Wells Fargo to Ramp Up Buying CLOs After Three-Year Retreat

Wells Fargo & Co. is ramping up buying top-rated collateralized loan obligations, after largely staying away from the $1.3 trillion market following interest rate hikes in 2022, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Wells Fargo has broadly been in talks with managers to buy AAA rated CLO bonds, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. In the past few months, the bank has already bought into a handful of CLO transactions, which buy and pool buyout debt, some of the people said.

The bank has signaled to market participants that they are likely to dedicate more capital for top-rated CLO deals now that the Federal Reserve has lifted its seven-year-long asset cap on the bank, they said.

Wells Fargo was once among the largest buyers of highest-rated CLO bonds, alongside other banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. Many banks only took a six-to-12-month hiatus from CLOs after rate hikes put pressure on their balance sheets in 2022, but Wells Fargo has mostly stayed out of the market since.

A representative for Wells Fargo declined to comment.

Wells Fargo is different than it was the last time it was a heavy buyer of CLOs. When the bank retreated in 2022, it was still subject to an asset cap imposed by the Fed, limiting its balance sheet.