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Nat West.. Cheeky Bstds...

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  • Nat West.. Cheeky Bstds...

    Another blow for free banking



    Ali Hussain


    TENS of thousands of NatWest customers who regularly exceed their agreed overdraft limit are being offered the chance to pay a monthly account fee of £10 in return for a reduction in overdraft charges.
    The move is seen as another blow to the concept of free banking, where there are no upfront account fees.
    At present, a NatWest current-account customer who strays into an unarranged overdraft is charged between £28 and £38. From September a saver who agrees to pay the £10 monthly fee will be charged £17. The charges are on top of interest charged at 29.69% on unauthorised borrowing.
    Gordon Pell, chief executive of retail markets at NatWest, said: “For those who do frequently use unauthorised borrowing our new deal could enable them to budget better. However, there is no compulsion to adopt the offer.”
    Pell estimates that 100,000 NatWest customers would pay less in charges under the new scheme. The bank said that customers would be able to opt in and out.
    The move came as First Direct, the telephone and internet bank owned by HSBC, said it had lost only 1.7% of its customers since introducing a monthly fee in February.
    It charges £10 on its standard current account if customers do not pay in at least £1,500 a month. It said it had lost 20,000 customers since the change in February.
    NatWest’s move is seen as a reaction to the growing consumer discontent over sky-high bank charges.
    Consumer groups such as Which? have encouraged bank customers to demand refunds of overdraft fees because they regard them as illegal penalty charges.
    Credit Suisse estimates that banks and building societies make £1.2 billion in profits from overdraft charges every year.
    Some savers have taken their compensation battle to court so banks will be forced to reveal exactly what it costs them to process an unauthorised overdraft or a bounced cheque. But no case has yet progressed this far.
    Many cases have been stopped as the banks, keen to keep a lid on the true costs, have settled out of court.
    The Office of Fair Trading is investigating and is expected to make a judgment by the end of the year.
    Consumer groups warn, however, that the growing pressure on banks to cut penalty charges may result in more banks introducing monthly fees for all customers.
    Stuart Glendinning of Moneysupermarket, a price-comparison site, said: “Banks are trying to end free banking by stealth.”
    Pearls of Wisdom.

    Be true to yourself and be strong.
    Be happy with whatever life has dealt you.
    You can never have too many friends... or too many shoes.

  • #2
    uh oh... nasty west are my new parachute account. Must behave, must keep eye on money.
    When we love, we always strive to become better than we are.

    When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better too.

    Paulo Coelho

    Comment


    • #3
      So it's ''give us the money we were going to steal from you anyway''

      Comment


      • #4
        This is really starting to wind me up now (Starting!!!!) why, again, is it the worst off in society that have to suffer to subsidise everyone else.

        I managed to avoid the FD fee by paying both our salaries into the account but if you don't earn £1500 a month after tax or cannot afford another product you are stuffed, now, if you go over your overdraftwith Natwest you have to pay twice for the priviledge.

        Isn't there a law against financial discrimination, if not, there should be

        Comment


        • #5
          Ok, i guess i need to make a comment on the article as i am aware of this. If someone merely goes overdrawn over their overdraft facility then the saving is only in reality, £1. Not really value for money.
          If someone is constantly getting maybe £100 of charges then technically they would save about £44.00.
          To be honest, i do not think the idea is a good one for the reason that they seem to be saying we will reduce all charges to £17 is you pay £10 when the majority of people do not make it their intention to have charges made to their account. Let us also get away from this service rubbish.
          It is not a service not to pay an item and charge that person, period.
          I can argue paid referral charges but not the level of them, I cannot argue over UBF which is a penalty PERIOD. Guaranteed card payment is also not a service, PERIOD.

          This is due to be offered later in the year as an account. How many people will knowingly want it? Errrrrmmmm
          anyone???



          EDIT: whoever wrote the article has written it in such a way as to confuse people. Unarranged Borrowing Fee is £28.

          Comment

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