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Entries categorized as ‘checking accounts’

Will banking by cell phone be an industry transformation or the latest flop?

August 11, 2008 · No Comments

Mobile banking holds a lot of promise — both industry experts and nonprofit activists hail it as a transformation in the industry. Industry experts like to be able to reach consumers anywhere — banking by mobile device will make banking possible all the time — and nonprofit experts see the potential for more low-income and/or underbanked people to have better access to accounts that can help them build assets.

Nonprofit experts make a great case. The estimated 10 percent of Americans who don’t have bank accounts — who are overwhelmingly low-income — have no place to store their money, and don’t have access to the types of accounts that help them build interest, build credit, and to the larger array of financial services such as car loans, student loans, and home mortgages. Given that cellphones have become a ubiquitous item, reaching the underbanked by cellphone seems like a terrific delivery system.

But will we realize that mobile banking will be filled with the same hidden fees and pitfalls that bank accounts are currently laden with? The mobile banking experience reminds me of the hype around prepaid debit cards as a way to transition underbanked people to the banking system, but then the types and numbers of fees with prepaid cards started to seem overwhelming.

Let’s not forget that banking on the web, in concert with the proliferation of ATMs in the late 90s, was supposed to transform banking also. In many ways it has transformed banking. But the internet hasn’t led to the disappearance of bank branches as was predicted. And in fact a plan by Bank One to charge customers money to speak to a teller — designed in part to increase the use of ATMs and internet banking — flopped miserably.

Categories: checking accounts · the underbanked

Ensuring that young Americans get the proper financial education

May 11, 2008 · No Comments

The state of financial education in the United States is lamentable. Wouldn’t it be great if young Americans in elementary school or high school were given courses on how to balance a checkbook, how to buy a home, how to budget their hard-earned money to save for the future? Many young people fail in the management of their first consumer credit experience, establish bad financial management habits, and stumble through their lives learning by trial and error.

One of the most promising groups working to change this lamentable situation is the Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy. After discovering this deficiency in financial literacy, the Coalition´s direct objective is to encourage curriculum enrichment to ensure that basic personal financial management skills are attained during the K-12 educational experience.

More on their website.

Categories: checking accounts · credit card clarity

Think twice before you swipe your debit card

March 30, 2008 · No Comments

Do you make simple math errors? The next time you do, you may pay $29 for it.

And if you commit the egregious crime of not knowing how much money is in your bank account, you pay pay upwards of $116.

A recent surveys of “courtesy” overdraft protection found that fees for one overdraft cost an average of $29 at our nation’s largest banks. So the next time you accidentally try to withdraw money from an ATM that overdraws the money in your account, be prepared to pay the consequences. In fact, many banks will allow you to use your debit card for purchases or an an ATM, and won’t tell you when you’re about to overdraw your account and incur a fee.

But what’s particularly egregious is that banks will charge you for each transaction you make when the account is in the red. For example, let’s say you set out Saturday afternoon to run some errands and you don’t realize you have only $30 in your bank account. You use your debit card to pay for $40 in groceries. That’s a $29 fee. Then you buy a $10 lunch on the same debit card. There’s another $29 fee. What if you need to fill up your gas tank for $40? And God forbid you get thirsty and buy a soda for $1.50? There’s two more fees of $29. In this scenario, the bank punishes you with $116 in fees because of your horrendous mistake.

Let’s say on Monday you check your bank account at work and realize your error and transfer money from your savings account to your checking account to bring it back in the black. So, essentially the bank extended you a loan for the roughly 48 hours that you had no money in your savings account. The problem is, in this scenario you borrowed $91.50 and paid $116 in fees.

Sound a little ridiculous? In banks’ own defense, many of them are known for reversing fees in these scenarios when customers complain loud enough.  But I think most Americans would agree that we’d prefer bank accounts that allow us to build assets and get ahead, and don’t particularly care to put up with navigating a labyrinth of fees just to keep our own hard-earned money in a safe place.

 

Categories: checking accounts

Banks relying more on our fees for their income

March 30, 2008 · No Comments

Amount Americans pay every year to banks in fees on checking accounts: $36 million. The Charlotte Observer ran an excellent story about overdraft fees and the numerous other fees associated with bank accounts.  

http://www.charlotte.com/business/story/528936.html

Banks relying more on fees for income

They’re banking on you to pay up

CHRISTINA REXRODE

crexrode@charlotteobserver.com

Add this to the list of things that are getting more expensive: penalties that banks charge you for breaking their rules.

Charges like overdraft fees, stop-payment fees, and ATM surcharges are on the rise, according to a report released last week by the U.S. Government Accountability Office. And that’s not all: The report also says that financial institutions are increasingly relying on such charges to supplement income.

The GAO undertook the study because lawmakers thought consumers might be unaware of the fees they were shelling out on their checking and savings accounts — more than $36 billion in 2006.

The GAO alleges that banks aren’t always making information about their fees readily available to potential customers or on their Web sites; federal banking regulators have said they’ll look into the matter. The banks say that the fees enable them to offer more services to customers; they also point out that the fees are largely avoidable.

