Los Angeles Times

Wells is looking to sell off more business units

The bank may shed additional assets after a broad review of its operations.

- By Jack Flemming jack.flemming @latimes.com

Wells Fargo & Co. may not be done shedding assets as it rethinks its business in the wake of its sham-accounts scandal.

After announcing the sale of its shareholde­r-services and commercial insurance units in the last month, the San Francisco-based bank is considerin­g cutting even more amid a broad review of its operations.

Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberr­y said over the weekend that management is looking into the disposal of “smaller” assets worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” while the company doubles down on products that are “more relevant” to its customers.

“We get a little bit smaller, a little bit less complex and we can focus on what we’re good at,” Shrewsberr­y told the Financial Times. “There are a handful of businesses in our mindset. They’re not at the scale of most of our businesses ... not top-tier providers.”

He didn’t specify which divisions or businesses faced the chopping block. The bank has almost $2 trillion in assets, the third most in the U.S. behind JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.

It’s the largest retail mortgage lender in the country, and the bank also holds the top spot in usedauto loans and student loans. In addition, it’s the top debit card issuer in terms of purchase and transactio­n value.

The bank declined any comment Monday, instead referring to remarks Chief Executive Timothy Sloan made in an earnings call last week.

“For those businesses that we don’t believe are as core to our platform, but [also] maybe they can grow better in the hands of others, we’ve decided to exit those,” Sloan said. “If something doesn’t fit, we’ll move on.”

Regulators fined the company $185 million last September after employees, driven by onerous sales goals, opened millions of unauthoriz­ed checking, saving and other accounts. In the wake of the scandal, Wells Fargo Chief Executive John Stumpf resigned and the company revised its incentive system.

Scott Siefers, an analyst with investment bank Sandler O’Neill, said that it’s no coincidenc­e big changes are underway at the bank.

“Of course, a lot of this strategic review was born out of last year’s scandal, but the company also has a new CEO in Sloan,” Siefers said. “He’s taking a fresh look to make sure they’re effectivel­y utilizing capital and finding ways to improve efficiency.”

The bank in April started shedding assets in earnest when it sold its crop insurance business for $700 million to Zurich American Insurance Co. In June, it announced the sale of its commercial insurance business to USI Insurance Services.

Last week, it announced the sale of its shareholde­r services unit to Britain’s Equiniti Group for $227 million.

Although the price tags are substantia­l, none of these units are part of Wells Fargo’s core business. Siefers said that although the bank will give every business a hard look, he doesn’t expect it to sell anything major.

“Wells Fargo is so vast that they have dozens upon dozens of discrete business lines, so some of the ancillary ones are getting a second look,” Siefers said.

The company is cutting costs as well. In January, it announced a plan to trim expenses by $2 billion by 2018, and at the Wells Fargo Investor Day in May, it announced plans to cut $2 billion more by the end of 2019.

The cuts involve closing and consolidat­ing smaller branches, cutting outside consultant­s and centralizi­ng operations — which could move jobs offshore.

In its earnings report last week, the company reported its biggest quarterly jobs cut since 2013. Its employee count fell by roughly 2,200 to about 270,600 during the three-month period that ended June 30.

Wells Fargo earned $5.8 billion, or $1.07 a share, in the quarter, outperform­ing what was expected by analysts, according to FactSet. Contributi­ng to that was a gain of 4 cents a share from the USI sale.

But the bank is still feeling the effects of its accounts scandal. New credit card account openings were up 10% since the first quarter but down 42% compared with last year’s second quarter.

Shares of Wells Fargo closed down 28 cents to $54.71 on Monday.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? THE FINANCE chief of Wells Fargo said the bank’s management may dispose of “smaller” assets worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” while the company doubles down on products “more relevant” to its customers.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images THE FINANCE chief of Wells Fargo said the bank’s management may dispose of “smaller” assets worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” while the company doubles down on products “more relevant” to its customers.

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