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Wells Fargo to refund fees caused by its delays

Bank charged some mortgage borrowers for ‘rate-lock extension’

By Lauren Raab, Los Angeles Times
Published: October 4, 2017, 5:16pm

LOS ANGELES — Wells Fargo & Co. said Wednesday it will refund a swath of fees it assessed to mortgage borrowers whose delays in completing their loan applications were primarily the bank’s fault.

As it looks to win back trust after a scandal over its sales practices, the San Francisco bank said it will reach out to customers who paid so-called “rate-lock extension” fees from Sept. 16, 2013, through Feb. 28, 2017, and give refunds to customers who don’t think they should have paid.

The fees are supposed to only be charged when borrowers fail to finish their paperwork on time and want to retain the initially quoted interest rate on their home loan.

The San Francisco bank said that roughly $98 million in extension fees were assessed to about 110,000 borrowers during that period. The bank said the amount to be refunded probably will be lower, as not all of the fees assessed were actually paid and some fees already have been refunded.

In July, the Los Angeles Times reported on a wrongful-termination lawsuit by a former Wells Fargo mortgage banker who alleged that the bank falsified records so it could blame mortgage-processing holdups on borrowers — and that it fired him for trying to report the practice.

The mortgage fee matter also has been the subject of a class-action lawsuit, and the bank reported in August that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was investigating the matter. Wells Fargo has acknowledged that the controversy was a factor in a shake-up of bank’s mortgage division.

Rate-lock fees can be significant, ranging from 0.125 percent to 0.25 percent of the total amount of a mortgage, depending on the size of the loan and other factors. For a homebuyer borrowing $400,000, a 0.25 percent fee is $1,000.

Wells Fargo is the nation’s largest mortgage lender, with $244 billion in home loans last year, or 12 percent of all U.S. mortgages.

The bank said Wednesday that an internal review “determined a rate-lock extension policy implemented in September 2013 was, at times, not consistently applied, resulting in some borrowers being charged fees in cases where the company was primarily responsible for the delays that made the extensions necessary.”

As of March 1 of this year, the bank said, a centralized review team is making sure the policy is applied consistently. The refunds will start to go out this quarter, it said.

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