Monday, April 30, 2012

How banks are getting richer off the poor


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4/26/2012 @ 2:20PM |27,226 views

How Banks Are Getting Richer Off The Poor

It’s not easy being a big bank these days. Consumers hate them, shareholders have beef with them and regulators can’t figure out what to do with them.
Bank
"People treat banking like an electric utility where if you flip the switch it has to be there for you. But the truth is banking is a business that aims to makes profits for shareholders," Nancy Bush, bank analyst.
At the end of the day though, a bank’s gotta do what a bank’s gotta do: make money. But how banks go about making that money is one way to differentiate them.The New York Times today writes about a few banks out there looking to boost business by offering low-income consumers products laced with loads of fees and plenty of interest.
Some banks, namely U.S. Bank, Regions Financial and Wells Fargo, are luring low-income consumers to sign up for things such as prepaid debit cards and payday loans–products that typically come with all sorts of fees and charges, the Timesreports. Why are banks courting these customers with pricey products?  Well, besides the obvious (fees) the products themselves weren’t subject to all the regulatory overhaul brought by the Dodd-Frank reform act. That leaves more room for banks to make money in an environment where doing so has become more difficult.
The Times story features David Wegner. He makes about $1,200 a month and is looking for a checking account.  He ends up with  U.S. Bank where he is offered all sorts of financial products geared toward low-income consumers. The branch offered him prepaid cards, check cashing and short-term loan options. He tells the Times that he felt like he was being treated like a second-tier consumer.
The truth is that when it comes to profitability Wegner is indeed a second-tier customer compared with other customers with higher checking balances. And you know what? There are higher tier consumers than them too like the ones with bigger checking balances. Consumers with multiple mortgages, checking accounts, savings, brokerage accounts and loans are valued more.
Nancy Bush, a bank analyst, puts it this way, “It goes back to the way some people have viewed banking. They treat banking like an electric utility where if you flip the switch it has to be there for you. But the truth is banking is a business that aims to makes profits for shareholders.”
Consider that 25% to 40% of checking accounts at the big banks are money losers. That’s according to Dick Bove who says the way banks used to make money from those unprofitable checking accounts is through debit card swipe fees and/or overdraft fees. Regulations like the CARD Act and Durbin Amendment have dramatically shrunk the revenue from those activities. “In response, banks are are either kicking out those unprofitable consumers by driving up fees or providing them with other products that are higher in cost,” Bove says.
Note that other big banks like Bank of America,JPMorgan Chase and Citi aren’t mentioned in theTimes story. That’s because they don’t offer these so-called alternative lending products for low-income consumers Bove says. Those banks aren’t relying so heavily on the retail banking sector for revenue and profits while banks like Wells, Regions, U.S. Bancorp and Fifth Third Bank are much more retail banking consumer for business.
The bigger problem here is that low-income consumers don’t have much of an alternative when it comes to banking. There’s a growing population of people who don’t have a bank accounts because they feel they can’t afford it. They are called the un-banked and under-banked; people  who don’t have enough funds and/or mostly deal in cash transactions and who say they can’t afford bank fees. They turn to things like pre-paid debit cards whichaccording to the Federal Reserve is the fastest growing non-cash method of payment.
Unfortunately they can also be laced with an alarming amount of fees and a lot less protection than your regular old debit card.
Products geared toward low-income consumers have typically been offered by payday loan companies and storefront lenders or even big retailers like Wal-Mart. Consumer Reports analyzed the pre-paid card industry recently and here’s what it found:
  • Fees can be high, multiple, and confusing
  • Not all prepaid cards provide adequate protection against theft of funds using the cards or card account numbers
  • Promised credit lines or features to build a credit record may be expensive and overstated
  • Federal deposit account insurance for prepaid cards applies differently than i does for bank accounts and may be capped at less than the value of all of the prepaid cards issued by a particular card program.
In its analysis the group sampled 16 prepaid cardsand found 13 of the 16 prepaid cards charge monthly fees, ranging from $2.95 for the nFinanSe card to $9.95 for the Vision Premier card and the Univision card. ATM withdrawal? Twelve of the 16 cards impose a fee for checking balances at ATMs, ranging from 45 cents to $1 per balance inquiry.

So now some banks are getting into the game in a bigger way. As the Timesnotes, these banks say they’re providing services for customers who might not be able to get banking access without them. That might be true but it’s a weak argument, and one that does nothing for the low-income consumer.
Indeed it seems the costs of banking outside of the traditional methods are higher, and the alternative for departing banking customers are not much better. In fact, it looks a lot worse according to some of those pre-paid card costs.
Here’s BB&T CEO Kelly King making the point in a letter to shareholders recently:
Particularly during these uncertain economic times, the deep and enduring relationships we form with our clients are crucial to both our success and our clients’ financial well-being. Unfortunately, the value of these banking relationships has been too easily discounted or even dismissed in recent years as banks have unfairly borne the brunt of blame for the financial credit crisis. We believe it’s important for banks like BB&T to reaffirm the value of having a relationship to help our clients meet their financial goals. For example, a national news reporter recently wrote about her experience living without a bank for only one month. In addition to the hassle of trying to pay bills and handle other routine transactions without a checking account, credit and debit cards or direct-deposited paychecks, the reporter was charged $93 in fees during the month for money orders, paycheck-cashing services and the like.
So, the bottom line for now is that the sad state of banking for the low-income consumer is more about picking your poison than than anything else.

