Wells Fargo & Company

WFC
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 12, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
14.6%FY2025
Moat
Narrow
Top Holder
Vanguard Group9%
Institutional
77.5%
Bull Case
ROTCE normalization toward 17–18% and aggressive capital returns are substantially undervalued at current multiples, implying significant upside.
Bear Case
A CRE credit cycle deterioration could force elevated provisions that delay ROTCE expansion and pressure earnings well into 2027.

Business Model


ticker: WFC step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Wells Fargo & Company (WFC) — Business Overview

Business Description

Wells Fargo is the third-largest U.S. bank by assets and one of the four largest U.S. universal banks. After nearly 7 years constrained by the Federal Reserve's $1.95T asset cap (imposed February 2018 after the 2016 fake-accounts scandal), the cap was finally lifted in June 2025 — unlocking the bank's ability to grow loans, deposits, and trading books for the first time since early 2020. CEO Charlie Scharf (since 2019, formerly Bank of New York Mellon CEO and Jamie Dimon protégé) is widely credited with the operational and regulatory turnaround.

Revenue Model

  • Net Interest Income (~55% of revenue): ~$50B targeted in 2026; spread between deposit costs and loan/securities yields
  • Consumer & Commercial fees (~25%): Service charges, card fees, mortgage banking, treasury services
  • Wealth & Investment Management (~12%): Asset-based fees, brokerage; $2.2T+ client assets
  • Corporate & Investment Banking (~8%): Trading + IB fees; CIB Markets revenue +19% YoY in Q1 2026

Products & Services

Consumer Banking and Lending
  • Checking/savings, credit cards, auto loans, home lending, personal loans
  • Digital banking (the app is well-rated; 35M+ digital customers)
  • Branch network of ~4,400 (still largest in US by some metrics)
Commercial Banking
  • Mid-market commercial banking
  • Treasury management, asset-based lending
  • Equipment finance, commercial real estate
Corporate and Investment Banking
  • M&A advisory, ECM/DCM
  • FICC, equities, derivatives trading
  • Foreign exchange, rates
  • Commercial real estate lending (historically the largest US CRE bank)
Wealth & Investment Management
  • Wells Fargo Advisors (3rd-largest US brokerage by advisor count)
  • Private Bank for HNW/UHNW
  • Abbot Downing for institutional/family office

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

  • Consumers: ~70M customers
  • Small businesses: ~3M
  • Mid- and large-corporates: Significant commercial banking + IB relationships
  • Wealth clients: $2.2T in client assets
  • Geographic: Concentrated in US (~95% of revenue)

Competitive Position

WFC's main differentiation: (1) #1 US mortgage originator historically (still top 5), (2) largest US branch network, (3) deep consumer deposit base (~$1.4T deposits), (4) leading commercial real estate lender, (5) #3 US wealth management by client assets behind Merrill (BAC) and Morgan Stanley. The asset-cap removal unlocks loan growth that had been frozen for 6+ years — the bull thesis is that WFC can finally compete on balance sheet again. Faces JPM (#1 across most categories), BAC (#2 deposits), Citi (#3 commercial); also Goldman/MS in CIB; Schwab/Fidelity in wealth.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1852 (Wells, Fargo & Co. — initially express + banking)
  • Headquarters: San Francisco, CA
  • Employees: ~213,000 (after AI-driven 2026 cuts)
  • Exchange: NYSE
  • Sector / Industry: Financials / Diversified Banks
  • Market Cap: ~$240B (May 2026)
  • CEO: Charles Scharf (since October 2019)
  • Total Assets: ~$1.95T (now able to grow post-asset-cap removal)
  • Dividend: $1.60+ annual (~$0.40 quarterly)
  • Major 2025 milestone: All 14 major consent orders resolved

Financial Snapshot


ticker: WFC step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Wells Fargo & Company (WFC) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2023 FY2024 FY2025 YoY
Revenue $115.3B $125.4B $123.5B -1.5%
Net Interest Income $52.4B $47.7B $46.7B -2.1%
Noninterest Income $44.8B $48.0B $47.0B -2.1%
Net Income $19.1B $19.7B $20.3B +9%
EPS (diluted) $4.83 $5.37 $5.95 +11%
Return on Tangible Common Equity 13.0% 14.0% 15.0% +1pp

Q1 2026 Highlights (most recent reported)

Metric Q1 2026 YoY
Net Income $5.3B +12%
EPS $1.60 +13%
Consumer Banking & Lending Revenue +7%
Commercial Banking Revenue +7% (tax credit/equity investment gain)
CIB Markets Revenue +19% FICC +15%, Equities +21%
Wealth & Investment Management Revenue +14% $2.2T client assets (+11%)
Loans Average Growth +10% YoY First post-asset-cap quarter at full pace

Asset Cap Removed (June 2025)

Milestone Date
Asset cap imposed February 2018 ($1.95T cap)
Asset cap removed June 2025
Loan book crossed $1T for first time since 2020 2H 2025
All 14 consent orders resolved 2025

Balance Sheet & Capital (Q1 2026)

Metric Value
Total Assets ~$2.05T (now growing post-cap)
Total Deposits ~$1.45T
Total Loans $1.0T+
CET1 Capital Ratio ~11.3% (well above 9.4% required)
Tangible Book Value/Share ~$48

Key Ratios (approximate, May 2026)

  • P/E (forward): ~11x | P/TBV: ~1.4x | Dividend Yield: ~2.0%
  • ROTCE: 15% (medium-term target raised to 17-18%)
  • Efficiency Ratio: ~65%

Growth Profile

2025 was the inflection year — asset cap removed June 2025; 2H 2025 saw loan growth normalize at +10% YoY. Q1 2026 was the first full post-cap quarter with broad segment strength (Markets +19%, Wealth +14%). FY26 NII guidance ~$50B reaffirmed (from FY25's $46.7B). Management has raised medium-term ROTCE target to 17-18% (from prior 15%) — reflecting the cap-removal upside, expense leverage, and CIB growth.

