Customers' anger over new bank charges (2)
I, like presumably thousands of Maltese, have a current account with HSBC Bank. I have a standing order on this account to honour a monthly life insurance payment. Through my own fault, the account did not contain enough funds to honour the monthly standing, payment. Receiving a statement I noticed that the bank, in the absence of funds in my account, did not honour the payment, and I guess that is the prerogative of the bank to decide. But what I find obscene, if not outright theft, is that I noticed that I was charged €15 for this mistake on my part.
Had the bank paid the standing order than I would understand, but what expense has the bank incurred to charge a €15 fee, which I would dare call, to put it mildly, a fine? And I hope they do not come up with excuses of the type that it is computer generated.
Several letters have been published in this regard including complaints about monthly charges for use of e-banking, something to which the banks initially lured customers as a free service only to then decide that it must impose a fee for the service provided.
Are there bank regulators in Malta, and if there are, have they been following correspondence in the local media?
Assuming there is a regulatory body locally, are banks free to decide unilaterally when and how to impose charges for services rendered, even when a service is provided by banks initially luring their customers into believing that a particular service is being offered for no fee?
No small wonder that local banks have recently built massive buildings, reduced employees through early retirement schemes, and at year's end register enormous profits by local standards.
Anybody following the present global financial crisis is aware that the credit crunch has been attributed, for the most part, to greed by the banks and similar institutions. Does anybody understand who the greedy party is? Need I say more?
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Kurt Mifsud
Feb 24th 2009, 13:31
My mother in law wanted to withdraw some money which were in British Sterling (£) and she wanted them in sterling. The cashier girl at HSBC Rabat (Malta) was going to convert the money to Euro (€) in the account, withdraw them, then convert the cash back to £, thus charging her twice! After several polite arguments, the cashier called her supervisor which still insisted this is the procedure (or better, how to steal people!). My mother in law insisted again and then the manager came. He then agreed to give her the money without any charges.
So what happened to the procedure? They know they are stealing money and they are doing it legally!
L..Galea
Feb 24th 2009, 11:54
Vincent E. Ciliberti
It's YOUR money.
Change the bank.
Lawrence Bonello
Feb 24th 2009, 11:51
Simple - do as I did! Take your banking elsewhere!
S. Calleja
Feb 24th 2009, 11:42
It's a free market. If you don't like what you're buying, change your seller.