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Stacy Mitchell

Stacy Mitchell

Posted: January 29, 2010 01:40 PM

Move Your Borrowing Along with Your Money

What's Your Reaction:

The New Rules Project, in partnership with HuffPost's Move Your Money campaign, is using its Community Banking Initiative to get out the word that banking locally can put the power back in the hands of individuals and communities, rather than Wall Street's CEOs.

As more of us ditch the big banks in favor local banks and credit unions, we need to give thought to both the saving and lending sides of a bank. Each is crucial.

On the savings side, community-based financial institutions need our deposits much more than the big banks do. Big banks have access to other capital. While deposits account for 82% of the funds small banks have to work with, their share at the biggest banks is just 66% (and deposits made in the U.S. account for even less: just 39%).

But to be profitable community banks need to convert those deposits into loans. "Deposits are extremely important to small banks. But the only way we can be successful is if we turn those into loans," said Frank Coumides, senior vice president for lending at Sonoran Bank, a small, locally owned bank in Phoenix.

When it comes to consumer lending, however, community-based financial institutions have lost a lot of ground over the last two decades as big banks raided two large segments of this market: mortgages and credit cards. Since 1985, community banks (those with under a $1 billion in assets) have seen their share of mortgage and credit card lending fall much faster than their share of deposits. While their share of all bank deposits fell 41%, their share of bank-owned mortgages dropped 63% and their share of consumer credit, including credit cards, fell 71%.

Big banks went after mortgage and credit card lending because these loans were easier to turn into mass-produced commodities (and toxic derivatives) and offered major profit potential.

Credit cards, in particular, became highly concentrated and incredibly lucrative, as the big banks devised new fees and manipulated terms for cardholders, while also jacking up the hidden fees they charge merchants each time your card is swiped. By 2006, credit card revenue had skyrocketed to $115 billion. Just ten banks control 90% of this market and the top three -- Citibank, Bank of America, and JP Morgan Chase -- control a staggering 63%.

It's not hard to see how, for many households, the interest and fees we pay on our mortgage, credit cards, and other loans generate far more income for the financial industry than what a bank can make on our deposits. So, as we start down the path of breaking up with the big banks and exercising our economic citizenship on behalf of our own interests and that of our communities, we should think about the whole range of financial services we use.

Credit cards are one place to start. About three-quarters of community banks and just over half of credit unions offer credit cards. Unlike big banks, these smaller institutions generally do not view their credit cards as major profit centers (you have to do a lot of volume in credit cards to make real money), but rather as a service for customers with whom they often already have a relationship.

That means that the fees and interest rates are often lower. Although data for small banks is hard to come by, a recent Pew study compared a group of credit unions with the largest banks and found that the credit unions had significantly lower interest rates, penalty fees that were half the cost, and "fewer dangers associated with unfair or deceptive practices."

"We never participated in the kinds of abusive practices common in the industry, because our credit card clients are also our depository clients," explained Kathy Fitzcharles of the 60-year-old Delaware County Bank in Ohio, which stepped up its marketing of credit cards this year as public hostility toward big card issuers spiked. The bank saw a 15% increase in the number of cards issued.

It's not alone. In an open letter to customers, Nancy Ruyle president of the Citizens Bank of Rogersville in Missouri, wrote, "We don't employ such tactics as short billing cycles that can cost you a late fee, or raising your interest rate because you were late paying some other bill. We believe in treating our customers fairly."

Some small banks and credit unions do their own underwriting and retain credit card loans on their books. Others rely on a third-party to manage the risk, such as TCM Bank, a subsidiary of the Independent Community Bankers of America that handles credit cards only on behalf of community banks. But even then, the local bank typically services the card, meaning that if you have a problem, you call the bank and deal directly with their staff, not an automated phone-tree. (Except for lost or stolen cards: there's a 24-hour 800-number for that.)

Moving your mortgage is more involved, but there are community banks and credit unions, like the 83-year-old Coast Line Credit Union in South Portland, Maine, that have been refinancing mortgages this past year for customers who were motivated in part by a desire to have their interest payments working in their local economy, not on Wall Street.

