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The worst things that banks do

Dealing with banks is a necessary evil, but at times they try to get away with appalling behaviour.

Banks have become almost pantomime villains in the UK over the past couple of years, and sadly they have done a lot to deserve that reputation.

Whether it’s gross incompetence or downright sneakiness, there’s never been a worse time to trust your bank.

Working out mortgage interest

Last week, Yorkshire and Clydesdale Bank confirmed it had made a pretty big error with its mortgage customers. It had miscalculated the monthly payments of 18,000 of its customers on variable mortgages, meaning they had been underpaying each month.

As a result, the borrowers will now have a shortfall on their mortgage account. Yorkshire and Clydesdale have now written to all of the affected borrowers explaining the situation and outlining how much extra these borrowers will need to pay in order to eliminate the shortfall. The bank reckons that for half of the affected borrowers, the total suggested increase will be less than £25 a month.

Staggeringly it’s since emerged that Clydesdale actually knew about the miscalculation last autumn!

However, in my view, this is a bit of a joke. It’s the bank's fault that they were undercharging the borrowers, so why should the borrowers have to pay for the bank's mistake? And what about those borrowers who cannot afford to pay any extra each month? Will their mortgage term be extended, so they end up paying an even larger amount in the long run?

Affected borrowers should take up their case with the Financial Ombudsman Service to see if they really are required to pay the extra money each month, particularly given that on the Ombudsman's website there is a technical mortgage note which includes the following statement: “In cases where the monthly repayment was too low, because the lender made an error which incorrectly extended the term of the mortgage, we will generally decide that the lender is entirely to blame.”

Sadly, banks try to get away with shocking behaviour like this all the time.

What’s your address?

Related blog post

One member of the lovemoney.com team has had an horrific time with Lloyds TSB. She was going on holiday to Cuba earlier this year, and wanted to use her Lloyds card. However, she didn’t have a PIN for the card.

Cue weeks and weeks of phonecalls to Lloyds, during which time they repeatedly claimed they had sent not only letters confirming the PIN, but replacement cards as well. None of these had arrived, however.

It later turned out that Lloyds had been sending the PINs and the cards to an address she had not lived in for three years. What is staggering is that she has lived at two different addresses since then, both of which still receive some marketing material or bank statements from Lloyds, so they have all of the correct address information on file.

Staggering incompetence.

Overdraft charges

Last year saw the Supreme Court surprisingly rule in favour of the banks on the issue of unauthorised overdraft charges.

Your bank will do everything in its power to make money out of you. Here’s how to fight back and win!

For years banks have got away with slapping ridiculous charges on customers who made the mistake of going past their agreed overdraft limit, sometimes by only a few pennies. You may be charged £40 for slipping past your limit, and then a further £20 for receiving a letter informing you that you had done so.

The banks argued that these were not actually fines, but rather a fee for a service, and that those fees enabled them to provide free bank accounts.

The Office of Fair Trading had wanted to investigate the charges, and won a succession of early court decisions. However, the banks managed to win the final decision, saving them billions of pounds. Thankfully, a number of banks have slashed their charges for overdrafts, but they are still far more than they should be.

If you want to find out how to avoid falling prey to such charges, be sure to have a read of Where to find the cheapest overdrafts.

Blank credit card cheques

Fortunately, this type of cheque will be banned at the end of the year, and it can't happen soon enough.

Many banks are only too happy to ship out blank cheques to their customers to entice them to buy things (which, chances are, they don’t really need) on credit. However, it is often more expensive to buy something with one of these cheques rather than using your card, and you won't benefit from the protection usually offered through buying with your credit card.

According to the UK Cards Association, an incredible 50 million blank cheques were sent out to Brits in the space of just three months in 2009, with £537m spent on them. MBNA alone admitted to sending out tens of millions of cheques during 2009, before it confirmed it would be scrapping them earlier this year.

Thankfully this utterly irresponsible practice is now on the way out.

These are just some of the worst things banks get up to, but there are plenty more. Why not share your own experiences of awful bank behaviour with your fellow readers via the comment box below?

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  • 04 August 2010

    After banking with one of the big banks since leaving school I changed banks 5 years ago ~ Moved to the CO-OP. Branch is small,the staff are friendly,the advice is outstanding.There are no share holders,the customers share the proffits, which in turn can be put to good use by donating it to on of the CO-OP's supported projects or put towards your shopping bill at one of you local CO-OP stores.Their telephone banking is second to none the staff at the call centre are friendly and informative. I would recomend the CO-OP Bank any time

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  • 29 July 2010

    How I agree with the comments of dmkhz, but why not add that the banks are nothing more than a bunch of legalised crooks and gangsters. I wonder how many people are aware that when they apply for a credit card and receive a credit limit, the bank or card company typically raises 10 times the amonut of the credit limit against the applicant's name and without their knowledge and of course their permission. Also, how many people know that in granting a credit limit or approving a loan, the money borrowed, whether by a government, business or individual is, in every case, NOT BACKED by anything! It is NOT ,in fact, deducted from other cash or hard asset that pre-existed in the bank's vaults - in other words; no depositor's account is EVER debited! ALL borrowed money is in fact FIAT money that did NOT pre-exist. therefore, when payback time comes, the borrower are actually repaying money that NEVER EXISTED in the first place! This has been the system for over 300 years ----- WHAT A JOLLY SCAM IN THE BANKSTERS! favour. If anyone is not convinced by this, can I advise they try and get hold of a copy of Dr. R. Lin's book 'The Fictions of Freedom'. It's a real eye opener A few quotes which may be of interest:- 'Give me control of a nation,s currency and I care not who makes it's laws!' (Amschel Rothschild) 'The bank has the benefit of interest on ALL moneys which is created out of nothing'. (William Paterson, the first to obtain the Charter of The Bank of England) Banking establishments are more dangerous than Standing Armies'. (Thomas Jefferson). On the subject of credit cards, I put my Barclaycard into dispute in August 2007 when I advised that I would pay what I lawfully owed when they supplied me with a true copy of the properly executed agreement with the prescribed Terms and Conditions. My dispute was over a point of law and had nothing to do with whether I had the money or not. What they supplied was a copy of my original Application Form NOT what I had requested! After an exchange of many letters, theirs containing the usual threats, I received a communication from Mercers. I did not know at the time that they were part of Barclay's set up, so when I received a default notice, I sent it back to them advising that as they were a third party and consequently had no legal standing in the case. After many months of letters I received a letter from a collection agency advising that they had my alleged debt over, in contravention of the CCA 1974. After a few months I went before my local County Court and the judge found in the claimant's favour and added £5,000 costs. I protested as the documentation that the claimant produced was such a bad photocopy it was unreadable!! However, I believe the judge found against me because I in my ignorance had not submitted a witness statement. Move on 14 months after the court hearing and in June I received a letter from Barclaycard advising that they were looking into my complaint and would let me have a reply by the end of that month. Another letter at the end of June advising that they needed more time and would now let me have their findings by July 28th. This was accompanied by all the usual b******* saying how they wanted to help etc., etc. Before the end of July a letter arrived advising that they had sold my alleged debt to a collection agency and that I should contact them!!!!!!!!! THIS AS I SAID, WAS 14 MONTHS AFTER I HAD BEEN BEFORE THE COUNTY COURT. Oh!! I almost forgot, during my earlier correspondence with Barclaycard, they also sent me a copy of someone else's details with all the financial information appertaining to that individual. Sorry this is so long winded, but I would be interested to know whether anyone else has had a similar experience?

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  • 29 July 2010

    PS  if you think that is the worst that banks do - you are seriously retarded

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