News

The bank has closed seven regulatory punishments, known as consent orders, this year and 13 since 2019. It still has one ...
Second quarter earnings season is set to kick off on Tuesday, with expectations that profits grew at the slowest rate in over ...
Sameer Samana, Wells Fargo head of global equities and real assets, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss ongoing tariffs and the ...
U.S. banking giants said consumers remained in good shape even after U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policies roiled ...
Citigroup (C) boosted its full-year net interest income guidance and now sees 2025 revenue at the high end of its previous ...
Wall Street had no idea how to process what hit it on Tuesday. Inflation came in hot, tariffs are back on the table, and ...
Fed stress test success, dividend hike, and growth momentum. Read why I believe WFC is a dividend income champ with further ...
Wall Street has become too optimistic — once again — about the likelihood of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, according to ...
Despite President Donald Trump continuing to tout tariffs as a way to increase U.S. manufacturing, a Wells Fargo report from this week argues meaningfully increasing manufacturing employment will ...
Wells Fargo Chief Executive Charlie Scharf said companies remain in solid shape but are bracing for more potential turmoil from tariffs.
Wells Fargo analysts did the math on what needs to happen in order to align Trump’s tariffs and manufacturing--but it's a long shot.
Despite some high-profile pledges to invest in domestic manufacturing, Wells Fargo doesn't see an increase in factory jobs in the foreseeable future.