New York, January 23, 2026, 12:52 EST — Regular session
- Wells Fargo shares slipped roughly 1.7% by midday, mirroring a wider decline across U.S. bank stocks.
- A court-ordered settlement notice filed Thursday reveals a $100 million mortgage-assistance program alongside a $10 million payment from the insurer to the bank.
- Policy risk tied to a proposed U.S. credit-card rate cap and the Fed’s decision next week is also under investor scrutiny.
Shares of Wells Fargo & Co (WFC) dropped roughly 1.7%, hitting $86.50 in midday trading Friday. The broader selloff among major U.S. banks added pressure, while investors digested a new legal disclosure from the lender.
This shift is crucial as traders rapidly slash bank stocks at the slightest hint of rising costs, legal troubles, or tougher regulations. Wells Fargo, especially, is focused on controlling expenses while aiming for more consistent growth.
Financials are also caught in a volatile session as Washington policy news and interest rate outlooks resurface. Banks’ earnings often respond to rate changes, so even minor tweaks in forecasts can jolt the sector.
Wells Fargo announced in a notice related to a shareholder derivative settlement that a federal judge in San Francisco will conduct a final approval hearing on May 5, 2026. The deal proposes a $100 million mortgage-assistance program targeting low- and moderate-income borrowers, alongside a $10 million payment from an insurer on behalf of director defendants. According to the notice, individual shareholders won’t get a direct payout. (SEC)
JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup all dipped on the day, dragging Wells Fargo down with the wider banking sector rather than marking it as an isolated stock event.
The broader market showed mixed signals, tech stocks holding up the Nasdaq as weakness surfaced in other sectors. Intel dragged sentiment down after its forecast, Reuters reported. (Reuters)
Policy risk remains a factor for lenders with card portfolios. Bank of America and Citigroup have looked into issuing credit cards with a 10% interest rate, Reuters reported, reacting to President Donald Trump’s push for a nationwide rate cap. This move highlights lingering doubts over if or how such a cap might actually be enforced. (Reuters)
Wells Fargo’s latest quarterly report, released earlier this month, highlighted just how sharply investors are watching costs and forward guidance. The bank fell short of profit expectations, weighed down by $612 million in severance charges. CEO Charlie Scharf told analysts, “The economy and our customers remain resilient, but we continue to closely monitor our portfolios for signs of weakness,” Reuters reported. (Reuters)
But investors banking on the settlement headline should note: final court approval hasn’t come through yet. The notice also warns that program details might shift to comply with legal or regulatory demands. Meanwhile, the sector’s biggest wildcard is still interest rates and the possibility that credit conditions tighten sooner than anticipated.
Investors are now focused on the Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting set for Jan. 27–28. The Fed will announce its decision on Jan. 28, followed by a press conference, per the Fed’s official calendar. (Federalreserve)