Fed terminates enforcement action imposed on Wells Fargo due to fake accounts scandal

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
Fed terminates enforcement action imposed on Wells Fargo due to fake accounts scandal teaser image

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve announced on ​Thursday that it had terminated the ‌enforcement action it imposed on Wells Fargo following the bank's widespread fake accounts scandal, ​saying the bank had sufficiently overhauled ​its operations.

The central bank said it ⁠was lifting the action after nearly ​a decade of remediation work by the ​bank. The 2018 action included the unprecedented asset cap on the bank's growth, which was lifted in 2025.

The ​bank had no statement on the ​Fed's action beyond acknowledging its removal.

Lifting the asset ‌cap ⁠was a major boon for the bank, which had been restricted in its growth for seven years as a result ​of the ​Fed's ⁠penalty, which was the first of its kind imposed by ​the central bank.

Thursday's relief now marks ​the ⁠final removal of any additional regulatory scrutiny imposed on the bank following its ⁠far-ranging ​sales practices scandal, which ​saw employees create millions of unauthorized accounts for customers.

Reporting ​by Pete Schroeder; Editing by Mark Porter

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