The Banksters Ride Again: Wells Fargo Scandal

White Horse Financial |

There’s never just one cockroach. If you see one in the open, you know many more are still hiding. Call the exterminator.

This time-honored rule also applies to banks. Earlier this month, we learned that Wells Fargo (WFC), ostensibly the most trustworthy of the too-big-to-fail institutions, is not trustworthy at all.

For years, Wells Fargo employees opened as many as 2 million false accounts in real customer’s names. The bank will pay a $185 million fine, but not admit any wrongdoing.

So, we now see Wells Fargo executives apologizing profusely for conduct they won’t acknowledge was wrong, even though it clearly was. Welcome to “The Twilight Zone.”

We should also note that the federal exterminators who should watch for such pestilence had no idea it was happening. They jumped in only after a 2013 L.A. Times investigation by reporter E. Scott Reckard made local prosecutors investigate.

Wells Fargo says it fired 5,300 employees in response. It’s not clear this scandal was the reason in all those cases. But if so, it was good news. The big banks can fire people who break the rules. It’s not hard at all.

Having learned how to axe low-paid branch workers, Wells Fargo can apply this newfound discipline to headquarters staff and even the C-suite.

I know… Who am I kidding?

IT's DEJA VU ALL OVER AGAIN

Absolutely no one with a seven- or eight-figure income will lose any pay over this, even though people at those levels designed the process that incentivized branch workers to open false accounts.

The executive in charge of the unit where all this happened, Carrie Tolstedt, was allowed to “retire” in July—and keep $124.3 million in bonus, stock options, and restricted stock. Had she been fired, as was certainly justified, she would have forfeited some of that pay.

Tolstedt failed to establish control systems to detect exactly this kind of behavior and stop it before it hurt customers. She was either complicit or clueless, either of which should have led to her termination with cause. But no, at Wells Fargo that only happens to hourly-wage people.

Under the Sarbanes-Oxley law, Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf and CFO John Shrewsberry must personally certify that the bank has adequate financial and operational controls. It obviously does not. Their signatures on annual reports therefore constitute fraud, or at least willful ignorance. Will they suffer any loss?

No, they won’t. As it did with Tolstedt, Wells Fargo will enrich them further, even as branch employees lose their jobs and customers lose money.

(Side note: Letting Tolstedt retire and keep all that money would be an excellent reward for her not implicating higher-ups in all this. I have no evidence such was the intent, though.) Where have we seen this before?

Aside from the fired worker bees, the only parties being punished are Wells Fargo shareholders. That $185 million fine, plus lost business and legal costs, reduces their asset value. That's right if you're a Well Fargo shareholder, you get to pay the legal fees for the folks that robbed your stage coach.

Worse, the regulators who should protect the public will do nothing to stop the similar misconduct that is surely happening at other large banks. There’s never just one cockroach.

Almost a decade after the mortgage collapse almost brought down the financial system, we seem to have learned and changed nothing. Our largest banks are far larger now than they were then. The next crisis will be worse than 2008.

When will it happen? No one knows, but I sense it is drawing near. My snail-mail and e-mail are both getting blasted with bank and credit card offers bearing insanely generous terms. Banks are aggressively taking more risks.

I remember getting that same kind of mail in 2007. We know what happened the next year.

Bubbles can only expand so far. We will all be in trouble when this one pops.

ANATOMY OF A SCANDAL

For years, Wells Fargo set up sham accounts without customers’ consent.

The Scandal Breaks

The illegal practices cost Wells Fargo $185 million in fines. The bank fired at least 5,300 employees.

Sales Goals, Broken Rules

“They warned us about this type of behavior and said, ‘You must report it,’ but the reality was that people had to meet their goals,” said a former worker. “They needed a paycheck.”

Skeptical, Hostile Congress

“Have you returned one nickel?” Senator Elizabeth Warren asked the bank's C.E.O.. House lawmakers were even angrier.

Ex-Workers File Suits

“These are the people who have been left holding the bag,” said a lawyer for the workers.

$41 Million Clawback

The bank said it would claw back pay from its embattled chairman and C.E.O.

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Resources:

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/28/business/dealbook/wells-fargo-john-stu...

http://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickwwatson/2016/09/15/wells-fargo-scanda...