By Yuka Hayashi 

WASHINGTON -- Wells Fargo & Co. agreed to pay $1 billion to settle federal claims of misconduct in its auto and mortgage lending businesses.

The settlement with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency concerned the bank's failures to catch and prevent problems, including improper charges to consumers in its mortgage and auto-lending businesses.

The fine is the largest against a bank so far in the Trump administration.

The bank also agreed to offer restitution to customers and improve risk and compliance management practices as part of the settlement.

"The OCC took these actions given the severity of the deficiencies and violations of law, the financial harm to consumers, and the bank's failure to correct the deficiencies and violations in a timely manner," the OCC said in its release detailing the settlement.

The regulator added that it "found deficiencies in the bank's enterprisewide compliance risk management program that constituted reckless, unsafe or unsound practices."

The settlement is the latest in a series of regulatory woes for the San Francisco-based bank. It has faced a number of regulatory problems in recent years, including regulatory scrutiny of illegal sales practices that involved the opening of as many as 3.5 million accounts without customers' consent. Regulators have since probed the bank's practices in auto lending, mortgages, wealth and investment management and foreign exchange.

Write to Yuka Hayashi at yuka.hayashi@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

April 20, 2018 09:52 ET (13:52 GMT)

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