By Ben Eisen and Andrew Ackerman 

The Federal Reserve temporarily lifted restrictions on Wells Fargo & Co.'s growth, allowing the troubled bank to make more loans during the coronavirus crisis.

The bank's lending capacity has been limited by a $1.95 trillion cap on assets imposed by the Fed in 2018. The bank will now be able to exceed that overall limit via loans it makes through two of the government's small-business lending programs, the central bank said Wednesday. The cap will remain in place for all other types of lending.

The central bank said it would "temporarily and narrowly modify the growth restriction on Wells Fargo so that it can provide additional support to small businesses."

Exemptions to the limit apply to loans made through the $350 billion Paycheck Protection Program and the Fed's Main Street Lending Program, which has yet to be rolled out. Any profits must go to the Treasury or a nonprofit focused on small businesses.

The change will amount to a real-time test of whether the nation's No. 4 bank has fixed the compliance failures that led to the cap, which was imposed after the bank was found to have created perhaps millions of fake accounts. In October, the bank brought in Charles Scharf as its chief executive officer, an outsider tasked with helping the bank resolve outstanding regulatory issues.

In recent days, Wells Fargo has been more vocal about the burdens of the asset cap in the current crisis. It said on Sunday that the balance-sheet restrictions forced it to limit lending through the Paycheck Protection Program to $10 billion. It has been prioritizing loans to business customers and nonprofits with fewer than 50 employees.

Kim Gorton, CEO of Slade Gorton & Co., a Boston-based seafood processor and distributor, said she hasn't been able to get a Payment Protection Program loan through Wells Fargo despite repeated attempts that began on Friday. The bank is her primary lender.

A Wells Fargo representative told her Monday morning that her company wouldn't be eligible because the asset cap had limited the bank's ability to handle loans, she said. Slade Gorton employs roughly 85 people, including about 25 who are on furlough. Wells Fargo is a large commercial lender in the $100 billion seafood industry, which is struggling right now as restaurants shut down.

"It's not just my little company getting put in this situation," she said on Monday. "It's thousands of other companies."

Write to Ben Eisen at ben.eisen@wsj.com and Andrew Ackerman at andrew.ackerman@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

April 08, 2020 13:29 ET (17:29 GMT)

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