Wells Fargo & Company

NYSE: WFC
$56.29
+$0.49 (+0.9%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

WFC Articles

Out-of-favor companies are shunned for a variety of reasons, but often those reasons are short-term issues. Products need to be updated, bad headlines, big management changes and more are usually the...
Everyone seems to overlook the past ties between Warren Buffett and JPMorgan. Now those ties just became even deeper.
While the polls have the race pretty tight, one thing is for sure: a victory by Donald Trump would favor a far different group of stocks than a victory by Hillary Clinton.
Perhaps another nail in the coffin of Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC) CEO John Stumpf. Bernie Sanders, former presidential candidate and United States Senator from Vermont wants to know if the...
When scandals break, losses and opportunities can both arise. It has been without argument that Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC) has seen its image smeared and tainted after its account-opening...
Stocks were indicated higher on Monday morning after a week of volatility. One point that keeps getting proved is that investors have found varying reasons to come in and buy stocks after any real...
Friday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades include Citigroup, Enterprise Products Partners, GoPro, Lululemon Athletica and Novavax.
Wells Fargo shares have fallen so much from when the fraud was disclosed, which cost 5,200 employees their jobs and the bank suffered $185 million in fines, that $10 billion has been cut off the...
With everything from analysts lowering estimates to the political cycle to a very hard to follow Federal Reserve, the ingredients are there for a witches brew of volatility.
Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) have jockeyed for the lead as America’s most valuable company, each with a market cap of about $550 billion. One tech giant vs. another. A look at...
Many customers, shareholders and employees want to know why Stumpf is still CEO, and why no one at Wells Fargo has taken responsibility for the scandal.
Several companies that pay modest or no dividends should increase their payouts so that they are at 5%, based on current share prices. Most of these have huge reservoirs of cash and healthy cash flow.
How exactly will investors and bank clients alike treat Wells Fargo after the major fine and settlement that took place over unauthorized account openings?
It is hard to say whether hacking, number of branches, extra fees or troubles like those at Wells Fargo are the greatest danger to consumers. MoneyRates.com thinks it is none of these.
24/7 Wall St. wanted to see what were the top holdings with the highest dividend yields in Warren Buffett's equity portfolio. It turns out that the highest stock yields absolutely blow away the...