10/5/2011 10:11:32 AM
10/5/2011 10:11:44 AM
^^I don't remember the source, but I swore that I heard one bank CEO saying that it costs them about $0.13 for a debit transaction
10/5/2011 10:15:12 AM
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-10-01/news/ct-edit-durbin-20111001_1_interchange-fees-debit-cards-retailersI read that banks made about 2B off these fees each year. "Bankers told Durbin and his fellow lawmakers last year that the interchange fees subsidize free checking accounts and other services, including the convenient practice of making purchases with debit cards at no charge to the buyer. Slash fees to retailers, the banks said, and they would likely recoup the lost revenue by charging their customers for use of the cards."Just as I have seen my bank fees go up since this law passed and many banks are no longer offering free checking. (which tends to hurt the poor, but no dem will ever admit to doing just that)Of course the president defending it saying they needed to go after credit cards, yet this only affected DEBIT cards which is actually what you would prefer people to be using...another idiot statement that will be ignored.
10/5/2011 10:20:06 AM
2 ridiculous quotes I saw in the CO article:
10/5/2011 10:49:44 AM
BofA was run by greedy uncaring smucks before the rate cap took effect, yet they waited until now to impose the fee.
10/5/2011 11:40:10 AM
"Obama is helping the banks, fuck the banks and fuck Obama!!!""Obama is hurting the banks, hurray for banks and fuck Obama!!!"Seriously, it's so fucking transparent that it's honestly insulting that you think the rest of us don't notice. Maybe its racism, maybe it's ideology, or maybe it's just plain old stupidity but either way the only consistent view any of you people have is "no matter what, anything Obama does is automatically bad".
10/5/2011 3:32:26 PM
No one here is inconsistent except for you. The anti-Obama's are in favor of the American people, almost all of which are taxpayers and consumers. Bailing out the banks harmed taxpayers. Passing regulations to harm the banks is harming consumers. Seriously, you were in favor of helping the banks because banks were good, now you are in favor of hurting the banks because banks are evil. Tell me again who is being inconsistent.
10/5/2011 4:22:49 PM
10/5/2011 4:26:17 PM
10/5/2011 5:03:16 PM
10/5/2011 5:08:00 PM
This was my problem with all of this... I always thought the transaction fees that banks were charging merchants were far too high based on the fact that for the vast majority of transactions, the customer is spending money they actually have in their bank account. The bank, except in the cases of fraud, doesnt have to worry about the customer 'not' having the money. The money is in their account, and gets deducted as soon as they swipe. Regular credit cards dont have this luxury. Their clients can go on a spending binge one month, then decide not to pay, and there is little the credit card company can do.And in retrospect, there is really zero benefit for using a debit card over a credit card. I am not sure why I ever used a debit card instead of a credit card. The one thing debit cards did is make sure that practically ever vendor has to accept cards these days. This is their legacy. But after using AMEX and Mastercard this past 8 months for all my purchases, I don't think I'll ever go back. Far better protections and far better perks than a bank gives.
10/6/2011 10:01:25 AM
10/6/2011 10:30:12 AM
10/6/2011 11:22:28 AM
10/6/2011 11:24:11 AM
Ok, if the argument here is that less regulation of financial services would have avoided all of this, then I have no idea why I'm even debating you two. You're obviously living in some kind of fantasy world. If you're interested in the real world, go research what happen in Iceland between 2001 and 2008, and then tell me again that financial services would be better off with less regulation. Fucking lunatics.
10/6/2011 11:34:22 AM
You mean when they let the banks fail, and then got out of recession while the rest of the world was still struggling?You're living in a fucking fantasy land if you think the financial sector was anything close to "unregulated" in the past century.[Edited on October 6, 2011 at 11:36 AM. Reason : ]
10/6/2011 11:35:51 AM
No, I mean when a country with a population smaller than Raleigh deregulated their banking industry and ran up $100 billion of debt. And they didn't "let their banks fail". The government took them over, basically the same thing we did except they took the extra step of firing all their politician, replacing them with women, and re-instituting regulations that our current Congress would never allow.
10/6/2011 11:40:02 AM
It's not uninformed, you idiot. Do some fucking reading. It doesn't seem like you know what the Federal Reserve does at all.[Edited on October 6, 2011 at 11:48 AM. Reason : ]
10/6/2011 11:48:15 AM
10/6/2011 11:53:51 AM
Doing well for who? In the case of healthcare, the insurance companies are getting richer, and prices are going up for consumers. That's not good for the overall economy.