Forward Estimates

  • 2026E Revenue: ~$130-135B (+5-9%)
  • 2026E EPS: ~$6.50-7.00 (consensus, +9-18%)
  • 2026E ROTCE: 16-17% (vs 15% FY25)
  • 2027E EPS: ~$7.50-8.00
  • 2027E ROTCE target: 17-18%

Capital Return

  • 2025 returned $23B to shareholders: $5B dividends + $18B buybacks
  • Quarterly dividend $0.40/share = $1.60 annual ($5-6B paid)
  • Buyback potential reduces share count by 5-8% over 18 months
  • CET1 well above requirements provides flexibility for accelerated returns

Recent Catalysts


ticker: WFC step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Wells Fargo & Company (WFC) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Asset cap removed June 2025 — loan growth restored — After 7+ years constrained, WFC can now grow its balance sheet again. Loan book crossed $1T for first time since 2020; average loan growth +10% YoY in Q1 2026. Markets revenue +19% YoY (FICC +15%, Equities +21%). Bulls argue the next 3-5 years will see WFC compound earnings power as the bank deploys legacy excess liquidity and re-takes share lost during the cap years. Stock outperformed KBW Bank Index by ~15% post-cap removal.

  2. $23B capital return in 2025 + buyback runway — 2025 returned $23B ($5B dividends + $18B buybacks). With CET1 at ~11.3% vs ~9.4% required, WFC has significant excess capital. Bulls model potential 5-8% share count reduction over 18 months — meaningful for a ~$240B market cap. Combined with mid-single-digit dividend growth = ~10%+ total capital return yield.

  3. All 14 consent orders resolved — regulatory overhang clearing — The multi-year regulatory penalty box is now empty. Charlie Scharf's "ruthless" focus on compliance has delivered: every major consent order resolved by 2025. This removes a structural headwind, reduces compliance cost run-rate (estimated ~$2B+ annual savings opportunity), and enables management to focus 100% on offense rather than remediation.

  4. Medium-term ROTCE raised to 17-18% (from 15%) — Management raised the medium-term ROTCE target — confidence signal from a CEO not known for over-promising. Combined with NII guide of ~$50B (vs FY25 ~$47B) and CIB momentum, EPS could compound at 10-15% through 2027-28. Stock at ~11x forward EPS provides margin of safety.

Bear Case Risks

  1. CRE exposure remains elevated — WFC is historically the #1 US CRE lender. While office loan exposure reduced ~20% in last 12 months, urban office vacancies remain elevated (15-20% in major markets). Continued CRE write-downs or refinancing distress through 2026-27 could pressure provisions for credit losses. Of any large bank, WFC has the most absolute CRE risk.

  2. NIM compression in declining rate environment — Fed has moved to "neutral" 3.50-3.75% range; further cuts likely in 2026. WFC's deposit beta and asset repricing dynamics mean NII has faced YoY declines through 2025. The bull case requires loan growth + NIM stability — if rates fall faster than expected, NII targets miss.

  3. Basel III Endgame implementation could limit buybacks — Despite March 2026 "softening" of Basel III, large banks still face higher capital requirements that could compress buyback capacity. If final rules require materially more CET1 vs. current levels, the buyback engine that supports the bull case slows.

  4. Legacy compliance / technology risk — Despite resolving all 14 major consent orders, WFC's 2016 scandal legacy means investors remain wary of regulatory surprises. Tech execution (system modernization, AI banker tools) is a continuing investment area that could underperform if execution stumbles. WFC announced material AI-driven job cuts in 2025-26 — execution risk during a transformation.

Upcoming Events

  • Q2 2026 earnings (July 2026) — NII trajectory, post-cap loan growth, buyback pace
  • CCAR / DFAST 2026 — Summer 2026 capital plan; potential buyback announcement
  • Q3 2026 earnings (October 2026) — Wealth, CIB, Commercial growth visibility
  • Annual Investor Day — Multi-year algorithm post-cap removal
  • Basel III Endgame final rules — Capital implications for buyback capacity

Analyst Sentiment

Sell-side consensus is Buy with average price targets in the $85-95 range vs. recent ~$72 trading levels (~15-30% upside). Bulls (Wells Sees own analysts unusually bullish; Jefferies, Morgan Stanley) cite asset cap removal, $18B buyback pace, and 17-18% ROTCE target. Bears focus on CRE exposure, NII pressure from rate cuts, and the long shadow of the 2016 scandal. With Cramer + others noting WFC was a $33 stock — most analysts see a multi-year recovery story still in early innings.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-12

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

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