"California Sues Wells Fargo Over Securities Sales
SAN FRANCISCO — Joining a roster of state lawmen pursuing civil actions against banks, California’s attorney general, Jerry Brown, sued three subsidiaries of Wells Fargo on Thursday, claiming the bank had lost some $1.5 billion for investors in the state who bought auction-rate securities.
The lawsuit, filed in San Francisco, claims that three Wells Fargo units gave “false and deceptive advice” when they marketed the securities to small investors by claiming that they were as safe and liquid as cash. Instead, investors lost money when the market for auction-rate securities collapsed in February 2008.
“More than 2,000 Californian investors who thought they could get their money back when they needed it now can’t,” Mr. Brown said at a news conference. “What we’re seeing today is another example of these complicated financial transactions, so-called financial products that have been part of this massive financial bubble that’s burst.”
In a statement, Charles W. Daggs, the chief executive of Wells Fargo Investments, disputed Mr. Brown’s claims, but expressed regret for “the effects this prolonged liquidity crisis has had on our clients.” He added that auction-rate securities clients had been given access to loans covering up to 90 percent of their investment.
The Securities and Exchange Commission and state regulators have been pursuing banks that sold auction-rate securities, whose rates fluctuated in auctions overseen by the banks, since the market froze last year. In August, for example, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank agreed to buy back some $12.5 billion in auction-rate securities in a deal with the New York attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo, who also reached a $7.3 billion settlement with Citigroup."


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