That’s cold comfort to consumers like Lori Irvin, a 31-year-old Charlotte resident. She was charged for stopping payment on a check she’d written for some mail-order products that turned out to be faulty. “If you’ve got a stop payment, it’s probably because someone has gotten a hold of your check who shouldn’t have, or someone’s done a disservice to you,” Irvin said. “And then you have to pay $25 to stop your own check?”

According to one measure cited in the federal report, the average stop-payment fee in 2007 was $19.41, a 17 percent increase since 2000, after adjusting for inflation. Overdraft fees increased 11 percent to $23.13, and the charge for returning a deposited item, which happens when you deposit a check that bounces, increased 49 percent to $12.31.

The fee that banks charge their customers for using other banks’ ATMs actually declined, from an average of 92 cents to 69 cents. But Randall Bevan, a Charlotte resident and a customer of BB&T Corp., is irked that it even exists. He was in Philadelphia recently for business and needed cash. BB&T, based in Winston-Salem, has more than 2,000 ATMs, but none are in Pennsylvania. So Bevan, who works in medical sales, used an ATM operated by PNC Bank.

PNC didn’t charge him for the transaction, but BB&T charged him $2, said Bevan, 40.

“I thought that was pretty lame on BB&T’s part,” Bevan said. “It’s not a lot of money. It’s more the principle of the thing.”

What the banks say

BB&T says it is simply passing along the charges: When its customers use other banks’ ATMs, BB&T has to pay a fee to an ATM operating network. Also, four of BB&T’s checking accounts, including its student checking, let users make a certain number of withdrawals each month from foreign ATMs free of charge.”We want customers to avoid those fees, and they can,” said spokesman Bob Denham. “Our hope would be for the client who was hit with the fee to visit one of our branches because somewhere in those four accounts he should be able to qualify, and he won’t have to worry about those fees.”

The American Bankers Association says those fees allow banks to invest in better services for customers. “Sometimes it’s a misnomer to look at these simple stories about fees, because the level of services has gone up,” said Bob Davis, executive vice president of the American Bankers Association.

Besides, some consumer fees have decreased, as the banks point out. The same study in the GAO report found that the fees for some transactions — including ATM annual fees and overdraft transfers linked to a deposit account — had decreased.

Finally, the banks point out that most consumer fees are avoidable. Bank of America spokeswoman Diane Wagner emphasized that the bank launched a campaign last June to teach customers how to avoid charges like overdraft fees. On its Web site and in other literature, the bank outlines tips like setting up e-mail or cell phone alerts for when your account drops below a certain balance.

“We would be delighted if our customers had a positive in their account rather than a negative, and we want them to experience zero overdraft by having materials such as fee education available to them,” Wagner said.

Next month, Bank of America will raise the charge for an overdraft or returned item from $20 to $25.

– Christina Rexrode: 704-358-5170

How to avoid fees

If you’re careful, you can avoid the fees that banks will charge you for breaking their rules. Here are some suggestions on how:

• Only withdraw cash from your own bank’s ATMs. If you can’t get to one of your own bank’s ATMs, get cash by using your debit card at a grocery store, drugstore or discount retailer and choosing the “cash back” option. If your bank doesn’t have many ATMs near you, consider switching banks.

• Keep track of the balance in your checking account by immediately recording every transaction. Also, check with your bank about getting a text message or e-mail every time your account drops below a certain balance.

• Sign up for overdraft protection. You can link your checking account to your savings account or a credit card so you won’t be charged if you spend more than your checking account holds.

Average fees rising

Insufficient funds

$24.18

11 percent increase

Overdraft

$23.13

11 percent increase

Returns of deposited items

$12.31

49 percent increase

$19.41

Stop payment order

17 percent increase

– Source: Government Accountability Office. Fees are adjusted for inflation and reported in 2006 dollars.

Categories: checking accounts

Baltimore CASH Campaign as a model for banking the underbanked

March 14, 2008 · No Comments

Walletwatch sat in on a presentation of Baltimore CASH Campaign. This spring, the nonprofit organized several volunteer income tax assistance (VITA) sites thoughout that city, where they prepare working families’ taxes for free to make sure they claim all exemptions and credits, especially the earned income tax credit.

Most underbanked individuals are turned off by mainstream banks because of the formalities and upscale culture of entering a bank and filling out account-opening paperwork. Many VITA sites have banks at their tax prep sites so that their tax filers can put their refunds right into a savings account, CD, or IRA. But what makes Baltimore CASH so unique is that their bank partners allow the volunteers to administer account-opening proceedures, making the tax filer feel more at ease with the process.

More info on Baltimore CASH Campaign at http://www.baltimorecashcampaign.org/services.htm

Categories: checking accounts · the underbanked

“Overdrawn!” the movie premieres on Current TV

March 11, 2008 · No Comments

Filmaker Karney Hatch pounds the pavement to investigate the overdraft charges on his bank statements, eventually taking Wells Fargo to small claims court. 

Check out his excellent film, which includes interviews with Rep. Carolyn Maloney and Ralph Nader, among others.

More on Current TV

Categories: checking accounts
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