Bank Fees? Let’s Tell The Banksters That We Don’t Want Their Stinking Bank Fees And That We Are Switching Banks



October 5th, 2011
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Millions of Americans are about to get stabbed in the back by their banks. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citibank and several other large banks are either already implementing outrageous new bank fees or are currently testing them. So are these ridiculous new bank fees going to be enough to get millions of Americans to finally boycott the big banks? When millions of Americans start paying a $5 fee every month to use their debit cards and when millions of Americans start paying a $20 fee every single month just to have a checking account hopefully that will be enough to wake them up. These fees are certainly not going to cause an "economic collapse", but they are incredibly annoying. The truth is that the big banks are trying to take advantage of us. It shouldn't cost $60 a year just to use a debit card. It shouldn't cost $240 a year just to have a checking account. What we need to do is to send an unequivocal message to the big banks: we don't want your stinking bank fees and we are switching banks.

When I was growing up, I remember how banks would bend over backwards to get your business. The customer service was generally very good and banks were not gouging us with ridiculous fees.

But now thousands of smaller banks have been gobbled up by the banking giants and things have dramatically changed. The big banks don't value us anymore. They seem to believe that they have a "captive audience" and that they can treat us however they want to.

Well, it is time for us to draw a line in the sand.

We didn't mind so much that they were paying us next to nothing on our savings accounts.

We didn't say too much when ATM fees soared into the stratosphere. For example, the average cost of using an "out of network" ATM in America today is approximately $3.81.

We didn't even object too much when they started charging us fees for things such as getting paper statements, receiving wire transfers, or closing our accounts.

But now they have really crossed the line.

On October 1st, new federal regulations went into effect that capped what banks can charge merchants for debit card transactions.

The average fee on a debit card transaction used to be about 44 cents.

The new federal regulations cap the fee on merchants at 21 cents.

So will banks be unable to make money under these new regulations?

Well, according to U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, each debit card transaction costs the banks somewhere between 4 and 12 cents.

So a cap of 21 cents is not going to kill the banks.

However, it is going to hurt the profits that they have been making. The new rules are expected to reduce total bank revenue by a whopping $6.6 billion a year.

Ouch.

So what are the big banks doing about it?

Well, they have decided to recoup that revenue by sticking it to us.

For example, Bank of America recently announced that it is about to start charging a $5 per month debit card fee.

This has sparked a firestorm of criticism.

Even members of Congress are getting involved.

According to ABC News, U.S. Senator Dick Durbin stood on the floor of the U.S. Senate this week holding up a plastic debit card and launched into a tirade about Bank of America....

“Bank of America customers, vote with your feet, get the heck out of that bank,â€