Mexican loan shark makes billions off of the poor


Billionaire Ricardo Salinas: Mexico's Credit Card

(This story appears in the May 7, 2012, issue of Forbes)
SILVER HAIR COMBED NEATLY, a purple tie gracing his neck, Ricardo Salinas Pliego spoke with the easy confidenceof a man who has not worried about money in a very long time. “Today we have a bank that didn’t use to exist,” Salinas told the crowd. “Today we have 11 million account holders, people who weren’t banked before.”
It’s unlikely that Salinas, a Mexican businessman worth $18.5 billion, has found himself in the unfortunate position of not having access to bank services. Most of the people listening to him speak last fall at a summit of Mexico’s business leaders probably haven’t, either. But for the 12.5 million customers who now have credit accounts at Salinas’ Banco Azteca, paying for the daily expenses of life is an entirely different game.
In a country where 52% of people live on less than $80 a month, Salinas has become one of the world’s wealthiest people by selling goods—and credit—to Mexico’s working poor. And business is booming. Salinas’ Grupo Elektra (the parent company of BancoAzteca) had an explosive 2011: Totalconsolidated revenue shot up 19% in local dollars, to $3.7 billion, with 45% of revenue in the fourth quarter coming from the bank. Thanks to Elektra’s soaring share price Salinas, who owns more than 70% of the stock, added more than $10 billion to his personal net worth in just over a year. And Elektra is one of the fastest-growing companies on FORBES’ ranking of the 2,000 biggest companies in the world, jumping 746 places to 802 on our list this year. “The bank performed very well in 2011,” says Fitch Ratings’ Alejandro Garcia.
In theory, expanding credit to Mexico’s underbanked population is a worthy goal and one that serves the country as a whole. After all, a Mexico with a more inclusive financial system is a Mexico with a better chance at the gargantuan task of lifting half its population out of poverty. “We’re seeing that low-income clients in Mexico, where 20 years ago they only had moneylenders and friends and family for needs, now have access to formal services,” says Carlos Danel, executive vice president of Compartamos Bank, a microcredit lender that charges its lendees incredibly high interest rates.
Critics are surprisingly sparse. “They serve people who have no other option,” says Marco Carrera, a spokesman for Condusef, Mexico’s consumer protection agency for financial services users. “There is no more expensive money than money that isn’t there.”
And credit in Mexico is outrageously expensive for everyone—rich and poor alike. Fault lax regulation, little competition and a historically volatile currency. An American Express Blue card, for instance, charges a usurious 42% APR in Mexico versus 15% to 20% in the U.S. Added fees drive rates closer to 57%, according to Condusef—and many credit cards charge even higher rates. It’s hard to know exactly how Azteca stacks up, since the bank does not report its data to the agency (an Elektra spokesman declined to explain why), but BanCoppel, an Azteca competitor, has the highest reported rate—88%, including added fees. And that’s just credit cards—Condusef does not publish the rates banks charge for personal loans.
Rates are highest in Mexico for people with the least money—and there’s actually a legitimate business case for what might seem like an unfair practice. Garcia, the Fitch analyst, says Azteca’s operating costs pluscredit costs require at least a 30% interest rate—and that’s just so the bank can break even. The higher costs are due to more hands-on customer service, plus the higher risk of lendingto these consumers, many of them first-time borrowers. “Especially with the low-income consumers, you have no information on their creditworthiness—and a lot of them work in the informal economy, so they wouldn’t even be able to prove to you how much income they receive,” says Jorge Gonzalez, professor of economics and dean of Occidental College in Los Angeles.
Salinas was a pioneer in lending to the poor. In 2002 his Grupo Elektra retail chain nabbed a banking license andbegan opening branches inside its electronics and home goods discount stores. Banco Azteca offers its clients three types of credit: personal loans,which customers typically use for medical expenses or quinceañera (15thbirthday) parties; a bank-branded Tarjeta Azteca Visa card; and consumer loans for in-store purchases in Elektra’s electronics and home goods stores. The company won’t say how many of the loans are used to buy refrigerators from Elektra versus paying for medical expenses, but its credit portfolio is growing fast: Its current 12.5-million-client roster is 45% greater than it was the prior year. Since 2005 Banco Azteca has pushed outside Mexico’s borders and now has branches in Panama, Honduras, Guatemala, Peru, Brazil and El Salvador. Within Mexico competitors like BanCoppel, Famsa and Wal-Mex have popped up to gobble a slice of this market.
Elektra caters to a specific demographic: households that make at least $400 per month—the taxi drivers, mango vendors and cleaning ladies of the nation. Prices on sofas and washing machines advertised inside Elektra stores and on TV emphasize the low weekly rates—not how much the customer will pay with interest. Once the sale is locked in, a cadre of more than 5,000 motorcycle-riding loan officers zip around the nation to collect payments. (Though unrelated to the loan officers, Elektra is also parent companyto Italika, Mexico’s most prolific producer of motorcycle scooters.)
“The big problem with Banco Azteca’s scheme is that it doesn’t help augment sources of income for low-income people; rather, what it induces is a scheme of consumption,” says Clemente Ruiz Durán, a professor of economics at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.
If that criticism sounds familiar that’s because it’s often leveled at abusiness demonized in the U.S.: the cash-advance payday loan. Salinas must also see the similarities. He’s placed a $780 million bid for America’s largest cash-advance company, Advance America Cash AdvanceCenters, based in Spartanburg, S.C. Expect the deal to close soon.