Today: 24 May 2026
Wells Fargo stock price slips into long weekend as credit-card cap talk shadows banks
17 January 2026
2 mins read

Wells Fargo stock price slips into long weekend as credit-card cap talk shadows banks

New York, Jan 17, 2026, 12:24 EST — Market closed.

  • Wells Fargo shares slipped slightly on Friday, as bank earnings and interest rate moves continued to influence trading.
  • After a mixed quarterly report this week, investors are now focused on Wells Fargo’s interest-income outlook for 2026.
  • A proposed cap on U.S. credit-card rates is emerging as a new headline risk ahead of next week’s reopening.

Wells Fargo & Company shares fell 0.7% on Friday, ending the day at $88.38 ahead of the weekend shutdown of U.S. markets. The stock enters Tuesday’s session under pressure from recent bank earnings and fresh concerns tied to credit card policies.

Why it matters now: Wells Fargo is pushing to capitalize after regulators dropped long-standing growth limits, yet investors are reassessing what “normal” earnings really mean amid conflicting pressures from rates, costs, and politics.

The calendar presents its own challenges. U.S. markets will be closed Monday for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, as traders gear up for a packed week featuring more corporate earnings and a U.S. Supreme Court hearing on President Donald Trump’s bid to oust Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. “The most important thing right now is earnings,” said Commonwealth Financial Network strategist Chris Fasciano. Reuters

Wall Street wrapped up the first week of earnings season on Friday with barely a move. The S&P 500 dipped 0.1%, the Dow lost 0.2%, and the Nasdaq edged down 0.1%, the Associated Press reported.

Wells Fargo’s latest earnings barely registered. The bank missed Q4 profit targets after taking a $612 million hit from severance costs linked to layoffs. Net interest income — the difference between earnings on loans and deposit costs — rose 4% to $12.33 billion but still fell short of forecasts. Its 2026 interest income projection of around $50 billion came in below analysts’ consensus. Shares plunged 4.6% on the day of the release, marking their steepest single-day drop in half a year. Brian Mulberry of Zacks Investment Management noted that “costs are under control and loan quality remains high,” while CEO Charlie Scharf reassured analysts, saying, “The economy and our customers remain resilient.” Reuters

Scharf is delivering a clear signal to investors: Wells Fargo is chasing higher fee income. He told analysts this week the deal pipeline is “meaningfully greater than at any point in the last five years,” as the bank aims to grab a larger share of investment banking. Reuters

Friday’s action highlighted how quickly sentiment can shift within the sector. Wells Fargo slipped 0.65%, while bigger competitors like Bank of America and Citigroup ended the day higher, even as the broader market meandered.

Rates continue to play a pivotal role. Treasury yields edged up Friday, with the 10-year climbing to 4.23% from Thursday’s 4.17%. This uptick could push loan yields higher but might also squeeze deposit rates and funding costs if it holds.

The bigger short-term risk might not be interest rates at all. Banks are rushing to figure out what to make of Trump’s proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for one year starting Jan. 20. So far, there’s no clear enforcement plan, and the White House has been unclear on whether it would push this through executive order or need Congress. “Policy volatility is likely to create market volatility,” Mulberry noted. Reuters

U.S. trading kicks off again Tuesday, Jan. 20, as investors eye fresh updates on the proposed credit-card cap and the trajectory of yields. Then on Jan. 21, the Supreme Court takes up Trump’s attempt to oust Fed Governor Cook, a move that could shake up Fed and rate forecasts — and bank stocks typically don’t escape unscathed.

Stock Market Today

  • HIVE Digital Shares Surge 50% Following C$3.5B AI Gigafactory Plan
    May 23, 2026, 10:03 PM EDT. HIVE Digital Technologies (TSX:HIVE) shares jumped 50.1% after announcing a C$3.5 billion, 320 MW AI "gigafactory" near Toronto. The facility will house over 100,000 GPUs (graphics processing units) and is set to begin operations in late 2027, marking HIVE's strategic shift from Bitcoin mining to AI infrastructure. This development positions HIVE as a major AI compute landlord leveraging clean power and advanced cooling in Canada's AI ecosystem. Despite the optimism, risks include ongoing losses, potential dilution from capital raises, and execution challenges of the multi-year build. Valuation views vary widely, with estimates ranging from US$4.41 to US$32.44 per share, underscoring investor debate on the stock's future prospects.

Latest articles

Exxon Mobil Corporation Wants a Texas Legal Home as Shareholder Battles Mount

Exxon Stock Moves in Holiday Week Trading

24 May 2026
Exxon Mobil shares closed at $154.92 Friday, down 0.24% on the day and 1.9% for the week, ahead of the Memorial Day market closure. The stock retreated from a midweek high as investors weighed possible Venezuela oil deals and volatile crude prices. Exxon’s annual meeting is set for Wednesday, with a shareholder vote on moving its legal home to Texas. Brent crude settled at $103.54 a barrel, posting a weekly loss.
Why SoFi Technologies Stock Is Slipping After Its PrimaryBid Deal

SoFi Moves Back Into Focus After Unnoticed Deal

24 May 2026
SoFi closed Friday at $15.62, down 3 cents for the day and nearly flat for the week. Trade publications reported SoFi acquired Peach Finance, a California lending software startup; terms were not disclosed. U.S. stock trading will resume Tuesday after Memorial Day.
Samsung Electronics stock flirts with 150,000 won as chip rally drives Seoul — what to watch next week
Previous Story

Samsung Electronics stock flirts with 150,000 won as chip rally drives Seoul — what to watch next week

Nvidia stock’s next test: Trump’s AI chip tariff meets China’s H200 roadblock
Next Story

Nvidia stock’s next test: Trump’s AI chip tariff meets China’s H200 roadblock

Go toTop