Key Highlights
- Wells Fargo forecasts increased workforce reductions and higher severance costs in Q4 2025.
- AI adoption to roll out gradually in 2026, driving major efficiency gains across the bank’s operations.
- CEO Charlie Scharf says AI will reshape workflows, but not fully replace human employees.
Wells Fargo is signaling another wave of workforce cuts as part of its ongoing restructuring strategy, with the bank citing stronger efficiency targets and deeper integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI).
CEO Charlie Scharf told attendees at the Goldman Sachs financial services conference that the bank expects higher severance expenses in the fourth quarter and anticipates lower staffing needs as it enters 2026.
The current headcount sits slightly above 210,000, down from 275,000 in 2019, reflecting years of strategic streamlining.
According to Scharf, even without new technology considerations, internal budgeting revealed that Wells Fargo would require fewer employees moving forward. However, the accelerating AI strategy is amplifying these structural changes, prompting analysts to brace for continued Wells Fargo job cuts.
AI Rollout Will Transform Operations but Not Eliminate Human Workers
A central theme of Scharf’s remarks was the significant role Generative AI and automation will play in reshaping the bank’s operations. He highlighted that early use cases, particularly within engineering teams, are already delivering measurable results showing a 30-35% increase in developer efficiency for coding tasks.
Scharf reiterated that AI will not fully replace employees but will fundamentally change how work gets done across Wells Fargo’s technology, operations, and customer service teams.
The bank plans to expand AI deployment gradually through 2026 and beyond, targeting workflows where automation can produce clear performance improvements.
Efficiency Gains Expected Across Technology and Back-Office Functions
The anticipated reduction in headcount is tied closely to broader productivity improvements powered by AI-based tools.
Scharf described the transition as a “positive reality,” especially in technology-heavy departments where automation can streamline tasks, reduce manual workloads, cut redundancies, and improve decision-making.
These measures form part of Wells Fargo’s multi-year transformation initiative that is aimed at creating a more agile and efficient organization capable of competing against digitally advanced peers in the Banking & Finance News landscape.
Cautious Approach to Mergers and Acquisitions Despite Asset Cap Removal
Following the Federal Reserve’s removal of the $1.95 trillion asset cap earlier this year, originally imposed after the bank’s fake-accounts scandal, industry observers expected Wells Fargo to consider acquisitions as a growth lever.
However, Scharf pushed back on those assumptions, stating that the bank will only pursue deals that offer clear strategic and financial value. “We have no interest in doing something which could just add a little bit of earnings to the company,” he said.

