The Business Times

Wells Fargo explores sale of asset management business: sources

Published Fri, Oct 23, 2020 · 04:20 AM

[SAN FRANCISCO] Wells Fargo & Co is exploring a sale of its asset management business, in what would be the US bank's biggest shake-up since former Bank of New York Mellon chief executive officer (CEO) Charles Scharf joined as CEO last year, people familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

The potential deal would illustrate how Mr Scharf is looking at drastic moves, beyond cost cuts, as he seeks to turn Wells Fargo around following a years-old sales practices scandal. He has said he is targeting US$10 billion in savings annually over the long term.

Wells Fargo's asset management arm, which managed US$578 billion on behalf of customers as of the end of June, could fetch more than US$3 billion in a sale, two of the sources said.

The San Francisco-based bank has discussed a potential deal with asset management companies and private equity firms, according to the sources, who cautioned that a divestment is not certain and asked not to be identified because the matter is confidential.

A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to comment.

Wells Fargo reported a 57 per cent drop in its third-quarter profit earlier this month, missing Wall Street's expectations, as persistent costs continued to haunt the bank.

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The bank has been grappling with these costs since 2016, when it entered a settlement with regulators that detailed millions of phony accounts employees had created in customers' names without their permission to hit sales targets.

Bank executives have signalled repeatedly that the worst of the fallout is in the past, but elevated operating losses have persisted.

The US Federal Reserve has placed restrictions on Wells Fargo's balance sheet, to be lifted only when the management team can prove it has sufficiently improved risk management and controls.

Mr Scharf told analysts on the bank's third-quarter earnings call this month that he expected to create some room on Wells Fargo's balance sheet by exiting non-core businesses.

"I just want to be clear. We are exiting them because they are not core to serving our core customer base on the consumer and large corporate side. We are not exiting them because of the asset cap," Mr Scharf said.

The asset management business, which is part of Wells Fargo's wealth and investment management division, offers mutual funds and retirement products.

Wells Fargo plans to keep its wealth management business that caters to high-net worth clients, the sources said.

The wealth and investment management division is led by Barry Sommers, the former head of JPMorgan Chase & Co's wealth management business that Mr Scharf recruited in June.

Wells Fargo had started to trim the division even before Mr Scharf became CEO. It sold its retirement plan services business to Principal Financial Group Inc last year for US$1.2 billion.

REUTERS

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