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Big Bankers Mounting Sneak Attack on Consumers
Have you received your thank-you note? I'm still waiting for mine.
More than a year into the Wall Street bailout, I've yet to get any sort of "thank you" from even a single one of the big banks that you and I propped up with $12 trillion in direct giveaways, indirect giveaways, government guarantees and sweetheart loans. You'd think their mommas would've taught them better. But I've begun to think that waiting on a simple gesture of banker gratitude is like waiting on Donald Trump to have a good hair day — ain't gonna happen.
Far from showing appreciation, the largest banking chains are now going out of their way to stiff us. Instead of nice notes, they are quietly slipping new gotchas into our monthly credit card bills and bank statements. In June, for example, Bank of America abruptly raised its fee for a basic checking account by 50 percent. Citibank jacked up the interest rate on some of its cards to 29.99 percent. And JPMorgan Chase more than doubled the required minimum payment on its cards.
Across the board, fees have skyrocketed to their highest levels on record, including assessments for such common occurrences as overdrafts (as high as $39), stop-payment actions ($39 — double what it was 10 years ago), balance transfers (up more than 50 percent in the past year) and ATM use (nearly doubled in 10 years).
To add insult to injury, the banks blame us for their rate increases. Because the economy is such a wreck (massive job losses, falling incomes, millions of home foreclosures and other unpleasantness), industry spokesmen say there is a greater risk that customers will bounce checks or fall behind on their credit-card payments. Thus, claim purse-lipped bankers, they must protect themselves from us by ratcheting up rates and fees. "There is an increased riskiness around repayment because of the recession," spaketh one lobbyist for the financial giants.
Glade doesn't make enough "Spring Lilac" to cover up the stench of this argument.
Come on — it was the greed and incompetence of Mr. Jolly Banker that wrecked our economy, caused the recession and forced the odious bailout on us. They want us to pay for that?The truth is, they are socking it to their customers for two reasons: 1) they can, and 2) fee hikes are a shifty way to snatch enormous levels of new income for themselves without doing anything to earn it.
These are the geniuses who made an ugly mess of the core business of banking — which is to make good loans. To make up for their huge losses in that business, bankers have essentially been reduced to flim-flam fee-scammers. Last year, assessment of consumer fees became the main business of banks, totaling 53 percent of the industry's income!
That was before the current outbreak of fee frenzy. In the first three months of this year, for example, Bank of America's fee income rose 50 percent above the same period of 2008 — an extra $4 billion in revenue for the bank.
"Fees 'R' Us" is what big banks have become. This is why they are panicked by reforms presently coming out of Washington. Already, President Obama has signed a bill to restrict credit-card gouging, and Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan (which control about 58 percent of the nation's credit-card market) are scrambling to jack up their rates and fees before the new law takes effect next February.
Now, the bankers are lobbying frantically to kill Obama's plan to create a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which would have regulatory power to prohibit a wide range of finance-industry abuses. For the first time, we consumers would have our own seat at the regulatory table — an agency with the independence and clout to counter the Federal Reserve and other agencies that primarily serve big banks.
From the bailout to the explosion in fees, we've seen that Wall Street's financial titans won't control their greed. For the sake of the economy, the well-being of America's majority and the advancement of our nation's democratic values, we must do it for them. For more information, contact Americans for Financial Reform: www.ourfinancialsecurity.org.
- Posted in




39 Comments so far
Show AllThe priority was to steal all the money and save the banksters. It was all a big lie saying that the banks would then give the money to consumers to save their homes, blah, blah, blah. The poor and struggling people of this country get nothing, not even table scraps. Time to dust off the guillotines and hang piano wire from the lamposts.
Rather than give the money to consumers, banks are using the money to speculate in the unregulated commodities market, thereby inflating the cost of food, fuel and many other products for the already beaten down consumers.
Obama Inc. has enabled this at every step of the way.
Yep. There good evidence banks are buying up tankers filled with Crude and docking them until the price of Oil rises.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601207&sid=a7ATbV1ocXJE
>>Traders are now seeking to store oil products. JPMorgan Chase & Co. booked the newly built supertanker Front Queen to store 2 million barrels of heating oil off the coast of Malta, and several other traders are seeking similar deals, Athens- based Optima Shipbrokers said June 2.
