Kamis, 13 Oktober 2016

Wells Fargo CEO retires amid accounts scandal and is replaced by a longtime company insider - Los Angeles Times

John Stumpf resigned Wednesday as chairman and chief executive of Wells Fargo[1] & Co., bowing to mounting criticism from lawmakers and others who said he should lose his job over revelations that bank employees created as many as 2 million accounts without customer authorization.

The wrongdoing by the San Francisco bank was exposed by a Los Angeles Times investigation [2]and led to an $185-million settlement with regulators last month, sparking the biggest banking scandal since the financial crisis and renewing calls for a breakup of the nation's biggest banks.

Stumpf, 63, had been chief executive since 2007 and chairman of Wells Fargo's board since 2010.

Timothy J. Sloan, 56, a longtime Wells Fargo executive who was named president of the company last year, immediately replaced Stumpf as chief executive, the bank said.

However, the ballooning scandal sparked a bevy of civil lawsuits, investigations by the Justice Department and calls for an industrywide probe into whether other banks might be pushing workers to open unauthorized accounts.

In retrospect, the beginning of the end for Stumpf came Sept. 8, the day the $185-million settlement with federal regulators [6]and the Los Angeles city attorney's office, which had been investigating the bank's sales practices, was announced.

L.A. City Atty. Mike Feuer filed a lawsuit against the bank [7]last year after starting an investigation prompted by the 2013 Times article. His legal action drew the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency into the probe.

Their investigation and an internal Wells Fargo review found that, since 2011, the bank had fired 5,300 workers for creating as many as 1.5 million checking and savings accounts, and more than 500,000 credit card accounts, without customers' permission.

Regulators said workers created those accounts as they tried to meet unrealistic sales goals that required workers to open a daily quota of new accounts.

Workers used personal information from existing customers to open new accounts, sometimes creating fake PINs, forging signatures and transferring customers' money into unauthorized accounts to make them appear legitimate.

The direct effect on consumers so far appears to be relatively small. The bank last month said it has already refunded about $25 on average to 100,000 customers to compensate for unauthorized fees and has set aside a total of $5 million for payouts. But some customers have complained unauthorized credit cards might have lowered their credit scores and raised their borrowing costs. 

More broadly, the revelations have damaged consumer trust in the financial system, prompting some Republican lawmakers to tell Stumpf during the House hearing last month that he had strengthened the case for stricter financial regulation.

"The damage you have done to the market, to your industry, far exceeds the damage to your own business," Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-S.C.) told Stumpf during the blistering Sept. 29 hearing of the Financial Services Committee. "Y'all were rotten."

Stumpf, during his appearance before the Senate Banking Committee, faced an unending stream of critical questions, many of which he did not or could not answer to lawmakers' liking.

Lawmakers particularly lambasted Stumpf for blaming dishonest workers rather than aggressive sales quotas for the creation of unauthorized accounts. The bank said most of the 5,300 workers who lost their jobs were low-level branch employees, though some managers also were let go.

He apologized and said he was accountable for the bank's problems, but lawmakers in both houses repeatedly said that true accountability would require his firing or resignation.

The bank gradually made some concessions, pledging to end its sales-quota system and, later, "clawing back" some stock awards and other compensation [8]owed to Stumpf and Tolstedt.

Stumpf lost about $41 million in unvested stock awards and eligibility for an annual bonus, which has totaled $4 million for several years, though that still left him with his large vested stock, pension and 401(k) benefits.

Tolstedt, 56, will give up $19 million in stock awards and could lose more than $30 million in stock options pending the results of an internal investigation. However, more than $40 million in vested stock awards and options are hers to keep.

Tolstedt, who had announced her retirement this summer effective at the end of the year, stepped down Sept. 27 as the scandal intensified.

The board also said it had started its own internal investigation that could lead to other executives losing pay or otherwise being punished.

Stumpf had appeared a perfect match for an institution much more focused on plain-vanilla banking and less on investment banking and trading than peers such as Bank of America, Citibank and JPMorgan Chase.

He did not come from a Wall Street background or have an Ivy League pedigree. He grew up on a dairy farm outside tiny Pierz, Minn., and earned degrees from St. Cloud State University and the University of Minn esota.

Stumpf started his banking career in 1982 at Norwest Corp., a Minneapolis bank that in 1998 merged with Wells Fargo. He oversaw a handful of regional operations for Wells Fargo before being promoted to a top post in 2002 as head of the community banking division. 

Times staff writer Jim Puzzanghera contributed to this report.

james.koren@latimes.com[9]

Twitter: @jrkoren[10]


UPDATES:

3:40 p.m.: This article was updated with comments from Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Paulina Gonzalez,  executive director of banking advocacy group California Reinvestment Coalition.

3:10 p.m .: This article was updated with the after-hours stock price. 

2:50 p.m.: This article was updated with quotes from retiring CEO John Stumpf and new CEO Timothy Sloan, as well as information about Stumpf's severance and retirement package.

2:25 p.m.: This article was updated with extensive background on the Wells Fargo scandal.

This article was originally published at 2:15 p.m.

References

  1. ^ Wells Fargo (www.latimes.com)
  2. ^ Los Angeles Times investigation (www.latimes.com)
  3. ^ Sherrod Brown (www.latimes.com)
  4. ^ Maxine Waters (www.latimes.com)
  5. ^ telling members of the House Financial Services Committee (www.latimes.com)
  6. ^ the $185-million settlement with federal regulators (www.latimes.com)
  7. ^ lawsuit against the bank  (www.latimes.com)
  8. ^< /small> "clawing back" some stock awards and other compensation (www.latimes.com)
  9. ^ james.koren@latimes.com (www.latimes.com)
  10. ^ @jrkoren (twitter.com)

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