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Wells Fargo plans to cut up to 10% of workforce in the next 3 years
Kate Rooney | @Kr00ney
Published 7 Hours Ago Updated 4 Hours Ago
CNBC.com
Wells Fargo plans to lower its employee headcount by 5 percent to 10 percent in the next three years.
The bank has 265,000 employees, meaning the reduction would result in a loss of between 13,250 and 26,500 jobs.
The move is part of the third largest U.S. bank's "ongoing transformation" after multiple scandals across major business units in the past two years.
The bank cited changing customer preferences, including the "adoption of digital self-service capabilities," as a key reason.
Wells Fargo Chief Executive Officer and President Timothy Sloan testifies before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017, during a hearing on Wells Fargo after one year.
Susan Walsh | AP
Wells Fargo Chief Executive Officer and President Timothy Sloan testifies before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017, during a hearing on Wells Fargo after one year.
Wells Fargo, the third-biggest U.S. bank, plans to lower its employee headcount by 5 percent to 10 percent in the next three years as part of its ongoing turnaround plan, the company announced Thursday.
The bank has 265,000 employees, meaning the reduction would result in a loss of between 13,250 and 26,500 jobs.
"We are continuing to transform Wells Fargo to deliver what customers want -- including innovative, customer-friendly products and services — and evolving our business model to meet those needs in a more streamlined and efficient manner," the bank's Chief Executive Officer Tim Sloan said in a press release.
The decline will be a mix of displacements and team member attrition, Sloan said.
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The move is part of Wells Fargo's "ongoing transformation, which addresses industry trends and changes in customer behavior," Sloan said. The company, which has $1.9 trillion in assets, blamed changing customer preferences, including the "adoption of digital self-service capabilities," as a key catalyst.
Shares had little reaction to the news, and were last up by about 0.8 percent on Thursday.
The bank is still recovering from multiple scandals across its major business units in the past two years. In 2016, it was revealed that branch employees had opened millions of fake accounts in customers' names without their knowledge to meet sales targets.
Wells Fargo switched up its executive ranks following the scandal but other investigations into its sales practices unearthed issues in its auto lending, mortgage and wealth management.
The ongoing scandals have added to pressure on current Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan. The bank denied recent rumors this week that former Goldman Sachs executive Gary Cohn was potentially replacing Sloan. Betsy Duke, chair of the lender's board of directors, said in statement that the CEO "has the unanimous support of the board, and this support has never wavered."