" ... banks are buying up tankers filled with Crude and docking them until the price of Oil rises."
And, of course, JP Morgan and others colluding (tell me they aren't!) to hold oil off the market will ensure rising prices.
My opinion is that the recent move in oil to $70 was not based on fundamental supply and demand. Now that its dropped below $60 over a 12 day period I feel certain it was another manipulation.
It's pretty clear the "market" isn't setting the price. But there's also some push going on against the hedgers starting a couple of new bubbles--or trying to start and sustain them--in energy and food. They could have pretty easily gotten back to preelection summer prices by now unless some very large forces were making some nasty threats to knock it off. Hedge traders do have vulnerabilities, although it takes hefty sums to kick 'em in the jimmies. They're skating on the thinnest of ice right now, and while the people have no say in how the country's run, other megacapitalists do, and many of them have grown weary of wall st's bullshit. It's hurting them, too.
It's no secret that Gates and Buffet, among several others, are working to try to wring the necks of the hedging class of financiers. If they drive food prices well beyond market capacity to sell to most people, they will utlimately sign their own death warrants. Failed states do not make good homes for the obscenely wealthy.
I hope they get caught with there pants down and have to stick that oil where the sun doesn't shine.
From the article:
"Fees 'R' Us" is what big banks have become. This is why they are panicked by reforms presently coming out of Washington. Already, President Obama has signed a bill to restrict credit-card gouging, and Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan (which control about 58 percent of the nation's credit-card market) are scrambling to jack up their rates and fees before the new law takes effect next February."
I see no sign of panic, I see a win-win. O'Bummer gave the banks plenty of lead time to get their new fees in place, and he gets to look like our champion.
And they called Willie "slick"...
"O'Bummer gave the banks plenty of lead time to get their new fees in place, and he gets to look like our champion."
EXACTLY what I was thinking! Nothing changed. They are still raising their fees with plenty of time left.
so this is the monetary return if you own/ buy the govt. the plebians to get 1% on their loans to the banks, and the patrician banks to get 20 - 30%, now legally protected, to give a loan to us.
sweet deal- if you can do it.
Banks have been doing this for decades but now thanks to those tasty bailouts from Obama and Congress, they're free to keep mugging the consumers. I agree with the posters who advocate switching to credit unions. However, it is equally important that we throw out the bums who supported these bailouts and replace them with those who stand against such obscene bailouts.
Bennett Miller
Shreveport, LA
Re Benn_Miller July 10th, 2009 11:33 am and elohim July 10th, 2009 11:34 am
Agreed on credit unions. What would really chafe the bastards is if credit unions would offer a non-profit credit card to "keep the banks honest" (nudge, wink).
If you have a bank card and pay in full each month you aren't making the bank any money and maybe even cost them.
Want to circumvent the banksters, then close your account and join a credit union. THe best defense is to put the bastards out of business.
I agree.
in fact we should have gotten a thank you note from the big boys over at the banks - especially jp morgan and goldman's
it should read: thank you all for taking little to no interest in the scam...i mean credit swap mess
while you all were watching tv and such we got our boy obama to shell out some serious coin and without any oversight or expectations we were allowed to take this cash and party on
we are having our best year ever - the bonuses are flowing once again and we are allowed to raise the charges for doing business with us right through the roof
so thanks
The banksters are a criminal class that owns DC along with the other criminal class the Pols.
The banks are wringing the last pennies from the piggy banks of the citizenry to finance the running of debtor prisons in the camps built by KBR.
Funny, one would have expected millions of angry Americans to cancel their credit cards in protest, and to switch all 'big bank' accounts to locals in protest, or to just pull their cash from 'big bank' accounts, aside from the min. needed to cover bills, etc, and keep it under the mattress.
Easiest protest opportunity ever, right? No walking, no sign carrying, no chance of getting tazered... just making a call and pressing a few buttons... and taking down a few of the 'big banks' with nary an effort...
Yet... nothing.
Americans to "big banks': "Thank you, sir, may we have another?"
Did just that, pulled every dime from Wells Fargo 3 months ago. Now we deal with only the local CU. My 401 has been in low yield savings for over a year. Though I only make a few percent I didn't lose 30-40% like many. I'm out of the stock market for good partially as protest and partially because nearing retirement.
