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Wells Fargo cutting sales goal in wake of hefty fine

Wells Fargo announced plans Tuesday to cut its aggressive product sales goals for retail bankers, nearly a week after state and federal regulators fined the bank $185 million US for allegedly opening millions of unauthorized accounts for its customers to meet those targets.

Consumer banking executive to retire with roughly $125 million US in compensation

A man passes by a Wells Fargo bank office in Oakland, Calif., in this July 2014 photo. The company is cutting it sales goals after being hit with a $185-million US fine for illegally opening millions of unauthorized accounts for their customers. (Ben Margot/Associated Press)

Wells Fargo will cut its aggressive product sales goals for retail bankers, as it faces $185 million in fines and a damaged reputation after allegations that it opened millions of unauthorized accounts to meet those targets.

The sales goals will be eliminated by Jan. 1, the San Francisco-based bank announced Tuesday. That doesn't end the matter, though, as Wells Fargo's chief executive has been called to appear before the Senate Banking Committee next week to answer questions about the bank's sales practices.

Wells Fargo has long been known for its aggressive sales goals, but in an industry plagued with questionable action during the mortgage bubble and financial crisis, it was also regarded as a well-run, tightly managed firm that did not get into the poisonous behaviour of its Wall Street counterparts.

Money transferred without authorization

In announcing the fines last week, however, regulators said Wells Fargo sales staff opened more than 2 million bank and credit card accounts that customers may not have authorized, and that money in their accounts was transferred to the new accounts without authorization.

Debit cards were issued and activated, as well as PINs created, without telling customers. In some cases, employees even created fake email addresses to sign up customers for online banking services, regulators said.

"We are eliminating product sales goals because we want to make certain our customers have full confidence that our retail bankers are always focused on the best interests of customers," CEO John Stumpf said in a statement.

Wells Fargo, known for its stagecoach logo, has always sold itself as first and foremost a community bank. But as one of the nation's biggest financial institutions, Wells Fargo executives also highlight every quarter the so-called cross-sale ratio, a metric only Wells used that reflects the number of products the bank sells to each customer. The ratio hovers around six, which means every Wells Fargo household has on average six different types of products with the bank.

Unrealistic targets

The targets, pushed from Wells' top executives, were unrealistic. Wells Fargo had a program called go for "Gr-Eight," a company-wide push to get more than eight products per household a level that was never reached. Many employees had to cheat to meet those goals, to the point where it became widespread. Thousands of employees were fired for this type of conduct.

The behaviour was first brought to light by an investigation by The Los Angeles Times in 2013.

One person who has not been fired is the executive who ran Wells' consumer banking division, Carrie Tolstedt. She announced earlier this year that she would retire from Wells at the end of 2016. Despite running this troubled division, the 56-year-old is expected to walk away with roughly $125 million US in compensation in a mix of stock, salary and stock options.

Wells Fargo has refused to say if it is considering implementing its executive compensation clawback provisions regarding Tolstedt. The bank adopted a somewhat aggressive clawback provision in 2013 that would apply to Tolstedt as a highly paid executive. One of the triggers for the provision could be if the executive's business group "suffers a material failure of risk management" or misconduct that "expected to have reputational or other harm to the company."

"It seems Wells Fargo's board has equipped themselves with a broad enough tool that, if they think the situation warrants it, this clawback provision could (apply to Tolstedt)," said Charles Tharp, a senior adviser at the Center for Executive Compensation.