Wells Fargo has been offered a penalty of $1 billion by regulators to resolve outstanding investigations related to auto insurance and mortgage lending abuses, the third-largest US bank by assets said today.
Reuters reported this week that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency were preparing a fine of up to $1 billion for Wells Fargo's auto insurance and mortgage lending abuses.
The bank said it may have to revise its quarterly results to reflect the final settlement.
"The CFPB and OCC have collectively offered to resolve for an aggregate of $1 billion in civil money penalties," the bank said in a statement.
"At this time, we are unable to predict final resolution of the CFPB/OCC matter and cannot reasonably estimate our related loss contingency," it added.
Wells Fargo is reeling from heavy costs and penalties related to the sales practices scandal, which came to light in 2016 and led to the ouster of ex-CEO John Stumpf and other senior management.
Executives were grilled in several appearances before the US Congress.
The US Federal Reserve has also imposed restrictions on the bank's growth, forbidding it to expand its balance sheet beyond 2017 levels until it makes internal changes that addressed its board and risk management.
The restrictions on balance sheet growth will cut its annual profit by $300-$400m this year, Wells Fargo said.
Chief executive Tim Sloan has sought to reassure investors that the bank was stable despite the regulatory restrictions.
"I'm confident that our outstanding team will continue to transform Wells Fargo into a better, stronger company; however, we recognise that it will take time to put all of our challenges behind us," Sloan said in the bank's first-quarter results statement today.
The bank recently said it was examining its wealth and investment management business for possible customer abuse, including overcharging and inappropriate referrals, after inquiries from government agencies.
Despite its ongoing woes, the bank reported a 6% jump in profit, saying net income applicable to common stock rose to $5.53 billion, or $1.12 per share in the quarter ended March 31, from $5.23 billion, or $1.03 per share a year ago.
Analysts on average were looking for $1.06 per share, according to Thomson Reuters.
The bank said its total revenue fell 1.4% to $21.93 billion.
Total loans slipped 1.2% to $947.3 billion, hurt most by a decline in average loans in its community banking unit, which includes consumer banking, the area most closely tied to the sales practices scandal.
Non-interest income from mortgage banking, an area where the bank supersedes its peers, fell 23.9% due to rising interest rates. Total non-interest expenses rose 3.3% to $14.24 billion.