Welcome to the U.S. of Goldman-Sachs.
It's really simple; close your bank account and join a credit union. Then you own your bank as a co-op member...
Oregoncharles
and if you have a bulk of money - yeah right - the credit union in Astoria Oregon will give you over 3% on your checking acct.
Thanks, Jim, for the tip on how the big banks have timed their fee increases to get grandfathered in (presumably) before the new consumer protection measures regarding credit cards take effect in February of 2010.
Also, no big surprize that the bankers' lobbyists are working diligently to kill the Consumer Financial Protection Agency before it gets enacted. Two years ago, I parted ways with Bank of America on a credit card they issued due to a variety of fee gouging related issues. Like a good consumer, I paid off the balance in full and took my modest plastic credit line elsewhere. Let the old invisible hand of the market place work its wonders, you know.
For the next four months, I still received a regular monthly statement from BOA on my closed account however, informing me that I had overpaid on my payoff figure by sending them the amount quoted to me on the phone. I had a $2.17 credit coming to me. BOA's check did not arrive in the mail.
Like a good little consumer advocate, I waded through the maze and determined that the appropriate existing federal regulatory agency was a regional office of the Comptroller of the Currency. I availed myself of their oversight services by sending in a formal complaint, humbly requesting (not so tongue in cheek) that in addition to dislodging my $2.17 refund check, I felt I was due $39 in late fees for each of the last four months from Bank of America, the same as they once charged me.
Silly of me to ask. Yes, I did get my refund check for $2.17 from BOA (good for a celebratory latte at Starbucks) courtesy of the Comptroller's office complaint, along with a detailed blow-off-and-die form letter, which quoted the following language verbatim from the fine print of an earlier billing statement:
"We may suspend or close your account or otherwise terminate your right to use your account. We may do this at any time or for any reason. Your obligations under this Agreement continue even after we have done this."
Several months later, I got a form letter back from the Comptroller of the Currency advising me that the foregoing boilerplate language was all perfectly acceptable under Regulation Z, and there would be no further regulatory involvement in "your contract with the bank." "We cannot intercede in a private party situation regarding the interpretation or enforcement of your contract...... We trust this is responsive to your complaint."
Do not sneer at the potential benefits of creation of an entity like the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency. The so-called regulation of the American credit card industry has long been a bad and dirty joke.
And of course what needs to be more fundamentally addressed is the cynical, obvious idiocy of leaving in place a system which lets the big banks tear up last month's contract and write themselves a new one any time they want, for good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all.
Small wonder such arrogant corporate business practices persist.
Bill from Saginaw
Bill from Saginaw,
Your tenacity and grit are admirable. I just got a note from BOA telling me the interest rate will now change EVERY MONTH acording to the prime rate.. I keep the balance at ZERO so they probably don't like me too much. None of these banks can be trusted. Thanks for puting it to them.
Obama is a Total FAILURE! Wake Up People!
Obama supports the Big Banksters not the workers in America. Have fun when your money means nothing and very soon too. Obama will keep lying to with you with a smiling face. The laugh is at your stupidity though. Wake Up Already! The old days are long gone folks. Stop looking at the USA as you did twenty or even ten years ago. Those times are gone forever. Things will keep getting worse and you will have no place to turn as state's become bankrupt and jobs are less than even now. The Stimulus even at this point is nothing but a band-aid without real structural change which the political and economic elites are against. Welcome to your new Serfdom status. Get ready to work as neoslaves. Wake up out of your stupors folks!
Don't you people realize that the America is a FAILED STATE NOW? That any other country would be under the control of the IMF and World Bank right now? Wake Up because America has Failed and you still want those who allowed it to fail to Fix It for Ya! Man, you people are DUMB!
Liberals and Progressives are very impotent. Wake Up out of your delusional states of mind.
Stop BITCHING IF YOU REMAIN IN THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. ANYONE BITCHING HERE TODAY WHO DOES NOT JOIN THE GREEN PARTY IS JUST YELLING AND COMPLAINING IN VAIN WITH YOUR USUAL FAKE Liberal/Progressive WHINE(ING). STOP IT BECAUSE IT HAS BECOME TIRING LISTENING TO YOU FAKE Liberal/Progressives who actually thought Obama or that the Demnocratic Party---also a party of the military-corporate state was gonna bring any real "change." You so-called Liberals/Progressives have become very pathetic!
