http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/columnist/block/2009-10-19-bank-of-america-card-fee_N.htmIt's nothing new, but I figured we could all take a moment to get outraged together.
10/22/2009 7:06:13 PM
Bank of America = Satan
10/22/2009 7:08:32 PM
it's their right. hopefully if customers flee the bank, the government won't feel compelled to bail them out and subsidize this sort of asinine foolishness.
10/22/2009 7:28:06 PM
FUck Bank of America. I swear they sit around on executive meetings figuring new crafty ways to screw otherwise honest consumers out of their monies. While a smart consumer should take their banking elsewhere the logical rationing often gets overlooked by little old grandmas, as an example. We as a country should not condone such unethical banking practices to begin with.
10/22/2009 7:48:39 PM
I, for one, am sure glad that we had to bail them out, when folks like myself and others were arguing to just let them fail once and for all.
10/22/2009 7:54:49 PM
Banks changing their business models to something crappier than it used to be in response to government legislation making it more difficult to conduct business the way they used to. No one could have seen that coming.
10/22/2009 8:03:57 PM
ahahaha. I like it. A fee for honoring your agreement. Anyone who would enter in to that kind of agreement is an idiot
10/22/2009 8:13:35 PM
10/22/2009 10:13:02 PM
And this tit-for-tat arms race was totally unpredictable.Nope. Nobody saw it coming.Ever.^^^
10/22/2009 10:16:41 PM
You predicted it. Good call!But I don't get your point...banks would have behaved better if they weren't regulated in the first place?
10/22/2009 10:53:27 PM
No, banks will generally seek an equilibrium of profits. You squeeze on one end and they'll shift to somewhere else. In other words, you squeeze on interest and late fees, and they'll move to recoup the costs somewhere else. TANSTAAFL: there ain't no such thing as a free lunch. You think that they're just going to willfully eat the loss? Keep dreaming.Hammer down on banks charging the irresponsible and they'll just push the fees somewhere else, on everyone. Which includes responsible borrowers who actually pay their cards on time and don't carry an excessive balance they can't pay.Interestingly enough, the same is true for insurance: make them insure everyone with no cost differential, and they'll charge everyone more. Of course, saying as much does nothing but raise hackles in the halls of Congress. I'm sure we'll get to test out to see if I'm right on this one again as well.
10/22/2009 11:01:48 PM
oh, we'll get to test it out. and the crocodile criers will just blame it on evil, greedy people
10/22/2009 11:17:15 PM
^^^ Banks will behave as they do, which is to find a way to make the most profit while having the most and happiest customers. Fees for having a revolving credit account are not new. Amex has charged them for the longest time, and annual fee cards were pretty common up until the last decade or so (hence why ads still talk about "no annual fees" as if it's a distinguishing feature). But people wanted better, they wanted no fees, big grace periods, cash back and rewards. All of that money had to come from somewhere, so the banks figured out that they could make that money by being especially harsh on people with lousy credit skills because they were the least likely to complain and the least painful to lose if they did complain. Your sky miles card is subsidized by all the college kids getting their free t-shirts.Now that such practices have become harder to do, the banks have gone on to getting their money back from everyone else. Does it suck? Absolutely. Was it unexpected? Not at all. Should we have bailed them out so that they could be around to do this? Absolutely not.
10/23/2009 8:03:22 AM
10/23/2009 8:51:42 AM
The thing i love the most about the bailouts was how selective they were. Instead of allowing 12 or so large banks to fail and split into multiple smaller banks, they allowed 6 to fail and gave the remaining 6 taxpayer money to buy off the good parts. In the end we're left holding all the bad debt and we've created even bigger banks. And to get back to credit cards, there are 2 kinds of people with credit cards. Retards who dont understand how they work that deserve what they get and people who use them for the rewards. If you're a retard, dont worry the fed will bail your stupid ass out. If you're using them for the rewards, if the rewards aren't worth the fees cancel the card. Pretty goddamned simple.
10/23/2009 9:31:01 AM
10/23/2009 10:10:47 AM
10/23/2009 10:38:51 AM
We would cut down on home invasion robberies if we decrminalized street muggings.
10/23/2009 12:26:17 PM
I'm astonished that there would be multiple people still set on blaming irresponsible people no matter what.Like, it's all people and the government?The banks didn't behave badly at all?
10/23/2009 12:33:02 PM
oh it's a solid 33/33/33 split with 1 being chancegovernment, banks, people
10/23/2009 12:49:09 PM
10/23/2009 1:05:38 PM
10/23/2009 1:08:42 PM
10/23/2009 1:27:42 PM
At BofA and AIG close to a majority of the top executives whose salaries were to be cut have already left. http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2009/10/going-galt.html
10/23/2009 6:12:12 PM
BofA probably wouldn't be feeling the pinch had they not been strongarmed into acquiring Merril Lynch which was on the brink of closing.
10/23/2009 7:56:22 PM
Bank of America repeatedly lost $5,000 of my money, often at really bad times. This resulted, among other things, in bounced rent checks. They almost cost me my apartment. The only halfway decent thing they did was write my landlord a letter explaining that they had fucked it up, not me.I ran to SunTrust and have had no problems with them so far.
10/24/2009 3:50:13 AM