Wells Fargo
Hit $3.7B Penalty Over
Crooked Consumer
Policies
December 20, 2022
Company repeatedly
misapplied loan
payments, wrongfully
foreclosed on homes and
illegally repossessed
vehicles, incorrectly
assessed fees and
interest, charged
surprise overdraft fees,
along with other illegal
activity affecting over
16 million consumer
accounts
The Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is
ordering Wells Fargo Bank to pay more
than $2 billion in redress to consumers
and a $1.7 billion civil penalty for
legal violations across several of its
largest product lines. The bank’s
illegal conduct led to billions of
dollars in financial harm to its
customers and, for thousands of
customers, the loss of their vehicles
and homes. Consumers were illegally
assessed fees and interest charges on
auto and mortgage loans, had their cars
wrongly repossessed, and had payments to
auto and mortgage loans misapplied by
the bank. Wells Fargo also charged
consumers unlawful surprise overdraft
fees and applied other incorrect charges
to checking and savings accounts. Under
the terms of the order, Wells Fargo will
pay redress to the over 16 million
affected consumer accounts, and pay a
$1.7 billion fine, which will go to the
CFPB's Civil Penalty Fund, where it will
be used to provide relief to victims of
consumer financial law violations.
“Wells
Fargo’s rinse-repeat cycle of violating
the law has harmed millions of American
families,” said CFPB Director Rohit
Chopra. “The CFPB is ordering Wells
Fargo to refund billions of dollars to
consumers across the country. This is an
important initial step for
accountability and long-term reform of
this repeat offender.”
Wells Fargo
(NYSE: WFC) is one of the nation's
largest banks serving households across
the country. It offers a variety of
consumer financial services, including
mortgages, auto loans, savings and
checking accounts, and online banking
services.
According to
today’s enforcement action, Wells Fargo
harmed millions of consumers over a
period of several years, with violations
across many of the bank’s largest
product lines. The CFPB’s specific
findings include that Wells Fargo:
-
Unlawfully repossessed vehicles and
bungled borrower accounts: Wells
Fargo had systematic failures in its
servicing of automobile loans that
resulted in $1.3 billion in harm
across more than 11 million
accounts. The bank incorrectly
applied borrowers’ payments,
improperly charged fees and
interest, and wrongfully repossessed
borrowers’ vehicles. In addition,
the bank failed to ensure that
borrowers received a refund for
certain fees on add-on products when
a loan ended early.
-
Improperly denied mortgage
modifications: During at least a
seven-year period, the bank
improperly denied thousands of
mortgage loan modifications, which
in some cases led to Wells Fargo
customers losing their homes to
wrongful foreclosures. The bank was
aware of the problem for years
before it ultimately addressed the
issue.
-
Illegally charged surprise overdraft
fees: For years, Wells Fargo
unfairly charged surprise overdraft
fees - fees charged even though
consumers had enough money in their
account to cover the transaction at
the time the bank authorized it - on
debit card transactions and ATM
withdrawals. As early as 2015, the
CFPB, as well as other federal
regulators, including the Federal
Reserve, began cautioning financial
institutions against this practice,
known as authorized positive fees.
-
Unlawfully froze consumer accounts
and mispresented fee waivers:
The bank froze more than 1 million
consumer accounts based on a faulty
automated filter’s determination
that there may have been a
fraudulent deposit, even when it
could have taken other actions that
would have not harmed customers.
Customers affected by these account
freezes were unable to access any of
their money in accounts at the bank
for an average of at least two
weeks. The bank also made deceptive
claims as to the availability of
waivers for a monthly service fee.
Wells Fargo
is a repeat offender that has been the
subject of multiple enforcement actions
by the CFPB and other regulators for
violations across its lines of business,
including
faulty student loan servicing,
mortgage kickbacks,
fake accounts,
and
harmful auto loan practices.
Enforcement
action
Under the
Consumer Financial Protection Act, the
CFPB has the authority to take action
against institutions violating federal
consumer financial laws, including by
engaging in unfair, deceptive, or
abusive acts or practices. The CFPB’s
investigation found that Wells Fargo
violated the Act’s prohibition on unfair
and deceptive acts and practices.
The CFPB
order requires Wells Fargo to:
-
Provide
more than $2 billion in redress to
consumers: Wells Fargo will be
required to pay redress totaling
more than $2 billion to harmed
customers. These payments represent
refunds of wrongful fees and other
charges and compensation for a
variety of harms such as frozen bank
accounts, illegally repossessed
vehicles, and wrongfully foreclosed
homes. Specifically, Wells Fargo
will have to pay:
-
More
than $1.3 billion in consumer
redress for affected auto
lending accounts.
-
More
than $500 million in consumer
redress for affected deposit
accounts, including $205 million
for illegal surprise overdraft
fees.
-
Nearly $200 million in consumer
redress for affected mortgage
servicing accounts.
-
Stop
charging surprise overdraft fees:
Wells Fargo may not charge overdraft
fees for deposit accounts when the
consumer had available funds at the
time of a purchase or other debit
transaction, but then subsequently
had a negative balance once the
transaction settled. Surprise
overdraft fees have been a recurring
issue for consumers who can neither
reasonably anticipate nor take steps
to avoid them.
-
Ensure auto loan borrowers receive
refunds for certain add-on fees:
Wells Fargo must ensure that the
unused portion of GAP contracts, a
type of debt cancellation contract
that covers the remaining amount of
the borrower’s auto loan in the case
of a major accident or theft, is
refunded to the borrower when a loan
is paid off or otherwise terminates
early.
-
Pay
$1.7 billion in penalties: Wells
Fargo will pay a $1.7 billion
penalty to the CFPB, which will be
deposited into the
CFPB’s victims relief fund.