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Tuesday, August 07, 2018

Wells Fargo Apologizes After "Accidentally" Foreclosing Hundreds Of Homes

Another day, another 'apology' for screwing up from Wells Fargo.

Six months after the Fed Slammed Wells Fargo with unprecedented sanctions - no more total asset growth until it cleans up its act - because of a pattern of consumer abuses and other lapses, that list grew over the weekend when the firm said it may have improperly foreclosed on 400 home loans.

As The Mercury News reports, Wells Fargo says a company mistake contributed to hundreds of foreclosures because it miscalculated customers’ eligibility for mortgage modifications.

The bank said in a filing Friday the error caused about 625 customers to be denied, or not offered, loan modifications they otherwise qualified for. Foreclosures were completed in about 400 of the cases.

The customers had been using federal programs that helped families at risk of losing homes. Spokesman Tom Goyda says there’s no breakdown of where the foreclosures occurred.

The error in the bank’s underwriting tool lasted from 2010 until it was fixed in late 2015, an internal review found.

The American Banker adds that the company accrued $8 million in the second quarter to remediate customers that may have been affected by an automated miscalculation of attorneys' fees between April 13, 2010, and Oct. 20, 2015; and it may pay out more in the future.

"To the extent issues are identified, we will continue to assess any customer harm and provide remediation as appropriate," Wells said in the filing.

Cowen & Co. analyst Jaret Seiberg wrote Monday in a note that “Wells Fargo is not making it easy for the Federal Reserve to lift the asset growth cap," adding that “we don’t know how the Federal Reserve could lift the cap this year. And lifting it next year could become a problem if the Democrats retake the House in November as we expect.”

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8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank God I have no investments with Wells Fargo!

Anonymous said...

I don't understand why anyone still banks there. They should be out of business by now.

Anonymous said...

Too big to fail...

Anonymous said...

They have to be the worst bank.

Anonymous said...


What a continuously crooked operation. Revoke their Federal charter. Break them up and sell off the pieces. Cashier the executive suite en mass.

Anonymous said...

The other day I cashed a check issued by Wells Fargo.I kept expecting the teller to find something wrong with it,but it was OK.

Anonymous said...

I used to have them when I had my Mortgage. During the course of my loan, it had been sold more than once and changed hands at least 4 times in the 25 years I had a mortgage.
When I finally paid of my house in 2010, I called and sent them a letter requesting a document showing that the loan was paid in full and that I now own my home.

They gave me the run around on this, so I had to get my lawyer involved to send them a certified letter. It was only then, that I received my letter and documentation showing that my home was paid in full.

Anonymous said...

Dave T: They are a mess, and what they are doing to people is simply unacceptable. I certainly won't be doing any business with them now or ever!