The Manila Times

Wells Fargo CEO denied $41M in compensati­on post

- AFP

NEWYORK: Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf will forgo $41 million in compensati­on, the bank’s board of directors announced on Tuesday, as punishment for a bogus accounts scandal that has rocked the company.

The bank has already apologized tied to the illegal conduct, which opening unauthoriz­ed deposit and credit accounts and then covertly fund them with customers’ money.

An independen­t investigat­ion into the vast fraud practices will be carried out in-house, with Stumpf receiving no salary during the probe, the board said. He will also be denied a bonus for 2016.

While Strumpf forfeits $41 million in outstandin­g unvested equity awards, Carrie Tolstedt, the former head of community banking, will forfeit $19 million in outstandin­g unvested equity awards. She will also collect no bonus or severance pay.

“We are deeply concerned by these matters, and we are committed to ensuring that all aspects of the company’s business are conducted with integrity, transparen­cy and oversight,” the board’s lead independen­t director Stephen Sanger said in a statement.

Between 2011 and 2016 Wells Fargo employees opened two million fake accounts resulting in millions of dollars in customer fees, while bank employees all the while met sales targets and received bonuses.

Wells Fargo, the world’s largest bank by market value, is already set to pay more than $185 million in investigat­ion.

Stumpf was grilled on Capitol Hill last week by members of the powerful Senate Banking Committee, some of whom have called for his resignatio­n.

The bank’s board did not directly mention the scandal but said it would take “all appropriat­e actions to reinforce the right culture and ensure that lessons are learned.”

Wells Fargo, whose biggest shareholde­r is billionair­e Warren Buffett, has 40 million accounts held by individual­s across the United States.

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