Wells Fargo is working on plans to refund tens of millions of dollars to client tied to sales of add-on products as varied as pet insurance and legal services, which were added to their accounts without their full understanding and entailed monthly fees, according to a story in Thursday's Wall Street Journal.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is looking into the issue, the paper says, as is Wells Fargo, which stopped selling these products in mid-2017.
The news comes less than a week after the bank released its fourth-quarter earnings and explained that it would spend $114 million to refund wealth-unit clients who had been overcharged over the last seven years, $171 million to compensate foreign-exchange clients and $334 million tied to car loans and mortgages.
"As previously disclosed …. we are reviewing add-on products sold to consumers by the bank or its service providers and if issues are found during this review, we will make things right with customers in the form of refunds or remediation," the company said in a statement. "We are working with our regulators on the ongoing review."
Some details about this review and concerns with the Wealth & Investment Management unit, which includes Wells Fargo Advisors, came to light on March 1 in a 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.