The Democratic Party is not an ally of Liberals and Progressives so get into some reality.
Obama is not a Liberal/Progressive but the newest face on the fading of the American Empire.
Obama's healthcare plan can be equated with a euthansia plan and the sooner you knuckleheads face this harsh reality the better off you will be. Get your heads out of your butts! Face facts folks--Obama and Biden are war mongers who back the military-corporatist state and most Democrats in the U.S. House and Senate are conservatives, and not liberals or progressives.
Until the next time, I am sure all of you will keep busy in those Democratic Party delusions and yes the illusion that Obama is such a "great leader."
Obama being an "environmentalist" is like saying the Mafia never killed anyone.
Obama is not trustworthy and you dolts keep thinking he will achieve substantial changes in the failed political system.
You are absolutely right. Half measures and compromises and this calculus of political viability shit is just half assed. Anyone who stays in the Democratic party is beyond stupid.
Yep.
GREED IS THE CREED.
DEBT IS THE NET.
get out of debt and stay out of debt.
Screw 'em.
And, as an aside...aren't we fools for actually BUYING our own TV sets?? Rise up and declare, "WE won't watch the crap unless you buy the TVs for us!!"
Set your TVs out on the curb---by the hundreds, by the thousands!! By the millions!!!
snydly rules!
I rejected the creed;
erasing my debt was my good deed.
If we all do the same,
crooked banks will go down the drain
We don't need to borrow;
it just brings us sorrow.
The money the crooks make,
puts our politicians on the take,
feeds us more wars
and pays the press whores.
Fight the insanity!
Rejoin humanity!
Seriously, Jim, can anything a bank does anymore constitute a "sneak" anything?
Regarding the formation of a finance protection agency, I'd like to think we've learned enough by now to realize that when our government creates an agency, it immediately opens up a bidding war for the capture of that agency in short order by the targets of the regulation. We'll get no seat anywhere soon.
On to the next predictable outrage.
Time to EAT THE RICH!
YUM! That's one high cholesterol diet I'll go for!
.
This is going to be fun.
How do you cook a bankster?
Any recipe for politicians?
Regards
Jeffrey Dahmer
First, you thoroughly cook the right wing; next you do the same to the left wing.
You're wrong Jim! Millions of Americans got thank you notes. They were pink.
Banks are just part of the CABAL !
Read below and you will get a picture, which will be extremely hard to swallow, and very painful to digest: “Collateral Damage” by E. P Heidner, part I and II.
>>> www.scribd.com/people/documents/2169400-ep-heidner <<<
The two documents have just recently been published and are very well researched and referenced (over 400 footnotes). The articles are lengthy, some parts not easy to follow and to digest and they need to be read with an open mind. But they are well worth the effort. They provide the most distressing information (some reads like a thriller).
The implications will challenge how we look at politics, economy, history, finance, war and terrorism. Many persons in the documents are well known; many are right now in pivotal positions of politics and finance. These people do shape OUR life and that of our children right now. The details are stunning. The consequences are BEYOND BELIEF.
There Is No Aleternative
"To what?"
"Our rising up en masse."
"And then what sort of world?"
"It'll be up to us."
"Otherwise?"
"Doomsday."
"Based on?"
"Perpetual war + global warming + economic collapse."
There is a way out . If you are saving only put your money in US treasury accounts and help Uncle Sam . The small local banks offer credit cards also . If you are borrowing try the local credit union . If we keep our tranactions local our communities will be better off . If you can convince your retirement fund manager to put the money in US treasury accounts that would help Uncle Sam also and the money would be there when you needed it . Wall Street is what they are because we gave them our money to play with .
Thanks Jim-
Chase wanted to charge me $39 for being a day late on a credit card payment, and they stood their ground even though I have a good credit rating and have always paid my cc bill on time...So, I cancelled the card, paid off the balance in full, and the next month they sent me a bill for $1...It's a final finance charge they say...I think Chase is gonna have to eat this one...Good riddance!
CTRick