Regulation
After the scandal explodes, Wells Fargo's former chief security officer embarks on a long journey into the legal system.
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An article in the Los Angeles Times provides an opportunity for bank executives to address the underlying problems. Instead comes a focus on damage control.
February 3 -
The bank establishes a committee with the express purpose of addressing employee misconduct. But as the problem of unauthorized customer accounts grows, it stops meeting.
February 2
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A plan released Wednesday by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was more aggressive than anticipated, leading to share price declines at Synchrony Financial, Capital One and Bread Financial. "This skews toward the worst-case scenario," one analyst wrote.
February 1 -
In a reversal from five years ago, six of the eight biggest U.S. banks by branch count now offer the loans, which observers see as safer alternatives to payday loans.
February 1 -
The scandal's roots stretch back more than a decade. In a corporate environment that doesn't welcome bad news, problems fester.
February 1 -
Corporate-governance and ethics experts offer tips to avoid management wrongdoing at all levels of a bank.
January 31 -
As the phony-accounts scandal is brewing in 2014, the executive who functions as the top cop inside Wells Fargo gets shown the door.
January 31 -
The giant bank's woes, and punishment, began years ago — and still linger today. Revisiting the saga's origins now yields several important lessons.
January 31 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's data-access rule could create an uneven playing field because banks and credit unions are examined by regulators but hundreds of nonbank fintechs are not.
January 30













