Receiving Wide Coverage ... More bad news: Wells Fargo said there may be a “significant increase” in the number of fake bank accounts its employees opened, up from the 2.1 million accounts it has already acknowledged. In a regulatory filing, the bank said it reviewing accounts that were opened as far back as 2009, earlier than its original investigation, which covered 2011 to mid-2015. Financial Times, New York Times, American Banker
Wells Fargo also said it expects further regulatory sanctions from its latest scandal, in which it improperly forced some 570,000 auto loan customers to take out car insurance they didn't need, some of whom later defaulted on their loans. The bank said it is issuing refunds totaling around $80 million to affected customers.
“We want our stakeholders to know about issues that we are committed to fixing,” Wells CEO Timothy Sloan said in the filing.
Happy anniversary – not: On what it says is the official 10th anniversary of the global financial crisis, the Financial Times says financial institutions have paid more than $150 billion in penalties to American authorities as a result of "banks' alleged misdeeds from the era." Bank of America accounts for more than a third of the total, having paid out $56 billion to state and federal regulators, most of which covered the actions of two companies it acquired, Countrywide and Merrill Lynch. JPMorgan Chase, which acquired Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, has paid the second most, $27 billion.
But things may be getting better, at least on Wall Street, where regulators have imposed “far lower penalties” in the first six months of the Trump administration than they did during the comparable period in 2016, when Barack Obama was president. Penalties levied by the three main Wall Street regulators were down 65% compared to the year-earlier period, $489 million versus $1.4 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal. That puts the industry on track for the lowest annual level of fines in at least seven years, it said.
“Lawyers who defend financial cases said a shift to a business-friendly stance at regulatory agencies in the Trump administration is one of several reasons for the decrease,” the Journal says.
Wall Street Journal Support uncertain: A Republican effort in Congress to block a rule that would prohibit banks from requiring arbitration of customer disputes may not have enough votes in the Senate to gain passage. The House voted last month to overturn the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s rule that prohibits mandatory arbitration, making it easier for customers to file class-action suits against banks. But “support in the Senate is uncertain,” the paper reports. “Several Republican senators have expressed reservations about voting to overturn the regulation, worried they may be portrayed as siding with banks and against consumers.”
Bank crisis: The number of African-American-owned banks operating in the U.S. has fallen to 23 this year, the lowest level in recent history, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. “That has left many African-American communities short of access to capital and traditional financial services,” the paper says.
“We have a crisis among black banks,” said Doyle Mitchell, CEO of Washington-based Industrial Bank. The number of black-owned banks has been falling for 15 years.
The number of such banks peaked more than 100 years ago, when there were 57 black-owned chartered banks, according to a study by a Howard University professor.
Financial Times High praise?: The American banking system is “notably less weak than its European counterpart,” writes John Plender, a senior editorial writer and columnist at the FT, looking back at the financial crisis. “That is because American policymakers learnt from the earlier Japanese experience of boom and bust. In the eurozone, by contrast, policymakers were reluctant to confront the challenge of the sovereign debt crisis head on. Stress tests have been un-stressful and banks remain undercapitalized relative to the U.S.”
Quotable “In a fairly short amount of time, no one is going to know how to compute what the next payment is going to be. And that’s why it’s important.” — Lou Barnes, capital markets analyst with Premier Mortgage Group, on the challenge mortgage lenders face in computing interest payments on adjustable-rate mortgages after Libor is phased out.
Liberty Bank in Salt Lake City had been "structurally unprofitable" since 2008, according to its regulators. Experts criticized the FDIC for allowing the bank's demise to play out in slow motion.
The New York-based bank says it will push its concentration of commercial real estate loans below 400% of risk-based capital over the next two years and focus more on C&I.
The San Francisco-based firm's Anchorage Digital Trusted Liquidity and Settlement network, better known as Atlas, will allow clients to settle a range of cryptocurrency transactions.
Consumer spending slowed and charge-offs rose during the first quarter, but Bread Financial said a pending late-fee rule may not be as devastating to its revenue as the Columbus, Ohio-based firm initially feared.
The FDIC board debated and ultimately withdrew two separate proposals to address asset managers' control over banks, but acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu said he couldn't support either and called for more research and debate about how asset managers' control over banks impacts safety and soundness.