While some community banks do a robust mortgage business, others offer very little mortgage lending. And, among those who do, some keep mortgages on their books for the duration of the term, while others sell all or part of them into the secondary market to free up capital to lend again in their communities (in which case, they may still continue to service your mortgage). So the key is to talk with several local banks and credit unions to find the right fit.

Other types of consumer loans, like car and home equity loans (if you are fortunate enough to still have home equity), are often readily available from credit unions and banks. A good rule of thumb for these types of loans is to always shop local banks and credit unions first. Depending on the institution, you may be able to get a substantially better rate than you'd find at a big bank, especially if you already have a relationship with it (i.e., an account there and a history of timely payments on a credit card or other loan).

Where you bank matters a great deal, but many community bankers told me this week that perhaps the most significant thing you can do to help their bottom line and your local economy is to shift some of your spending away from chains and other big businesses.

"One of the most important things people can do is support local small businesses. When they start to expand, they'll come back to community banks for loans," explained Mary Anne Carson, senior vice president of the Santa Cruz County Bank in Santa Cruz, California, which has seen a cascade of people looking to move their money and asking the bank's staff, "Are you truly local?"

Small business lending is the bread-and-butter of many community banks. Small business growth, in turn, is the key to pulling out of recession, say many economists. I'll take a closer look at this symbiotic relationship in an upcoming post.

Stacy Mitchell, author of Big-Box Swindle, is a senior researcher with the New Rules Project and its newly launched Community Banking Initiative.

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07:04 PM on 02/21/2010
Hello,

we startet now the german campaign with the URL www.Move-Y­our-Money.­org. We are the regional group of attac germany, attac frechen, www.attac-­frechen.de.

We hope many people donate us !!!

Greetings
Andreas Zech

www.attac-­frechen.de
www.move-y­our-money.­org - linked to the article in the blog-site of attac Frechen
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
03:12 PM on 02/01/2010
I can only wonder which overpayed bank robbing Chase executive got the money they stole from her. They have negatively affected her credit rating and character with this blatant theft and could care less that they did. This is the little story that becomes a huge story when you take into considerat­ion they did this to many other Americans and do far worse to them on a daily basis. This bank robbing system is out of control and getting worse day by day, and we have a president who will do nothing to stop this crime spree by big banking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
03:11 PM on 02/01/2010
A dear friend of mine was a WAMU banker, then the bubble burst, and Chase bought them out. She removed her money except for about $300.00 and went to another bank, but left that sum in place in case it worked out cause she loved WAMU. Months went by and she received an overdraft email from WAMU. Now under the Chase guidelines­, they drained her savings account of the $300.00 and did not let her know until she was approx. $100.00 overdrawn. She went through weeks of messages and phone calls while there was still a WAMU and was assured her account was closed. She never received any mail from Chase. The only thing she received from chase was an email that said she was overdrawn, which she ignored because in her mind, she was never a Chase customer. FF to last week. She gets a letter from a collection agency saying she owes Chase $187.00 in overdraft fees on an account she never had with Chase and was told was closed by WAMU. She was referred to Chase Executive Offices who got back to her today and said the only way for her to get that off her credit rating was to pay the collection fee, in essense, an admission of guilt to owing Chase money when in reality she was totally ripped off by that bank.
09:41 AM on 02/01/2010
Everyone needs to take responsibi­lity for their own actions. This means the individual­s and the bansk.
09:40 AM on 02/01/2010
Everyone needs to take responsibi­lity for their financial actions. This means the banks and the individual­s.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fourbrrl
07:45 AM on 02/01/2010
I've been saying THIS for a year now ....

THE SOLUTION, NO GOVERNMENT REQUIRED..­ALL americans are to NOT PAY one dime to their credit cards , move your money AND your mortgages OUT OF BANKS into a credit union, or even a steel box...tht'­d bring em down...fro­m THE PEOPLE. THEY NEED our MONEY to FUNCTION. we are 95% of this economy and get ZERO respect...­close our wallets to these schiesters and watch em squirm and fall !!! Then WE THE PEOPLE will have taken control WITHOUT marches or revolution in the historical sense...VE­RY SIMPLE !
OR..people can just COMPLAIN MORE...yea­h THAT works huh ?
04:35 AM on 01/31/2010
Sorry, but no.

We should not stop giving them our money after they already got most of it.

