It’s confirmed, Wells Fargo is still losing advisors even as it tries to restore its image.

Wells Fargo and Co. lost a total of 173 advisors in the second quarter, the company said when it reported its second quarter earnings on Friday. Overall, the company’s net income fell 11 percent to $5.2 billion, or 98 cents a share, from $5.86 billion, or $1.08, a year earlier.

Wells Fargo reported a total of 14,226 financial advisors, as of June 30, in its retail brokerage, which includes Wells Fargo Advisors. That figure dropped from the 14,399 financial advisors Wells Fargo reported in the first quarter.

The report didn’t clarify the number of advisors in each of its units, but Wells Fargo Advisor’s website states that as of March 30, more than 9,400 financial advisors were in its traditional brokerage channel (Wells Fargo Advisors) and its in-bank brokerage division held a little over 3,400 advisors.

The earnings report also highlighted some of the costs Wells Fargo has accrued from its mistakes.

Wells Fargo stated its foreign exchange business accrued $171 million in remediation costs with $31 million being refunded to customers who were wrongfully charged additional fees. The company also shelled out $114 million in refunds to overcharged clients in its wealth management unit. It’s also facing remediation costs for its mortgage, insurance and auto-lending businesses along with the $142 million its paying to settle the class-action lawsuit by victims of the fake account scandal.

The bank’s tarnished reputation has also hurt the profitability of its wealth management business. The wealth management division’s net income fell 37 percent to $445 million in the second quarter compared with the same period last year. Wells Fargo added the division’s earnings are also down 38 percent compared with the first quarter and attributes the decline to “higher impairment and operating losses.”

The wealth management division’s client assets are up 3 percent to $1.9 trillion from 2017’s second quarter because of “higher market valuations.” Wells Fargo reported the wealth division is also suffering from a lack of referrals from community banking, possibly because that unit is downsizing. Referrals between community banking and the wealth investment management unit declined by 5 percent from last year.