Bank Fees Rant

v1_0

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Aug 27, 2007
Messages
575
Re: Bank Fees Rant

Ahhh... Having worked for a while at a couple of financial institutions I've had the opportunity to observe some things.

I could go on for pages and pages. Let me hit a few points then move on to the main topic.

Point 1: Money is not distributed equally. A few big customers can very much outweigh a lot of small customers.

Point 2: Banks are pretty much a necessary service. Checks, electronic payments, and even money orders go through banks. Unless you are paying cash or bartering you are using a bank.

Point 3: Banks make money on any money they handle. Even if one side of the transaction uses the bank, it makes money (sometimes more than if both sides of the transaction stay in the bank).

Point 4: When funds are unavailable to you (the out of state waiting period, or not posting till the next day, etc), they are still available to the bank.
Point 4a: This applies when you transfer to another bank - unless you cash out your account right there and then. As soon as they cut your check, the money goes into a 'limbo' state - they don't need to pay you interest on it, but until the *end* of the transfer they still have the money.

So now to the major point. The interesting thing about banks is that they don't manufacture anything - they just store and move money around. There are no materials, tools, etc. to manage.
They make their money on moving money around, but not on storing it. All of this is governed by a fairly wide set of rules to operate within.
Banks really only have a few ways to make more money: move more money around, or charge more to move the same amount. All of the services that they offer are for the express purpose of doing one of the previous - getting more people (or businesses) to put their money into their bank, or for being able to charge for moving money around.

The larger banks are not tied to any one particular community, they have grown much larger than that. Especially the ones that are 'public ally owned' - they are more responsible to the shareholders than to anyone else. So, there is a lot of pressure on those banks - perhaps we can call this 'hypercapitalism' - to make money for the sake of making money. They are necessary enough so that people pretty much have to use some bank, and the larger ones are large enough so that even if they had no 'retail customers' they would probably still make money either as a clearinghouse or from their business accounts (in the short term).

The banks have a pretty good idea of how much they can charge for things before they loose too many people. They do expect people to leave, but they offer enough for other people to open new accounts. And they know that advertising works.

Now and again, they get things wrong. Remember a few years back - some banks were going to start charging a "teller fee" for transactions that involved a teller? That caused a commotion, which was expected. But it also caused charges of discrimination - that was unexpected - that ultimately lead to the dropping of that particular fee. Of course, it was spun a little differently...

It is possible that in the present circumstances of the economy, people will actually start scrutinizing their bank charges more and actually compare banks by them. In that case, there will be an equalizing pressure at some point. OR, perhaps we will start seeing a resurgence of lawsuits against credit unions, and a increase in charges that the larger banks levy against the smaller banks when money changes between the two...
 

Tim Frank

Vice Admiral
Joined
Jul 29, 2008
Messages
5,346
Re: Bank Fees Rant

I closed my National City account after they charged me a $20 INCOMING wire transfer fee.

Since when does it cost a bank money to receive a wire? I work for a brokerage firm and know for a fact that it does not cost $$ to receive an incoming wire.

I will be dealing with my local credit unions from now on.

By the way it's not "too big to fail" it should be "too big to bail out using taxpayer dollars while bonuses are still paid exorbanantly":mad:(my firm is NOT a recipient of any taxpayer funds- we are actually solvent and profitable):D

You work for a brokerage firm and you are slamming the banks for their fees?
Give your head a shake.
That's like the Boston Strangler telling you that "your tie doesn't look quite right, can I tighten it for you"? :eek:
 

ne7800

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Jul 10, 2008
Messages
1,195
Re: Bank Fees Rant

Thank you for your intrest in this thread. We will now be instiuting a $1 fee for replying to this and any other thread, and a .50 cent fee for reading this and any other thread, making a grand total of $1.50 to reply to a thread. Thank you for you intrest and cooperation in this matter.

NE7800
Senior V.P. of BS :D:eek::D
 

CheapboatKev

Vice Admiral
Joined
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Messages
5,813
Re: Bank Fees Rant

Thank you for your intrest in this thread. We will now be instiuting a $1 fee for replying to this and any other thread, and a .50 cent fee for reading this and any other thread, making a grand total of $1.50 to reply to a thread. Thank you for you intrest and cooperation in this matter.

NE7800
Senior V.P. of BS :D:eek::D

You forgot to mention the "$25.00 fee for any new post or response over the 100 character limit"

Also the "$10.00 SPELL CHECK FEE" that should make Iboats RICH!! lol
 
Joined
Sep 5, 2007
Messages
1,790
Re: Bank Fees Rant

You see all those billions the banks lost have to be made up for. I look for interest rates to go up as soon as they figure out a way to do it..I use a credit union and watch over my accounts. BOA is the worse.
 

FBPirate95

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Apr 15, 2009
Messages
840
Re: Bank Fees Rant

They would not post my debit purchases until after the credit, so now every Snickers bar I got had a $33 overdraft fee attached to it. In one week, they tried to charge me $264 in overdraft fees!!

QUOTE]

Overdraft fees are the worst of all. If you overdrafted your account, you didn't have the money to begin with.....how are you expected to pay a fee, much less a $30+ fee?

My wife recently recieved a letter from her credit card issuer....it stated they have recently reviewed her credit report and have determined they are going to lower her credit limit. She was livid....first of all she ALWAYS pays our bills on time. Second of all she's had this credit card for over 10 years, has never had a late payment, always pays more than the minimum, and has never exceeded the balance. I looked into her credit report to find the remainder of an emergency room visit when she was pregnant had recenlty posted as collections. We had no clue that was out there. She called the credit card company and ripped them a new one. They stated they would put it under review again and get back to her. Yesterday she got a letter stating everything had been re-instated. Do these people think we're stupid?

Now that I'm on my soapbox its time to bring hospitals into the mix. That whole collections from the ER visit is a joke too. If anyone has ever visited the ER or hospital in general, they like playing games too. They will send you bill after bill for this and that...different doctor, this procedure....etc. They bill you and the insurance company at the same time. This process goes on and on. We paid at least 5 different bills (totalling over $600) from the ER visit in question, the insurance paid their part....and we had no clue another $125 bill was out there. Those are preditory tactics in my opinion to get as much out of you as possible.

*whew*...stepping down off the soapbox.
 

Tyme2fish

Commander
Joined
Feb 19, 2002
Messages
2,481
Re: Bank Fees Rant

The bank just called me and all was settled to my satisfaction. The $6.00 will be credited back to my account. The manager that called was very polite and very helpful.

Looks like I won't be going to the branch in person today to rant and rave and otherwise make a jerk out of myself. ;)
progress.gif
 

FBPirate95

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Apr 15, 2009
Messages
840
Re: Bank Fees Rant

The bank just called me and all was settled to my satisfaction. The $6.00 will be credited back to my account. The manager that called was very polite and very helpful.

Looks like I won't be going to the branch in person today to rant and rave and otherwise make a jerk out of myself. ;)
progress.gif

Fee for low balance - $6.00

Call to bank to raise holy heck about fee - $0.50

Having the fee refunded 'cause you're right - Priceless

:D
 

Tyme2fish

Commander
Joined
Feb 19, 2002
Messages
2,481
Re: Bank Fees Rant

It turns out that I was partially right and partially wrong. My account is for free checking with no minimum balance. However, I must either use my debit card 5 times a month or have a direct deposit monthly.:redface:

I never use nor carry my debit card and don't even know my pin number. I have been transferring monies into this checking account from another institution almost every month. Seems I just missed the billing cycle by one day before this last transfer which acts like a direct deposit.

So I set it up to have a monthly transfer and my $6.00 fee was credited to my account. I'm happy.:)
 

bowman316

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Oct 21, 2008
Messages
1,822
Re: Bank Fees Rant

Does anyone still get a paper check? Direct deposit is so much easier. Unless you don't have a normal job, and you get paid under the table or something.
 

v1_0

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Aug 27, 2007
Messages
575
Re: Bank Fees Rant

Now that I'm on my soapbox its time to bring hospitals into the mix. That whole collections from the ER visit is a joke too. If anyone has ever visited the ER or hospital in general, they like playing games too. They will send you bill after bill for this and that...different doctor, this procedure....etc. They bill you and the insurance company at the same time. This process goes on and on. We paid at least 5 different bills (totalling over $600) from the ER visit in question, the insurance paid their part....and we had no clue another $125 bill was out there. Those are preditory tactics in my opinion to get as much out of you as possible.

*whew*...stepping down off the soapbox.

This would be universal health care at work.

Public ERs cannot refuse someone - even if they cannot pay.

Car insurance has something similar - uninsured motorist. You are paying a premium on your insurance in case the other person dosn't have insurance....

When you go into a store, you are paying a slight bit more on everything to cover stock "shrinkage". (Pilfering, shoplifting, breakages).

I've heard it said that the bulk of the cost of a ladder goes towards insurance. This to cover court cases for people that use the ladder for something other than a ladder (scaffold, etc).

Let's not get started on taxes....
 
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