Los Angeles Times

Senators question whether Wells’ CEO is fit to lead

Timothy Sloan is grilled during hearing on the bank’s reforms.

- By Samantha Masunaga

It’s been about a year since the Wells Fargo & Co. scandal unraveled, with the bank admitting that employees created millions of customer accounts without permission.

But for Chief Executive Timothy Sloan, who appeared Tuesday on Capitol Hill to give an update on reform efforts, little time seems to have passed.

Senate Banking Committee members grilled Sloan about the changes put in place at the San Francisco bank, which has acknowledg­ed that onerous sales goals and a focus on selling multiple products to consumers were at the heart of the scandal.

Sloan was even questioned about whether he was fit to lead the reforms, given his 30-year tenure at Wells Fargo, including a stint as chief financial officer when unauthoriz­ed accounts were opened.

“At best, you were incompeten­t. At worst, you were complicit,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said during the hearing. “Either way, you should be fired.”

Sloan, 57, replaced former CEO John Stumpf after he was ousted last October following two brutal Capitol Hill hearings held just weeks after the scandal broke.

Since then, though, there has been a steady stream of new disclosure­s about wrongdoing in other business units.

Among them are allegation­s Wells Fargo improperly changed the terms of mortgage loans for bankrupt borrowers, signed up customers for unauthoriz­ed life insurance policies and overcharge­d small businesses for credit- and debit-card processing services.

Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, the committee’s ranking Democrat, seized on the bank’s disclosure in July that it would pay $80 million in refunds to hundreds of thousands of vehicle-loan customers who were billed for auto insurance even though they had their own policies in place. Some even had their cars repossesse­d.

“The board chose to limit the scope of the review to the community bank,” he said at the hearing. “It should have known or should have wanted to know that other problems” existed in other divisions.

However, Sloan got some

support Tuesday from Wells Fargo’s single largest shareholde­r.

In an interview with CNBC, Berkshire Hathaway Chief Executive Warren Buffett said Sloan “had my faith.” He said the disclosure­s of other problems were only to be expected after Wells Fargo began a deeper investigat­ion.

“You turn over rocks and sometimes you find something,” said Buffett, whose company owns 9.4% of Wells’ outstandin­g shares. “It’s very seldom there is just one thing going wrong at a big institutio­n if something like that is going on.”

As part of a $185-million settlement with regulators, Wells Fargo admitted in September 2016 that it created as many as 2.1 million checking, savings, credit card and other accounts without customer permission. A recent expanded audit showed that the estimated number of unauthoriz­ed accounts could be as high as 3.5 million.

Sloan, in his prepared remarks, said the bank has determined 190,000 customers incurred fees and charges and they are being reimbursed $6.1 million. The bank also has agreed to settle several class-action lawsuits over the matter for $142 million.

Sloan offered a mea culpa of sorts when asked by Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) if it was fair that he got a promotion and board members still were paid after the accounts scandal.

“I’ve taken responsibi­lity for mistakes made at the company,” Sloan said. “I’m taking action in my role as CEO to make Wells Fargo a better bank than it was a year ago.”

In his opening remarks, Sloan listed a number of reforms the bank has undertaken, including the eliminatio­n of product sales goals for retail bankers and the adoption of a new employee incentive program based on customer service performanc­e.

Although the two-hour committee hearing was tough, it was not nearly as contentiou­s as the one last year that resulted in Stumpf ’s ouster.

During that five-hour hearing, Stumpf faced aggressive questionin­g from a bipartisan group of senators who criticized his leadership and called for his resignatio­n.

Committee members questioned the bank’s commitment to not require customers to settle their disputes with the bank over unauthoriz­ed accounts through forced arbitratio­n. The bank, like many financial institutio­ns, requires customers to give up their right to sue when they sign up for personal accounts and other services.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen (DMd.) cited a current court case in which he said attorneys for the bank took the position that customers who had accounts opened without their permission were required to enter into arbitratio­n.

“If that is true, that directly contradict­s your testimony,” Van Hollen said.

Sloan said he was unaware of the bank’s position in the case but promised he would look into it.

Arbitratio­n has become a big issue on Capitol Hill after the Wells Fargo scandal. Critics have said the wrongdoing at the bank might have been disclosed earlier had customers not been forced into settling their disputes privately.

The class-action lawsuits against Wells Fargo were filed nonetheles­s — and settled by the bank — despite the arbitratio­n clause, amid the heightened media scrutiny prompted by the scandal.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued a regulation in July that would make it easier for customers to bring class-action lawsuits against banks and other financial institutio­ns, but the Republican-controlled House voted to kill the regulation before it could take effect.

A California bill that would prevent banks from using arbitratio­n clauses to protect themselves from lawsuits over sham accounts is awaiting Gov. Jerry Brown’s signature.

The union-backed Committee for Better Banks released a statement shortly after the hearing began, calling for legislatio­n to prevent “predatory practices” at banks.

“Far from moving past the scandal, Wells Fargo’s list of misdeeds has grown exponentia­lly,” said Erin Mahoney, organizing coordinato­r for the group, an offshoot of the Communicat­ions Workers of America labor union. “The bank clearly has not learned its lesson.”

The bank’s pressureco­oker sales culture was first described in a 2013 Los Angeles Times investigat­ion, which Warren referred to during her questionin­g. She noted that Sloan was interviewe­d for the report.

Warren read back his quote to him — “I’m not aware of any overbearin­g sales culture” — and asked if he launched an investigat­ion into the issue either after the Times interview or after the story laying out evidence of the scandal was published.

Sloan said The Times did not provide him with documentat­ion, to which Warren responded, “So I take that as a no.”

Sloan later said an internal bank review found problems in the Community Banking division, and the matter was elevated to the bank’s senior leadership team the same year the article was published.

Still, like Warren, Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.) also expressed doubt that Sloan was the right person to lead a turnaround at the beleaguere­d bank, noting he was unable to answer several questions posed by senators.

“I think anyone with an open mind would question whether we would see a culture change,” she said.

Sloan told senators that the bank’s consumer business has slowed since the accounts scandal broke, though employee turnover at Wells Fargo is down to its lowest point in 4½ years.

The bank reported last year it fired 5,300 employees for violations of the company’s sales practices. The bank has since rehired 1,780 employees “who left the bank during those years,” according to a transcript of Sloan’s prepared remarks.

“We’re not growing as fast as we were prior to last September, but we’re on a good trajectory,” he said. “And I think that’s because we have taken responsibi­lity.”

Wells Fargo shares rose 11 cents, or 0.2%, to $55.58 on Tuesday.

samantha.masunaga@latimes.com

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? WELLS FARGO CEO Timothy Sloan looks down as Sen. Elizabeth Warren questions him during a hearing. “At best, you were incompeten­t. At worst, you were complicit. Either way, you should be fired,” she said.
Susan Walsh Associated Press WELLS FARGO CEO Timothy Sloan looks down as Sen. Elizabeth Warren questions him during a hearing. “At best, you were incompeten­t. At worst, you were complicit. Either way, you should be fired,” she said.

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