10/6/2011 11:55:45 AM
why all of the nuance? Profit is the best measure of a companies worth to society
10/6/2011 12:01:37 PM
No, it's not, and no one has said that. Profit (and the profit motive) is both necessary and good, but it says nothing about the sustainability or impact of an enterprise.
10/6/2011 12:07:05 PM
10/6/2011 12:13:06 PM
Milton Friedman said a lot of dumb things. And, no, socialists don't have the sustainability market cornered, though they might have a monopoly on "impossibility".
10/6/2011 12:18:17 PM
are you really gonna throw THE Milton Friedman under the bus like that?If profit isn't the best measure of a companies worth to society, then how can we expect a free market (where profit is always maximized) to ever achieve an optimal outcome
10/6/2011 12:28:46 PM
10/6/2011 12:51:05 PM
10/6/2011 1:12:47 PM
10/6/2011 1:27:15 PM
10/6/2011 1:34:57 PM
10/6/2011 2:52:05 PM
10/7/2011 8:37:14 PM
10/14/2011 11:42:47 AM
********************************************************************Bank of America just reported highest profits in years. BofA also suckered the FDIC into insuring $75 Trillion in additional toxic assets this week.Keep up the good work, protesters. It's really working. *******************************************************************[Edited on October 20, 2011 at 12:26 PM. Reason : .]
10/20/2011 12:25:04 PM
Nothing to see here, folks.
10/20/2011 12:34:01 PM
^^ their earnings sucked actually.And yes. They are going to use the $1 trillion in deposits to cushion the blow on their losses.If you have money in that bank and you lose it, you deserve it. You'd have to be a complete idiot not to see what they just did.
10/25/2011 2:00:00 AM
10/25/2011 7:53:24 AM
10/25/2011 11:04:53 AM
^ I can get behind that.
10/25/2011 11:19:51 AM
$5 fee goes the way of Qwikster.
11/1/2011 2:03:51 PM
the people running some of these operations must be braindead....alteast the other banks were smart enough to quietly test the fees in small markets to confirm the backlash w/o all the bad pub.
11/1/2011 2:40:42 PM
They don't care about customers. They care about congress. The $5 fee was an attempt to create popular support for a repeal of the Dodd-Frank act. They knew exactly what they were doing, it just didn't work out.[Edited on November 1, 2011 at 6:30 PM. Reason : In other words, the bad publicity was the goal.]
11/1/2011 6:29:25 PM
I dunno...while that certainly seems plausible, the level of charity involved is hard to fathom. Is it really your suggestion that Bank of America chose to shoot themselves in the foot for the benefit of all banks? The law should have no impact on Bank of America's profits, as their competitors face the same losses and prices will adjust. However, if they move alone to piss off customers in hopes of influencing Congress, even if they win they have pissed off customers and will lose market-share.
11/1/2011 11:28:58 PM
I thought that if corporations wanted something they just contributed to campaigns and lobbied with million dollar handshakes on both sides of the political fence. They don't need the public to apply any pressure because the representatives stopped listening to the public a long time ago. [Edited on November 2, 2011 at 8:55 AM. Reason : -]
11/2/2011 8:55:13 AM
As this regulation passed, you can rest assured the corporations were entirely in favor of it. The question is, which corporations. In this case, Walmart was bigger and more powerful in Washington than the banks.
11/2/2011 11:21:36 PM
Some people are clever. Walmart orchestrated this entire thing, but not just for the obvious reason of lower debit-card fees for itself. No, it is also cornering the banking market for itself. As non-retailer banks are losing profitability and thus customers, Walmart's unregulated non-bank banking services are flourishing. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/High-Bank-Fees-Give-WalMart-a-nytimes-3177514040.html?x=0It it wasn't so sad, it'd almost be morbidly entertaining to watch big business use the democrat run government to screw the poor.
11/8/2011 10:53:41 PM
gotta hand it to em, it's a smart approach....but all its gonna take is for one large scale money laundering (or turrist funding/both) case to lead back to them and the gov is gonna do what it does best....choking, knee jerk regulation and that's that.
11/9/2011 9:38:31 AM
$ 5.14 I wounder if they are gonna pass Timmy G's new super stress test? Extra points for passing the super test and going out of biz in the same month.
11/23/2011 9:29:00 PM
Too Patriotic of a Business Name to Fail
11/24/2011 1:09:44 AM