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Wells Fargo Advances Multi-Year Simplification Plan to Enhance Returns
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Key Takeaways
WFC is exiting non-core, lower-return businesses to focus on consumer banking and commercial lending.
WFC agreed to sell its rail lease portfolio to GATX and Brookfield, with regulatory approvals secured.
WFC has completed multiple divestitures since 2018 to cut costs, improve efficiency, and redeploy capital.
Wells Fargo & Company (WFC - Free Report) has been pursuing a strategic exit from various non-core and lower-return businesses to streamline its focus on consumer banking, commercial lending, and high-return areas. This effort, led by CEO Charlie Scharf since 2019, aims to cut costs significantly—targeting up to $10 billion annually—and reallocate capital to core franchises.
In sync with this, in May 2025, WFC agreed to sell its rail lease portfolio to a joint venture of GATX and Brookfield. Marking a significant step in this transaction, this month, GATX Corporation and Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. received all required regulatory approvals to close the deal on or around Jan. 1, 2026.
Earlier, in March 2025, the bank completed the sale of its non-agency third-party commercial mortgage servicing business to Trimont, backed by Värde Partners, reducing exposure to operationally complex commercial real estate servicing activities.
In 2023, the company also sold approximately $2 billion of private equity fund investments in Norwest Equity Partners and Norwest Mezzanine Partners to institutional investors, further aligning its portfolio with core banking priorities. The company also pursued strategic simplifications in its Home Lending business by exiting the Correspondent business and reducing the size of its Servicing portfolio, enabling a more focused mortgage operation targeting bank customers. In 2021, the bank completed several major divestitures, including the sale of its Asset Management business to GTCR and Reverence Capital Partners, Corporate Trust Services to Computershare, and the Canadian Direct Equipment Finance business to TD Bank, allowing Wells Fargo to concentrate on core consumer and corporate clients.
Earlier, in 2019, Wells Fargo sold its Institutional Retirement & Trust business to Principal Financial Group, and in 2018, it divested its auto finance segment in Puerto Rico to Popular, Inc.
Together, these simplification efforts are expected to reduce operational costs, improve capital efficiency, and enable Wells Fargo to redeploy resources toward higher-return areas, strengthening its long-term growth prospects. This strategy has contributed to improved profitability metrics, including a targeted return on tangible common equity of 17-18% post-asset cap removal.
Business Streamlining Efforts by Other Financial Firms
In November 2025, The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS - Free Report) reached an agreement with ING Bank Slaski to divest its Polish asset management firm, TFI. The deal, targeted for completion in the first half of 2026 pending regulatory signoff, will end Goldman’s presence in the Polish retail investment market while cementing ING’s long-term ambitions in the region.
GS acquired control of what is now Goldman Sachs TFI through its 2022 takeover of NN Investment Partners. By selling its stake now, Goldman sheds its majority exposure in a mature but relatively small asset-management market — likely freeing up capital and management bandwidth for other priorities.
In September 2025, HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBC - Free Report) agreed to sell its retail banking business in Sri Lanka to Nations Trust Bank PLC.
This divestiture is part of broader streamlining efforts by HSBC announced in October 2024 to enhance operational efficiency. This enables the bank to strengthen its market share and leadership in areas where it has a competitive edge and an opportunity to boost and support its clients.
WFC's Price Performance and Zacks Rank
Shares of WFC have gained 16% over the past six months compared with the industry’s growth of 18.1%.
Image: Bigstock
Wells Fargo Advances Multi-Year Simplification Plan to Enhance Returns
Key Takeaways
Wells Fargo & Company (WFC - Free Report) has been pursuing a strategic exit from various non-core and lower-return businesses to streamline its focus on consumer banking, commercial lending, and high-return areas. This effort, led by CEO Charlie Scharf since 2019, aims to cut costs significantly—targeting up to $10 billion annually—and reallocate capital to core franchises.
In sync with this, in May 2025, WFC agreed to sell its rail lease portfolio to a joint venture of GATX and Brookfield. Marking a significant step in this transaction, this month, GATX Corporation and Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. received all required regulatory approvals to close the deal on or around Jan. 1, 2026.
Earlier, in March 2025, the bank completed the sale of its non-agency third-party commercial mortgage servicing business to Trimont, backed by Värde Partners, reducing exposure to operationally complex commercial real estate servicing activities.
In 2023, the company also sold approximately $2 billion of private equity fund investments in Norwest Equity Partners and Norwest Mezzanine Partners to institutional investors, further aligning its portfolio with core banking priorities. The company also pursued strategic simplifications in its Home Lending business by exiting the Correspondent business and reducing the size of its Servicing portfolio, enabling a more focused mortgage operation targeting bank customers. In 2021, the bank completed several major divestitures, including the sale of its Asset Management business to GTCR and Reverence Capital Partners, Corporate Trust Services to Computershare, and the Canadian Direct Equipment Finance business to TD Bank, allowing Wells Fargo to concentrate on core consumer and corporate clients.
Earlier, in 2019, Wells Fargo sold its Institutional Retirement & Trust business to Principal Financial Group, and in 2018, it divested its auto finance segment in Puerto Rico to Popular, Inc.
Together, these simplification efforts are expected to reduce operational costs, improve capital efficiency, and enable Wells Fargo to redeploy resources toward higher-return areas, strengthening its long-term growth prospects. This strategy has contributed to improved profitability metrics, including a targeted return on tangible common equity of 17-18% post-asset cap removal.
Business Streamlining Efforts by Other Financial Firms
In November 2025, The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS - Free Report) reached an agreement with ING Bank Slaski to divest its Polish asset management firm, TFI. The deal, targeted for completion in the first half of 2026 pending regulatory signoff, will end Goldman’s presence in the Polish retail investment market while cementing ING’s long-term ambitions in the region.
GS acquired control of what is now Goldman Sachs TFI through its 2022 takeover of NN Investment Partners. By selling its stake now, Goldman sheds its majority exposure in a mature but relatively small asset-management market — likely freeing up capital and management bandwidth for other priorities.
In September 2025, HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBC - Free Report) agreed to sell its retail banking business in Sri Lanka to Nations Trust Bank PLC.
This divestiture is part of broader streamlining efforts by HSBC announced in October 2024 to enhance operational efficiency. This enables the bank to strengthen its market share and leadership in areas where it has a competitive edge and an opportunity to boost and support its clients.
WFC's Price Performance and Zacks Rank
Shares of WFC have gained 16% over the past six months compared with the industry’s growth of 18.1%.
The company currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.