A group of 11 jurors will decide whether Wells Fargo & Co. grossly mismanaged a former securities lending program and lied about its safety, or whether the financial calamity that followed the boom was to blame for millions of dollars in losses.
Lawyers painted vastly different pictures of the multibillion-dollar program in opening statements Tuesday in federal court in St. Paul before U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank. The San Francisco-based bank marketed the program to institutional investors such as pension funds.
The investors accuse Wells Fargo of fraud in playing fast and loose with what was supposed to be a very conservative investment program. They assert that the bank failed to properly monitor and manage the collateral investments, then lied to participants about the performance while investments melted down.
Of the total securities in the portfolio in the fall of 2007, nearly 15 percent were distressed or had defaulted.
The investors say that instead of investing funds in safe investments such as high-grade money market instruments, as they were led to believe, managers were making riskier bets on complicated instruments such as structured investment vehicles, or SIVs.
One such SIV, Cheyne Finance, was run by a London hedge fund and invested in subprime mortgages. Cheyne was put into a receivership.
"Mr. Stumpf runs the bank," Minneapolis lawyer Michael Ciresi said, referring to Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf. "He didn't even know what an SIV was. He had to go to Wikipedia."
Wells Fargo has denied the allegations. It sold the majority of its ClearLend securities lending business to Citigroup Inc. in 2011 and has largely exited the securities lending business.