Elizabeth Warren asks the Fed to break up Wells Fargo, citing a 'broken culture'

Warren asks the Fed to revoke key banking status for Wells Fargo

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., on Tuesday urged the Federal Reserve to break up Wells Fargo, arguing that widespread corruption and a slew of scandals at the financial powerhouse posed "substantial risks" to consumers and the broader financial system.

In a letter to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, Warren asked the central bank to use its authority to separate Wells Fargo's core banking unit – like offering checkings and savings accounts – from its other financial services. She argued the Fed had the power to do so by revoking Wells Fargo's status as a financial holding company under the Bank Holding Company Act.

"The Fed has the power to put consumers first, and it must use it," the Massachusetts Democrat wrote. "By invoking its full authority to protect consumers and the financial system and requiring Wells Fargo to separate its consumer-facing banking arm from the rest of its financial activities, the Fed can ensure that Wells Fargo faces appropriate consequences for its long-standing ungovernable behavior."

NATION'S BIGGEST BANKS SUED OVER HANDLING OF PPP LOANS

In a statement, Wells Fargo said "it's a different bank today than we were five years ago because we’ve made significant progress," including: enhancing oversight and transparency, bringing new leaders on board across the business, launching a risk assessment program to identify operational risks and controls, implementing a new incentive plan for bank branches and reducing the total number of customer remediations that need to be completed.

"Serving customers with the highest standards requires a strong risk and control foundation. That’s why meeting our own expectations for risk management and controls — as well as our regulators’ — remains Wells Fargo’s top priority," the bank said.

For nearly five years, Wells Fargo has been in Washington's sights after it came to light that the company made millions by creating fake accounts for customers without their knowledge, sometimes charging unnecessary fees or harming individuals' credit ratings.

The Fed, under the leadership of Janet Yellen, responded to the scandal by imposing an unprecedented asset cap on Wells  Fargo in 2018, which it remains under to date.

The bank, the fourth largest in the U.S., has also paid nearly $4 billion in fines and penalties since the scandal broke in 2016. 

But regulators at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) last week slapped Wells Fargo with an additional $250 million sanction, saying the bank has been too slow to compensate victims and address underlying weaknesses in business practices.

The OCC said the bank engaged in "unsafe or unsound practices" and violated the terms of a 2018 consent order. The agency also said it would restrict Wells Fargo's mortgage business until the problems are addressed.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

"These new revelations have once again made clear that continuing to allow this giant bank with a broken culture to conduct business in its current form poses substantial risks to consumers and the financial system," Warren wrote. 

In a separate letter to the chairman of Wells Fargo's board of directors, Warren questioned whether CEO Charlie Scharf and the board were capable of managing the bank. She accused the bank of additional "corruption" and "mind-boggling" mismanagement under Scharf, who earned more than $20 million in the 2020 fiscal year.

"It is unfathomable that Mr. Scharf has been so well compensated while failing for the last two years to address the company’s ‘top priority,’ and inconceivable that no member of the Wells Fargo Board or its top executives has been held sufficiently accountable," she wrote. "You owe your customers, your investors, and your regulators an explanation for Wells Fargo’s ongoing inability to meet legal and regulatory requirements."