Best Banks

No Gravatar


Having a bank is a necessity in modern-day living, but unfortunately many people are dissatisfied with the available choices.  At the start of this year Forbes listed America’s Best And Worst Banks, but it was somewhat surprising to see what they analyzed.

With Bank of America and Citigroup buoying their balance sheets and repaying billions of dollars in taxpayer bailout funds, the casual observer might assume the banking crisis is just about over. The casual observer would be wrong.  Lots of banks are going under these days. Here are the best and worst among the 100 largest.

Busted banks are still keeping the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. busy. In the past two months, 41 went under, surpassing the total of 26 for all of 2008. What’s more, by some measures bank balance sheets are in worse shape today than they were at the height of the financial crisis.

It is of course necessary that your bank will still be there when you wish to get your money.  However that is a very minimal criterion in selecting a bank.

Unfortunately reports since then indicate that on other dimensions, banks are not doing very well. One title suggested that Customer Satisfaction With the Biggest Banks Plummets.

While customer satisfaction with banks over all remained unchanged in the fourth quarter of 2009 from the year-earlier period, customer satisfaction with some of the biggest banks has declined to the lowest fourth-quarter levels in years.  The results, from the American Consumer Satisfaction Index, back up similar findings from a Forrester Research report.  This found that customers of the biggest banks in the United States were the least likely to believe their financial institution did what was best for them as opposed to what was best for the institution’s bottom line.

A report from Reuters today shows that there is no improvement: Large bank customers  are even more dissatisfied.

Some of the largest U.S. banks were ranked very low for retail customer satisfaction.  A US marketing research company study by J.D. Power and Associates implies that as some of the biggest banks get bigger, customers may not be happy.  The three biggest U.S. retail banks — JPMorgan Chase & Co’s Chase, Citigroup’s Citibank, and Bank of America Corp’s Bank of America — consistently rank at or near the bottom for customer service in the regions they serve.

This dissatisfaction with banks and the service they provide seems to be the case wherever you look.  Here are some results from the UK on how different services rank for customer satisfaction.

According to a recent survey conducted by moneysupermarket.com, it is hairdressers and hotels that that we think provide the best service. While banks and estate agents are thought to offer the worst.  Restaurants, coffee shops, garden centres, supermarkets, clothes stores and entertainment centres such as the cinema and bowling alleys all scored highly with consumers.

Here below are the results for this year.  Compared to last year’s survey it would appear that the service provided by banks has actually got worse. Banks have dropped a place in this table.

banks customer service

The industries at the bottom of the table have all traditionally suffered a bad press. Most of them – banks, energy companies, estate agents – demand hefty fees of their customers and provide necessary and essential  services, rather than luxuries.

Unfortunately the attitude in many banks may be as Tom Peters said, that “we are no worse than the others”.  If you are looking for one of the best banks, hopefully you can find one that searches for banking excellence, which includes not only safeguarding your money but also delivering a high level of customer satisfaction.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Seniors Credit Card Debt

No Gravatar

For some seniors, their biggest debt load comes from their credit cards. Mortgages can be a burden too but at least the mortgage interest rate is usually at an affordable level.  That is not so with credit cards.  In the present tough times the high interest rates that credit cards charge can be an almost impossible burden for seniors.

It is good to see that the credit card companies are now willing to make deals over debt.

Bank of America says it eased off on more than 700,000 credit card holders in 2008, lowering interest rates and some balances.  After helping to foster the explosive growth of consumer debt in recent years, credit card companies are realizing that some hard-pressed Americans will not be able to pay their bills as the economy deteriorates.

Banks are putting in place a system for  Credit card debt forgiveness.

Big banks have formed an unusual alliance with consumer advocates to urge the government to allow huge portions of credit card debt to be forgiven, a turnabout from recent years when the banking industry lobbied strenuously to make it harder for consumers to erase their credit card debts in bankruptcy.  The new pilot program, which the banks hope will become permanent could involve as many as 50,000 people struggling with credit card debt. On an individual basis, the amount of debt to be forgiven would rise according to the severity of the borrower’s financial situation, up to a maximum of 40 percent.

The largest credit-card banks in the US have each set aside between $1 billion and $3.5 billion in the third quarter for losses on credit card loans as their profits plummeted.  It does not remove the debt load problem but hopefully in some cases reduces the problem to a manageable level.

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Money as Debt

No Gravatar

Any blog on money could not fail to include Paul Grignon’s 47-minute animated presentation of “Money as Debt”.  It tells in graphic terms what money is and how it is being created. The Cowichan Citizens Coalition and its Duncan Initiative received high praise from those who have previewed it.

Given the present global depression, it is particularly appropriate.  It deserves the widest distribution and use by all those who are concerned with the present unsustainable monetary system in Canada and the United States.

Footnote: If you are interested in books on Money, then why not visit the Money section of the Money Bookstore.

Technorati Tags: ,

One Law For The Rich, And …

No Gravatar
Technorati Tags: ,,

With so many seniors in dire straits around the world, it can be distressing to read the headlines.  CNN has a particularly upsetting one: Where’s the bank bailout money?

“What the banks have said largely is that we’re using the money to stimulate the economy, to get the economy moving,” said Sarah Binder, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. “That’s far, far too general to know what … the banks are doing with the money.”

The vague responses from the banks should not come as a shock, said one U.S. House Financial Services Committee member who opposed the bailout.

“One of the fundamental problems with the Wall Street bailout was the people who had caused the problem were never called in front of Congress to explain what they had done, what needed to be done,” said Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, a Michigan Republican.

One hopes that those who do not have lobbyists will be kept in mind too.  However it is often the squeaky wheel that gets the oil.

Footnote: If you are interested in books on Money, then why not visit the Money section of the Money Bookstore.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , ,

Search the Internet for related articles:
Loading