Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE:WFC) just got a green light from the Federal Reserve to break free from a major regulatory handcuff, with Wall Street analysts saying the move could unlock double-digit earnings growth and rising confidence in the stock.
On June 3, the Federal Reserve removed the asset cap provision from its 2018 consent order against Wells Fargo.
The restriction, imposed following a series of scandals tied to improper customer practices, had capped the bank's total assets at $1.95 trillion.
While other parts of the order remain in place, lifting this specific cap eliminates a major constraint on growth.
In a note shared on Wednesday, the bank’s analyst Richard Ramsden said that the asset cap was “the key limiting factor on WFC’s ability to grow,” and its removal could unleash “a number of idiosyncratic earnings drivers.”
Goldman updated its earnings outlook for Wells Fargo, estimating a 14–19% boost to earnings per share over time.
That's roughly equivalent to a 200 to 280 basis point uplift in return on tangible common equity (ROTCE), potentially pushing the 2026 ROTCE range to 16.5%–17.3%.
That's a meaningful jump from the firm's previous estimate and reflects multiple drivers:
“Removal of the asset-cap is a positive catalyst, both fundamentally and for stock valuation,” said Bank of America’s analyst Ebrahim Poonawala in a note to clients.
Poonawala raised his price target from $83 to $90, assigning higher valuation multiples based on improved clarity on growth prospects.
"Management bandwidth is increasingly refocused on franchise efficiency… after several years during which addressing regulatory concerns likely consumed 50%+ of management's attention," Poonawala said, citing a November 2024 meeting with CEO Charlie Scharf.
Poonawala indicated Wells Fargo is poised to grow earnings meaningfully through its corporate and investment banking arm, especially after the firm invested heavily in hiring experienced bankers like Doug Braunstein and Fernando Rivas.
He forecasts that all four of Wells Fargo's core business segments could deliver best-in-class returns, with a 16%–19% ROTCE potential.
Investors welcomed the news. Shares of Wells Fargo rose 3.1% during early trading on Wednesday, hitting their highest level since early March.
The stock is up nearly 8% year-to-date, underperforming large bank peers such as JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) and Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C).
Compared to the broader financial sector, as tracked by the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLF), Wells Fargo outperformed by about 2 percentage points year-to-date.
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