Today: 9 April 2026
Wells Fargo stock price today: WFC edges up as rate-cap worries and new bond filings hit
16 January 2026
2 mins read

Wells Fargo stock price today: WFC edges up as rate-cap worries and new bond filings hit

New York, Jan 16, 2026, 13:39 EST — Regular session

  • Wells Fargo shares up about 0.4% at $89.35 in afternoon trade
  • Bank has been in the debt market with fresh SEC pricing supplements for long-dated notes
  • Investors are focused on the 2026 net interest income outlook and the political fight over a proposed 10% credit-card rate cap

Wells Fargo & Co shares rose about 0.4% to $89.35 on Friday afternoon, steadying after a rough midweek slide as traders weighed the bank’s outlook against a sour mood across financials.

Lenders have been rattled by talk of a one-year cap of 10% on credit card interest rates, a proposal investors fear could squeeze one of the industry’s highest-margin products. U.S. markets are closed on Monday for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, compressing the next trading week and keeping positioning skittish. Reuters

In slides for its fourth-quarter call, Wells Fargo said it expects 2026 net interest income — the spread between what it earns on loans and pays on deposits — to run about $50 billion, plus or minus, with assumptions that include two to three Fed rate cuts. The bank also pegged 2026 expenses at about $55.7 billion as it pushes efficiency work while spending more on technology and other investments. SEC

The stock is still near Wednesday’s close, when it fell 4.6% after the bank booked $612 million in severance charges and missed profit estimates. CFO Mike Santomassimo warned the proposed credit-card cap would make lenders pull back, urging “continued careful consideration of all proposals … to make sure we get to the right outcomes.” “Beyond this issue, there is still a lot of good (news) as costs are under control and loan quality remains high,” said Brian Mulberry, senior client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management. Reuters

A prospectus supplement filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission showed Wells Fargo agreed to sell $2 billion of fixed-to-floating rate notes that pay 5.433% until 2046, then reset against compounded SOFR, a U.S. overnight benchmark rate, plus 123 basis points (hundredths of a percentage point). The notes mature in 2047 and are expected to settle on Jan. 23. SEC

Wells Fargo said it earned $5.36 billion, or $1.62 per share, in the fourth quarter on revenue of $21.29 billion, and repurchased $5.0 billion of common stock. Chief executive Charlie Scharf said the quarter showed “strong financial performance,” as the bank pointed to the removal of the Federal Reserve’s asset cap and the termination of multiple consent orders, which are formal regulatory enforcement actions. SEC

Management’s pitch is simple: a cleaner balance sheet and tighter controls should free up growth, and the cost base has to keep bending lower to prove it. That is easier to say than do when competition for deposits flares up and technology bills keep climbing.

Credit quality is the other line investors are watching. Wells Fargo has flagged pressure points in commercial real estate, with office loans still a recurring topic, even as the bank says most customers are holding up and it is watching for early signs of weakness.

The rate-cap debate is now the wild card. Wells Fargo has been trying to expand card products and fee businesses, but the political math around consumer credit is shifting fast and headlines can move the group.

If the proposal stalls, attention likely swings back to the usual bank levers: where interest rates settle, how quickly deposit costs fall, and whether loan demand holds up in commercial and auto. If the cap gains traction, lenders face a messier downside case — weaker card economics, tighter credit, and more noise around earnings guidance.

Traders will be watching Tuesday’s reopen after the holiday, along with the next wave of bank results, for signals on how seriously lenders are treating the rate-cap threat. Wells Fargo’s scheduled Jan. 23 settlement for its latest note sale is another near-term date on the calendar as investors track funding costs into the rest of earnings season.

Stock Market Today

  • National Vision Holdings (EYE) Shows Strong Growth Amid Strategic Expansion
    April 9, 2026, 10:20 AM EDT. National Vision Holdings, Inc. (EYE) has shown robust growth, gaining 123.5% over the past year, outperforming its industry and the S&P 500. The optical retailer's strategy includes expanding owned brands and leveraging a remote hybrid model to deliver eye care efficiently. Early results from new initiatives, such as targeted marketing and the launch of Meta AI glasses in select stores, are promising. The firm maintains a market cap of $1.92 billion and expects long-term earnings growth of 20.1%, nearly double the industry average. While elevated costs and a leveraged balance sheet pose challenges, National Vision's ongoing business transformation targeting underdeveloped customer segments and premium product lines indicates potential upside for investors.

Latest article

Nokia Oyj AI Data Center Push Gets Lift From Fifth Straight GigaOm Leader Ranking

Nokia Oyj AI Data Center Push Gets Lift From Fifth Straight GigaOm Leader Ranking

9 April 2026
Nokia was named a Leader and Outperformer in GigaOm’s 2026 Radar for data center switching for the fifth year in a row, competing with Cisco, Arista, and HPE Juniper. Shares fell 1.05% in Helsinki ahead of Thursday’s annual meeting, where board changes and a dividend of up to 14 euro cents per share will be considered.
American Airlines Faces FAA Fine Over Drug-Testing Lapses in New Test for 2026 Turnaround

American Airlines Faces FAA Fine Over Drug-Testing Lapses in New Test for 2026 Turnaround

9 April 2026
The FAA proposed a $255,000 civil penalty against American Airlines, alleging the carrier allowed 12 flight attendants who tested positive for drugs or alcohol to return to safety-sensitive duties before completing required follow-up tests. The alleged violations occurred from May 2019 to December 2023. American has 30 days to respond. The airline said it is reviewing the notice.
Hologic goes private: Blackstone, TPG close buyout and name José Almeida CEO

Hologic goes private: Blackstone, TPG close buyout and name José Almeida CEO

9 April 2026
Blackstone and TPG closed their $17.3 billion acquisition of Hologic on April 7, with José Almeida replacing Steve MacMillan as CEO. Hologic shares were suspended before trading that day and will be removed from the S&P 500 before Thursday’s open. Former shareholders will receive $76 per share in cash plus a contingent value right worth up to $3 more if revenue targets are met.
When Will Gas Prices Fall? Iran Ceasefire May Not Bring Quick Relief as Oil Rebounds

When Will Gas Prices Fall? Iran Ceasefire May Not Bring Quick Relief as Oil Rebounds

9 April 2026
Brent crude rebounded 3% Thursday despite a U.S.-Iran ceasefire, with the Strait of Hormuz still nearly shut and only one oil-products tanker passing in 24 hours. U.S. gasoline averaged $4.166 a gallon on April 9, and AAA said prices could drop slowly. North Sea Forties crude hit a record $146.43 a barrel. The U.S. EIA expects Hormuz flows may take months to recover.
Qualcomm stock price today: QCOM slips despite $0.89 dividend as analysts flag catalyst gap
Previous Story

Qualcomm stock price today: QCOM slips despite $0.89 dividend as analysts flag catalyst gap

Riot Platforms stock jumps after AMD signs $311 million Texas data center lease
Next Story

Riot Platforms stock jumps after AMD signs $311 million Texas data center lease

Go toTop