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Wells Fargo's quarterly profit rises by 22%

Wells Fargo is the fourth biggest bank in the US
Wells Fargo is the fourth biggest bank in the US

Wells Fargo & Co has today reported higher quarterly profit despite flat revenue as the bank benefited from aggressive cost-cutting. 

Revenue declined at Wells' community bank and wholesale bank as net interest income was squeezed by lower interest rates and higher deposit costs. 

But profit in those segments jumped 26% and 6%, respectively, due to lower overall costs. 

Total expenses dropped 4% to $13.4 billion and total net interest income fell 3% to $12.1 billion. 

Wells Fargo, the fourth largest US bank by assets, has been leaning on cost cuts to stabilise its bottom line amid sluggish revenue trends in the wake of sales practices scandals that spread to each of its primary business segments and claimed two chief executives. 

Interim chief executive Allen Parker was thrust into the job in March when former CEO Tim Sloan resigned abruptly, saying pressure from politicians and regulators had become a distraction in running the scandal-plagued bank. 

Now the San Francisco-based bank must also contend with fresh macroeconomic uncertainty from a changing interest rate environment that's pressuring lending margins across the industry. 

The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to cut rates later this month. 

Wells Fargo became the third big bank to report contracting net interest margins, a closely watched metric that measures the difference between how much a bank is charging on its loans and how much it pays for deposits. 

The figure dropped 11 basis points to 2.82% in the most recent quarter. 

Wells Fargo has cut its net interest income guidance twice to reflect the broader economic outlook. 

It relies heavily on interest rates to pad its revenue since it has tons of rate sensitive deposits and mortgage securities.

But the bank still showed that it was it was able to grow its loan book despite macroeconomic headwinds. 

Total loans grew 0.6% to $949.88 billion in the quarter. 

Deposits were roughly flat at $1.3 trillion. 

It said its net income applicable to common stock rose to $5.85 billion, or $1.30 per share, in the second quarter, from $4.79 billion, or 98 cents per share, a year earlier. 

Analysts had expected a profit of $1.15 per share, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. 

Revenue of $21.6 billion was slightly ahead of the $20.9 billion estimate.