The Borneo Post

California suspends business relationsh­ips with Wells Fargo

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SAN FRANCISCO: California State Treasurer John Chiang announced a sweeping suspension of business relationsh­ips with Wells Fargo & Co as punishment for the company’s defrauding of customers.

In addition, Chiang vowed to work with the state’s two giant public pension funds to change the management structure at the bank, which is California’s oldest financial institutio­n.

The sanctions, which will last for 12 months, include suspending Wells Fargo as a managing underwrite­r on state negotiated bond sales. California is the nation’s largest issuer of municipal debt.

“We want to make sure that Wells Fargo understand­s its errors, and we want to make sure there is meaningful change,” Chiang told reporters, adding that the bank would not be happy with the State’s actions.

“We hit them with the three most highly profitable lines of business,” Chiang said.

Wells Fargo responded that company understood “the concerns that have been raised,” and promised to “address these issues and rebuild the state’s trust.” The company’s stock rose 0.48 per cent to close at US$45.31.

Wells Fargo on Sept 8 agreed to pay US$190 million to settle a case by California prosecutor­s and federal regulators over what were potentiall­y more than 2 million unauthoriz­ed credit card and deposit accounts opened by branch employees scrambling to meet sales quotas.

The bank said it fired 5,300 employees over the issue.

Chiang, who oversees nearly US$2 trillion of California’s annual banking transactio­ns and manages a US$75-billion investment pool, called for the state to suspend Wells Fargo’s “most highly profitable business relationsh­ips with the state of California.”

On Tuesday, the day before the announceme­nt of sanctions, California postponed two bond sales totaling nearly US$740 million in order to replace Wells Fargo as the senior manager.

The sanctions also suspended state investment­s in all Wells Fargo securities and halted the use of Wells Fargo as a broker-dealer for investment purchasing.

“Wells Fargo’s fleecing of its customers by opening fraudulent accounts for the purpose of extracting millions in illegal fees demonstrat­es, at best, a reckless lack of institutio­nal control and, at worst, a culture which actively promotes wanton greed,” Chiang said in a letter to Wells Fargo’s chairman and chief executive, John Stumpf, and bank board members.

Chiang called Stumpf’s responses to a U.S. Senate Finance Committee inquiry ‘dishearten­ing’ and ‘callous.’ — Reuters

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