The Borneo Post

With 2018 tax cut, Wells Fargo could pay its RM3.8 bln fine

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FEDERAL regulators hit Wells Fargo with an eye-popping US$ 1 billion ( RM3.8 billion) civil penalty last Friday after finding that the company had failed to catch problems in its auto and mortgage businesses over several years, cost customers millions of dollars and even wrongfully repossesse­d their cars.

For years, the bank’s lax internal management led it to “engage in reckless unsafe or unsound practices and violations of law,” according to regulators.

Wells Fargo charged thousands of customers for auto insurance they did not need, driving some to default on their loans, then improperly confiscate­d the vehicles, according to the settlement documents. The bank also improperly charged some customers fees to lock in an interest rate for a mortgage.

“Since at least 2011, the Bank has failed to implement and maintain a compliance risk management programme commensura­te with the Bank’s size, complexity and risk profile,” one of the regulators, the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency (OCC), said in its consent order.

The widely expected settlement is among the most aggressive moves by Trump administra­tion regulators to punish a big US bank. It could also hobble Wells Fargo’s efforts to move beyond more than a year of rolling scandals that have hampered its growth and tarnished its image.

“We have said all along that we will enforce the law. That is what we did here,” Mick Mulvaney, acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB, said in a statement.

Wells Fargo, which has repeatedly apologised for its misdeeds, pledged to repay affected customers. The bank has said it would spend US$ 182 million to repay customers who had been charged for car insurance they did not need. It has not said how much it will refund customers who were improperly charged to lock in mortgage rates.

“For more than a year and a half, we have made progress on strengthen­ing operationa­l processes, internal controls, compliance and oversight, and delivering on our promise to review all of our practices and make things right for our customers,” Timothy J. Sloan, president and chief executive of Wells Fargo, said in a statement Friday. “While we have more work to do, these orders affirm that we share the same priorities with our regulators.”

The Trump administra­tion has ushered in a period of resurgence for the banking industry. Trump has appointed business-friendly regulators and supported legislatio­n in Congress to roll back rules that the industry has complained go too far. But Wells Fargo’s running scandals have dampened those efforts, with Democrats and consumer advocates pointing to the bank’s misdeeds as proof that the industry needs more oversight, not less.

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

“Wells Fargo has a terrible track record of harming consumers and deserves every punishment they have received and more,” Republican Maxine Waters (California), ranking Democrat of the House Financial Services Committee, said in a statement. But the civil penalty “does not mean that Mick Mulvaney, who was illegally appointed to serve as Acting Director, has turned over a new leaf and is now looking out for consumers.”

The fine is a component of one of the largest enforcemen­t cases in the CFPB’s six-year history. The OCC’s US$ 500 million fine will be credited toward that amount, giving Wells Fargo a US$ 1 billion bill overall.

The large fine is hardly crippling for Wells Fargo, however, which has more than US$ 1 trillion in assets. The bank reported Friday that although the penalty drove down firstquart­er profits by US$ 800 million, it netted US$ 4.7 billion.

“While the size of this fine is higher than anticipate­d, it is expected to be easily absorbed by quarterly earnings,” Fitch Ratings said in a statement last week when the bank initially signalled it could face a US$ 1 billion fine.

In an interview with Fox Business Network, Mulvaney defended the size of the penalty.

“I don’t think the folks at Wells think a billion dollars is a small amount of money,” he said. “I don’t think anybody should think a billion dollars is a small amount of money. So this is a historical­ly large collection, and we’re very satisfied with the outcome.”

The fine could further hobble the beleaguere­d bank’s efforts to rebuild its reputation after admitting in 2016 that it had opened millions of sham accounts that customers did not want. In the wake, its longtime chief executive resigned; last month, the Federal Reserve levied an unpreceden­ted penalty against the bank, blocking its ability to expand. “Our customers deserve only the best from Wells Fargo, and we are committed to delivering that,” Sloan said.

 ?? — WP-Bloomberg photos ?? Pedestrian­s walk past a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in Los Angeles on Apr 19.
— WP-Bloomberg photos Pedestrian­s walk past a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in Los Angeles on Apr 19.
 ??  ?? Signage is displayed outside a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in Los Angeles.
Signage is displayed outside a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in Los Angeles.

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