Banks! Sorry RANT coming!!!

if you order currency from us on a week day its here the next day with no charge, just dont use i lol as i dont want the others to know what im taking lol
 
Minniespal said:
I really thought I had heard everything ~ Now I know why I do all my banking online :rolleyes:
Me too. Even deposit cheques via the cashline machine so don't even need a branch.
 
I am very lucky with my bank, they don't charge commission on TC or money, plus they have just announced free American Express TC card as well as excellent free travel insurance and mobile phone insurance as part of the account package :thumbsup2
 

mushumadness said:
unfortunatly alot of people are elft in debt when relatives die, its awfull but true,

one of the questions we ask people who come in for loads visa etc is if they want the insurance that means the debt is paid on event of death, or payments covered through illness, and if they say no we ask who would pay the loan if they passed,

I can see me getting flamed for working at a bank,

Fortunatly for us the law says if the person died without assets, as my father did, nothing not even his bedroom furniture in my house was his. The debts die with him, but it doesn't stop the banks from trying to scare relatives into paying.
 
princess jackson said:
Obi wan kenobi,

Which bank as sound likes a great deal, my bank has changed the travel insurance to europe from Worldwide. And mobile phone insurance i need as i washed my phone.

its Nat West Advantage Gold account.
It now gives you;
annual family travel insurance
mobile phone insurance
identity theft protection
£100 off package travel with the advantage gold travel service (run by air miles actually)
10% off home electrical goods, 20% off cds and dvds
20% off a load of Uk attraction sites
American express travellers cheque card free
commission free travel money
25% off car insurance and home insurance
special preferential banking rates on various loans and mortgage rates and 1% off the personal loan rate
there are a few other things as well, which I can't remember at the moment
 
Wonder how we will get on when all our banking is done in India!!! My DH has worked for HSBC for 28 years and has just found out his department (securities) is closing and all their jobs are going to india best thing is they are bringing them to their centre to train them up!!
 
The Bank I work for does 'allow' large amounts of cash to be taken but obviously we have to have it in order to give it out.

The only way to guarantee the funds are available is to order it in advance.

It may seem daft when it is 'your money' but for security & insurance there is a maximum cash limit onsite (which will be alot lower than you think) and if another customer takes alot of cash 10mins before you ask for it then it may be all gone. This isnt just my bank either as when we had builders in DF's bank had to ask him to return at the end of the day when they had managed to scrape together £5k.

With regards to having a visa logo on your debit card I cant comment as we do maestro.

:sunny:

Jodie
 
Bank bashing is a UK sport, isn't it? :teeth: Having worked for a major bank for 26 years, it's probably not surprising that I'm able to see things from 'the other side'. That's not to say that I don't have issues with some practices, but that's probably more to do with 'big business' than banks per se.

Now, this may surprise some of you, but bank notes do not magically materialise in bank branches. I'm being facetious, of course, but humour me ;) . Cash is a physical commodity. In much the same way that supermarkets order product lines based on demand, bank branches have to forecast the amount of cash they need based on trends. Tesco in Stow-on-the-Wold most likely has to order more of its Finest range than my local store here in Quedgeley. Some bank branches will need to send cash to its holding centres, whilst others will need to order it in. The really lucky ones will have a balance between the cash paid in and that paid out.

The reason branches are only permitted to hold a certain amount of cash has much less to do with security and insurance (have you ever seen a bank strongroom? Anyone who gets into one deserves their prize) than it does with pure commerciality. Quite simply, it costs the banks a fortune to hold cash they're not using (the same as Marks and Spencer holding too much knicker stock). So, the argument that it's 'our money' is irrelevant. I find it frustrating when I want to buy a dress and they don't have my size, but I can accept that if a shop has sold all its stock of my size on a particular day that they can't get Scotty to 'beam one up'.

Now, on to the Visa charges. Firstly I need to explain the different layers in the transaction. Visa is a framework which allows the system to operate. It is owned by thousands of financial institutions. One of those institutions will be your card provider and it provides you with credit. You are a debtor in that company's balance sheet. It earns money from you in interest charges and it stands to lose if you fail to pay, or if your card is used fraudulently. Then there are card acquirers (known in the bank for which I work as merchant services). They provide the hardware (e.g. chip and PIN machines) and software to allow the retailer to process the transactions and receive payments from the credit card company. These are the people which charge the retailer for their services. For credit card transactions that tends to be a percentage, for debit card transactions it is a flat rate (pence per transaction, regardless of amount). The retailer can choose to treat this as a business overhead (and thus not pass it on to you), to pass on the expense to you (at cost), or to make a profit. Any travel agent charging £62 from a Visa debit card transaction is choosing the profit option. In fact, the middle option is actually the smart option for the retailer. The transaction is cost-neutral, whereas accepting cash will cost them money - cash handling is a bank's biggest transactional expense and the customer will be charged more for paying in cash than for any other transaction. That's why businesses which deal in large volumes of cash (such as supermarkets) are so keen to give you 'cash back' - it hugely reduces their costs.

Hope it's been an education! ;)
 





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