Wells Fargo misses profit estimates on severance costs, shares fall
Wells Fargo reported lower profits, impacted by severance costs for operational streamlining. The bank's shares saw a significant drop. Despite missing some profit targets, Wells Fargo is focusing on growth initiatives, including new credit card p...

The bank has streamlined its workforce to fund long-term growth initiatives after closing seven regulatory punishments known as consent orders last year to address its problems tied to a fake-accounts scandal. One order from 2018 remains.
The fourth-largest U.S. lender, which twice reduced its annual interest income expectations last year, said net interest income - the difference between what it earns on loans and pays on deposits - rose 4% to $12.33 billion in the quarter from a year earlier, but missed expectations of $12.46 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
For 2026, Wells Fargo forecast its interest income to be about $50 billion. Analysts, on average, were expecting $50.33 billion. The bank expects average loans to increase by a mid-to-single-digit percentage this year, driven by commercial and auto loans, alongside credit cards.
Analysts said the results were mixed, highlighting disappointing interest income after Wells Fargo had a chance to catch up with peers in its first full quarter since regulators removed its asset cap. "Beyond this issue, there is still a lot of good (news) as costs are under control and loan quality remains high. With a potential lift in more mortgage applications as rates fall, they could see competitive growth in the back half of the year," said Brian Mulberry, senior client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management.
STRONG CUSTOMER, CREDIT CARD UNCERTAINTY
"The economy and our customers remain resilient, but we continue to closely monitor our portfolios for signs of weakness," Scharf told analysts. Separately, U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates would cause banks to pull back on lending, CFO Mike Santomassimo said on a media call, echoing peers JPMorgan Chase and others.
"We would just encourage continued careful consideration of all proposals, including this ... to make sure we get to the right outcomes," Santomassimo said.
Scharf said the bank would be open to engaging about the Trump administration's options.
The bank ended 2025 with 205,198 employees, compared with 210,821 as of September 30. Its headcount has fallen every quarter since late 2020.
The results cap a strong year for the U.S. bank as regulators removed a $1.95 trillion asset cap in June, lifting a penalty linked to Wells Fargo's fake-accounts scandal, allowing the bank to grow and pushing total assets past the $2 trillion mark last year for the first time.
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