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Wells Fargo & Company (WFC-PC)

NYSE - Nasdaq Real-time price. Currency in USD
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19.16+0.20 (+1.06%)
As of 12:04PM EDT. Market open.
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Trade prices are not sourced from all markets
Previous close18.96
Open18.97
Bid19.13 x 1100
Ask19.20 x 1300
Day's range18.91 - 19.25
52-week range15.89 - 20.37
Volume29,509
Avg. volume105,569
Market cap126.062B
Beta (5Y monthly)1.21
PE ratio (TTM)3.97
EPS (TTM)4.83
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yield1.09 (5.77%)
Ex-dividend date28 Feb 2024
1y target estN/A
  • Bloomberg

    Wells Fargo Weighs Debut Risk Transfer as Banks Shore Up Capital

    (Bloomberg) -- Wells Fargo & Co. is looking at essentially buying insurance on some of the loans in its portfolio using a transaction known as a synthetic risk transfer, potentially becoming the latest big bank to use the product to cope with looming capital rules.Most Read from BloombergElon Musk’s Robotaxi Dreams Plunge Tesla Into ChaosTrump Has Only $6.8 Million for Legal Fees With Trial UnderwayTikTok to Remove Executive Tasked With Fending Off US ClaimsRay Dalio’s Famous Trade Is Sputtering

  • Reuters

    Wells Fargo bond saleswoman sues over 'unapologetically sexist' workplace

    Wells Fargo was accused of sex discrimination in a lawsuit by a bond saleswoman who said the fourth-largest U.S. bank denied pay and promotions available to men and tolerated an "unapologetically sexist" workplace. The complaint filed on Friday in federal court in Chicago by Michal Leavitt is the latest in a long line of lawsuits accusing big U.S. banks of bias against women. Leavitt said Wells Fargo's practice of steering larger accounts toward men in its financial institutions group cost her up to one-third of her potential pay, and forced her to wait nine years for a promotion to director from vice president.

  • Bloomberg

    Wells Fargo Bond Saleswoman Claims Pay Bias in ‘Boys Club’ Team

    (Bloomberg) -- A Wells Fargo & Co. bond saleswoman sued the bank for sex discrimination, claiming she was denied the same promotions and pay as men and forced to endure a “boys’ club” environment. Most Read from BloombergTraders Are Cashing Out of Markets En MasseNew York’s Rich Get Creative to Flee State Taxes. Auditors Are On to ThemElon Wants His Money BackMagnificent Seven Earnings Arrive With Stocks at Critical MomentXi Orders China’s Biggest Military Reorganization Since 2015Michal Leavitt