problems went back to at least 2006 — far earlier than the 2011 to 2016 timetable that the bank admitted to, documents show.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States