SEC Scrutinizing Wells Fargo’s Cash Sweep Feature for Advisory Clients

Wells Fargo offers three cash sweep options, which allow investment advisory clients to earn a return on uninvested cash balances.

|

Wells Fargo’s cash sweep options for investment advisory clients are being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the bank disclosed in a regulatory filing.

The sweep feature allows such clients to earn a return on uninvested cash balances. The bank offers three sweep options, under which uninvested cash can be deposited into interest-bearing accounts or money market funds.

The note about the investigation was included in Wells Fargo’s 10-Q (quarterly report) filed Oct. 31 with the SEC. The cash sweep options are provided to investment advisory clients when they open an account. No further details about the investigation were included in the filing.

The lender has been working to fix its compliance and repair the damage from an earlier scandal over its sales practices. Its efforts, however, have at times come under renewed criticism following probes into unrelated matters.

One such matter was a hiring policy that required the San Francisco-based bank to interview a “diverse” group of people for some jobs, with half of the candidates being female or nonwhite.

The policy drew scrutiny last year following a report from The New York Times that said the bank had conducted “fake” interviews for jobs that had already been filled.

Also in its Oct. 31 filing, Wells Fargo said the Justice Department had closed its investigation into its hiring practices related to diversity without taking any action.

The issue, however, continues to be under the scanner of the SEC, the bank added.

The lender also remains under an unprecedented asset cap that the Federal Reserve imposed, as well as roughly a dozen consent orders with regulators.

This article was provided by Reuters.

Latest News

See all >>

Scarier Than Death Itself? Running Out of Money First, Americans Say

Inflation, taxes and Social Security worry contribute to fear, Allianz Life study finds.

60% of Retirees Wish They Had a Side Gig, Study Finds

Many seek mental stimulation or wish to support their ideal retirement lifestyle, the D.A. Davidson survey reveals.

Women Investors Find Balance Between Patience and Risk

Most women are comfortable taking risk in their investments and cite patience and discipline as their top investing strengths, a Schwab survey reveals.

Advisor Admits Defrauding 47 Investors Out of $6.9M

The New Jersey man targeted mostly elderly investors in a Ponzi scheme for three decades.

Americans Scale Back Their Retirement Savings ‘Magic Number’ to $1.26M

Cooling inflation means people believe they’ll need $200K less for retirement than they thought last year, according to a Northwestern Mutual survey.

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

It reversed a much criticized change that was expected to force tens of thousands of Americans to visit offices in person each week.