Wells Fargo & Co on Friday reported a 31% decline in third-quarter profit as the bank racked up costs related to a fake accounts scandal and boosted its loan loss reserves in preparation for a potential slowdown.
The bank posted $2 billion in operating losses related to litigation, customer remediation, and regulatory matters associated with the now six-year-old scandal over its sales practices.
“Our top priority remains strengthening our risk and control infrastructure which includes addressing open historical issues and issues that are identified as we advance this work,” Chief Executive Officer Charlie Scharf said in a statement.
“We remain at risk of setbacks as we work to complete the work and put these issues behind us and expenses this quarter reflect our ongoing efforts.”.
Meanwhile, the bank set aside $784 million in the quarter for credit losses, compared with a $1.4 billion release a year earlier, when extraordinary government stimulus helped the economy to rebound from the pandemic hit.
The provisions included a $385 million increase in the allowance for credit losses reflecting loan growth and a less favorable economic environment, the fourth-largest U.S. lender said.
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Banks are building up rainy day funds again amid worries that aggressive interest-rate increases by the Federal Reserve to tame stubbornly high inflation will tip the U.S. economy into a recession.
The outlook has been further clouded by the Russia-Ukraine war and fading stimulus measures. Higher borrowing costs have also shackled demand for mortgages and car loans, crimping banks’ revenues.
Noninterest expense rose 8%, while net interest income jumped 36%, primarily due to the impact of higher interest rates and higher loan balances.
The Fed raised interest rates by 150 basis points in the third quarter taking key rate to 3.00%-3.25% range, the highest level since 2008, helping banks earn more from loans.
Wells Fargo’s average loans rose to $945.5 billion from $854 billion a year earlier.
The bank reported a profit of $3.53 billion, or 85 cents per share, for the quarter ended Sept. 30, compared with $5.12 billion, or $1.17 per share, a year earlier.
“Both consumer and business customers remain in a strong financial condition, and we continue to see historically low delinquencies and high payment rates across our portfolios,” Scharf said.
He said the bank was closely monitoring risks related to the continued impact of high inflation, increasing interest rates, as well as the broader geopolitical risks.
“While we do expect to see continued increases in delinquencies and ultimately credit losses, the timing remains unclear,” Scharf continued.
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