Wells Fargo
Wells Fargo
Wells Fargo is one of the largest banks in the United States, with approximately $1.9 trillion in balance sheet assets. The company is split into four primary segments: consumer banking, commercial banking, corporate and investment banking, and wealth and investment management.
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In April 2025, the bank admitted that it may have made a mistake in denying the plaintiff forbearance.
May 12 -
In the megabank's latest sign of progress with regulators, it said that a 7-year-old CFPB order has been terminated.
April 28 -
The notes will get credit enhancement from balances on the subordinate bonds, which are permitted to amortize.
April 11 -
The San Francisco bank announced Monday that it has shed its fifth regulatory order this year — this one related to loss mitigation practices in its home lending business.
March 28 -
The Federal Reserve Board lifted two enforcement actions against the megabank dating back to 2011. But the Fed's seven-year-old asset cap remains in effect.
February 4 -
The Federal Reserve terminated two mortgage-related enforcement actions against Wells Fargo & Co. from more than a decade ago, the central bank said Tuesday.
February 4 -
Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf validates some of the optimism, telling analysts he feels "really great about our progress." But he said executives "don't want to get ahead of ourselves."
January 15 -
As the flames continued to spread, banks closed more branches while others donated to relief efforts.
January 9 -
Workers in the bank's conduct management intake group joined colleagues at 23 Wells Fargo branches in approving a union.
December 11 -
The megabank's scale hasn't made it immune from the deposit wars that have crimped bank profits. But the "stabilization" that Wells Fargo flagged is a positive sign as other banks start reporting earnings.
October 11 -
Wall Street banks are expected to capitalize on ultra-low credit spreads and strong demand from investors after they report quarterly results.
October 10 -
The penalty by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is a major setback for the San Francisco bank, which was freed from a separate anti-money-laundering order in 2021. Its stock price fell sharply after the news broke.
September 12 -
The San Francisco bank's interest expenses continue to rise as depositors switch to higher-yielding options. At the same time, soft loan demand from business customers is putting a lid on how much interest Wells is collecting from borrowers.
July 12 -
Workers are eligible for the one-time cash grants if they earned a salary of less than $75,000 last year, and their total cash compensation was less than $85,000. The payments come amid a unionization push at the San Francisco-based megabank.
January 26 -
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The San Francisco-based bank warned for months that charge-offs were likely to start rising as some office-related loans went bad. It began to happen in the fourth quarter, which could be an omen for regional banks that have larger concentrations in the office sector.
January 12 -
Across the industry, the pace of branch shutdowns slowed this year. Still, large financial institutions continued to trim their physical footprints, with two super-regional banks taking the most aggressive actions.
December 15 -
JPMorgan Chase now tops Wells Fargo in third-party servicing, origination volume and on-balance-sheet home loans, according to company filings.
October 13 -
The company is rolling out a special-purpose credit program to help address what it describes as "the biggest barriers to achieving homeownership." Such programs are gaining popularity among banks.
August 10 -
The bank, which already agreed to refund home loan applicants over the charges, is asking a federal judge to toss the suit on numerous grounds.
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