Wells Fargo’s head of consumer lending is leaving just two years after being hired by CEO Charlie Scharf.
Mike Weinbach, whom Scharf poached from JPMorgan Chase in the early days of his tenure, will leave Wells Fargo in mid-September to help the division transition to its new leader. Kleber Santos, the bank’s head of diverse segments, representation and inclusion, became the consumer lending group’s new chief on Monday.
The departure comes as the $1.9 trillion-asset Wells Fargo continues coming under scrutiny from regulators and Democratic lawmakers.
Weinbach oversees the company’s auto, credit card, merchant services, personal lending and home lending groups. The latter division has gotten criticism from top Democrats over a Bloomberg
Under Weinbach’s tenure, the consumer lending group has also launched a
In a press release, Scharf called Weinbach a “great leader and an even better person.”
“Mike and I have been discussing his desire to do something different, and we recently agreed that now is the right time,” Scharf said. “I wish him well in his future endeavors, which I am confident he will meet with great success.”
Wells Fargo has historically underperformed its competitors in the credit card business. The Autograph card, which offers triple points for travel, dining and gas, is part of CEO Charlie Scharf’s effort to compete more effectively.
Scharf, who joined Wells Fargo in 2019, had hired Weinbach as part of an
Santos
In the press release, Scharf called Santos a “proven leader” who has significantly boosted Wells Fargo’s representation and inclusion outcomes and pointed to Santos’s retail banking experience. He had previously spent 15 years at Capital One Financial and was the McLean, Virginia-based bank’s president of retail and direct banking.
“I’m confident that his capabilities and his drive will help us continue to strengthen Consumer Lending and prepare it for future growth,” Scharf said.