Mortgage crisis returns to bite Wells

Nearly a decade after the financial crisis, Wells Fargo is getting stung by bad behavior in the housing bubble.

Wells Fargo took a surprise $1 billion charge in the quarter for previously disclosed pre-crisis, mortgage-related regulatory investigations, the third-largest U.S. lender said Friday . The expense pushed total costs to a record $14.4 billion.

This latest hit adds to Chief Executive Officer Tim Sloan’s challenges, 13 months after the San Francisco-based lender was rocked by a fake-accounts scandal. Wells Fargo has struggled to attract customers after news broke last year that branch bankers opened thousands of accounts without customer approval to meet aggressive sales targets. More recently, it’s come under fire over auto-loan clients who were forced to pay for unwanted car insurance and homeowners who were improperly charged fees for mortgages.

The legal charge related to pre-crisis mortgages cut 20 cents from the bank’s earnings per share. Net income fell 19% from the year earlier period to $4.6 billion. Analysts had expected $5.13 billion. Earnings per share of 84 cents fell short of the $1.03 average estimate of 26 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Wells Fargo also faced unfavorable trends in its underlying businesses. Adding to difficulties in the consumer bank, commercial loans declined by about $6 billion from the second quarter.

Shares fell 2.6% in pre-market trading in New York as of 8:14 a.m.

Wells Fargo branch.
Pedestrians walk past a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in New York, U.S., on Friday, April 13, 2012. Wells Fargo & Co., the largest U.S. home lender, reported a 13 percent rise in first-quarter profit, setting a record as the bank made more money on new mortgages and curbed losses from old ones. Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg

Bloomberg News
Earnings Mortgages Consumer banking Enforcement Wells Fargo
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER