Banks Roll Out New Check, card Fees
Don’t you just love America’s banks. Always looking for a way to screw the customer in a new and improved manner. If regulations clamp down in one area, they just move on to another for shady practices. Trying to reign these guys in is like playing wack a mole.
The nation’s banks will be bombarding customers with new fees and products in 2010 as they try to replace more than $50 billion in revenue wiped out by new rules that clamp down on certain business practices.
So far, the changes are mostly concentrated in checking accounts and credit cards. In addition to attaching new fees to old products, banks are introducing new types of accounts that they hope will reel in new customers and reduce their funding costs.
For plastic, the new rules go into effect in February as part of the Credit Card Act of 2009. The rules will limit some interest-rate increases, require more disclosure to customers and prohibit banks from raising interest rates on current balances unless a customer is at least 60 days behind in a payment.
Credit-card issuers collected $22.9 billion in penalty fees—such as those assessed for late payments—in 2009, up from $19 billion in 2008, said , who runs a credit-card consulting firm in Thousand Oaks, Calif.
Credit-card companies already have been racing to slip new fees and practices into customer contracts ahead of the law. Issuers are closing accounts, switching cards with fixed interest rates to variable rates and introducing cards that have an annual fee.




January 2nd, 2010 at 8:17 pm
I like the movement that Arianna Huffington is trying to get rolling. It’s called Move Your Money. They are encouraging people move their money to community based banks and credit unions. By doing that , it becomes more then a statement to the BOA’s and Wells Fargos. It’s an investment in the community as it increases the revenue available for local loans both to private individuals and business’s. If I wasn’t already using local banks for personal and business accts for the last 40 yrs, I would be moving my accts.
I got rid of credit cards a year ago.
Sage Reply:
January 3rd, 2010 at 2:16 am
I’m thinking about moving to the credit union. I just dread getting everything set up for bill pay.
timesr Reply:
January 3rd, 2010 at 10:01 am
@Wizcon, “If I wasn’t already using local banks for personal and business accts for the last 40 yrs, I would be moving my accts.”
I have used small banks most of my adult life; but darn, they get taken over by the big guys.
January 3rd, 2010 at 9:26 am
I h ave BofA and believe me I HATE IT. I tried to open a new account at a few different banks a few years ago, but guess what? My credit score wasnt good enough to get a BANK ACCT…not a loan,, just an acct. where I put in money and write checks for my bills. What I have done almost every week of the last 2 years is cash my check at a local convenience store for $7 is their fee. Then I buy money orders and mail out my bills. A little more BS than using my bank, but my bank is about a 30 minute drive anyway so it works out ok. So I am using BofA as minimally as possible. But when a customer writes me apersonal check I have to use it. BofA made a new policy in the spring that was they can credit transactions in any order they feel over night. Translation: put in your paycheck and have 2 ATM’s coming through, the atm’s will go through first and put you NEGATIVE before they put your paycheck on. Also they started taking our paycheck and holding it for 5 days and bouncing items while it sat there. Same paycheck for several years with no problem, all of the sudden they put a hold on it….This just racks up fees in the billions for them. As stupid as it is, this is a world where it’s very hard to have NO BANK,, But I am going to try to get the small local bank in town to open one for me. Little bank in my town of 3500 makes you give them COLLATERAL for a loan. Imagine that ! You want to borrow 5k, you better show them the title to a car or truck or boat or horse trailer worth 5k first ! Geniuses! GRRRR@Banks !