Regulator terminates consent order with Wells Fargo from 2015

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The end of the consent order is a positive sign for the fourth-largest U.S. bank, which has been in regulators’ penalty box and paid billions in fines and restitution since September 2016 when a sales scandal came to light.

Wells remains under a $1.95 trillion asset cap that the Federal Reserve imposed, as well as around a dozen consent orders with regulators.

This consent order https://www.occ.gov/static/enforcement-actions/ea2015-048.pdf, which was put in place prior to the emergence of the sale scandal, related to billing and marketing practices the bank employed when it sold various identity theft protection and debt cancellation products.

Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) is still working on a separate 2018 sweeping OCC consent order related to the mis-selling of mortgage and auto-insurance products, which imposes a number of constraints on the bank’s business.