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25 Wells Fargo bankers added to Canada offices

November 7, 2012 at 1:58AM
In this Oct. 7, 2010 photo, the logo for Wells Fargo Bank is displayed in downtown San Francisco Wells Fargo & Co. said Wednesday, Oct. 20, its third-quarter profit rose 19 percent and beat forecast as losses from failed loans fell for the third straight quarter.
In this Oct. 7, 2010 photo, the logo for Wells Fargo Bank is displayed in downtown San Francisco Wells Fargo & Co. said Wednesday, Oct. 20, its third-quarter profit rose 19 percent and beat forecast as losses from failed loans fell for the third straight quarter. (Associated Press - Ap/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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TORONTO - Wells Fargo & Co., the fourth-largest U.S. lender by assets, said it added 25 bankers in Canada and made the country a priority for international expansion.

Canada's "right at the top," Richard Yorke, who leads the company's international group, said Tuesday. "The Canada strategy is clearly a part of our overall international strategy, and the strategy is focused around leveraging the American nexus, our capabilities and customer base in the U.S."

Canada's government gave San Francisco-based Wells Fargo approval in September to offer commercial and corporate banking, adding to the firm's equipment-financing and capital-finance operations in the country.

Wells Fargo, which had about 135 employees in Canada before the expansion, added bankers specializing in commercial lending, corporate banking, commercial real estate and energy in Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver, Richard Valade, country head, said in the interview. The firm said it plans to add 20 more workers within a year.

"We're now going to be able to serve our U.S.-based clients that have operations in Canada," Valade said. "We'll be able to serve Canadian businesses that have dealings in the U.S. and we'll also be able to deal with local Canadian companies."

The bank's global expansion, which began toward the end of 2010, now includes 20 nations in Europe, Asia and Latin America, Yorke said.

Wells Fargo's international presence is the smallest of the top four U.S. commercial banks. The company had $39.7 billion in foreign loans, or about 5.1 percent of its total, at the end of September.

BLOOMBERG NEWS

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