We should get politician­s not bought by lobbying parasites to implement laws that will proctect the peiople and get our money BACK:
06:28 PM on 01/30/2010
There is an article in the Huff Post from yesterday at: http://www­.huffingto­npost.com/­2010/01/30­/regulator­s-shut-dow­n-bank_n_4­43069.html noting that the number of bank closings for the year is up to 15 with more to come from the FDIC. Why is the FDIC closing local banks but leaving the "too big to fail" guys still open while the helpful Federal Reserve maintains a big bank loan rate of almost zero? Is this like an ethnic cleansing for banks? The FDIC get to close as many small to moderate sized banks as it wishes and then we hear that small businesses cannot get loans. Gee, are the dots connected? Local banks tend to benefit local communitie­s. Local banks tend to make business loans to local businesses­. Why not close the giant banks and leave all the small and regional banks open? Just an observatio­n as you move to local banks and credit unions that the FDIC is targeting.
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therealist2000
The day We the People bring down Corporate America
05:43 PM on 01/30/2010
Breaking up the Banking Monopoly should be the 1st job of the Antitrust Division. If they do not authorizat­ion to do so, then immediatel­y given them authority to start busting things up.
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therealist2000
The day We the People bring down Corporate America
05:36 PM on 01/30/2010
The anger and sentiment seems right. But how is this the solution to the "too big to fail" syndrome? We all praise small community banks. But putting more money in small banks is a symbolic gesture and not real reform for the financial industry. Why not cut the legs off the "too big too fail" banks and turn them into small or medium sized "not too big to fail" banks? By diverting attention from the real problem with symbolic gestures might do more harm than good. But symbols do matter just the same! Why not have private banks compete with government establishe­d banks rather than have this phony competitio­n, while each greases the palm of other banks. Why not use the Antitrust division to break up bank monopolies­? There is REAL reform for you, instead of these symbolic, diversion tactic gestures, away from real solutions to symbolic solutions.
08:31 PM on 01/31/2010
OK, local banking with our money is a first step.....

the real money reform comes when we, as citizens, require the federal goverment to SHUT DOWN THE FEDERAL RESERVE, WHICH IS A PRIVATE BANK, OWNED BY GOLDMAN SACHS, ALONG WITH A GROUP OF OTHER BANKS, AND

PRINT OUR OWN PUBLIC MONEY, JUST LIKE LINCOLN DID. AND Ben Franklin.
it can be done....it would end all public debt.

see the movie "The Secret of Oz," for an explanatio­n of why we have a Federal Reserve & the accompanyi­ng debt.
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therealist2000
The day We the People bring down Corporate America
11:00 PM on 01/31/2010
The Federal Reserve is a quasi-publ­ic entity. It is composed of private banks but they operate under the imprimatur of the government­. At least that is my understand­ing. Now, I am not a big fan of the Fed, but not for reasons stated by libertaria­ns like Ron Paul. The gold standard is not the solution to the problems that ail America. My solution is that the Antitrust Department break up the oligopoly of banks---th­e half dozen or dozen of them as a start on the issue of too big to fail and a more equitable arena for community and local banks to get a foot in the arena.
03:16 PM on 01/30/2010
We can did and DO cap interest rates in the USA

http://www­.lectlaw.c­om/files/b­an02.htm

You and I are capped at 8%, Banks, not since 1980.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LisaLisa1234
01:34 PM on 01/30/2010
I use 0% offers as a sort of arbitrage: I borrow the money at 0%, stick it in a CD for the life of the offer, pay it all back & have the interest as a profit.

This way the big banks pay me to use their money.
05:49 PM on 01/30/2010
What duration are your cds?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LisaLisa1234
10:25 AM on 01/31/2010
It depends on the 0% offer; usually 6-12 months.
12:39 PM on 01/30/2010
The surest way to impact the large banks is put the local bank across the street. www.starta­bank.com/h­ow2/ folks can help you do this. The best place to start a new bank is in the lobby of Wells Fargo or Bank of America.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
10:48 AM on 01/30/2010
Needed double-pan­ed windows for my home in Utah - went to several banks, including the one that held my savings and checking accounts. The answer was "no". Had excellent credit, owned the property. Finally went to a credit union and the answer was "yes".

Moved ALL my money to the credit union and used their services for 16 years before I moved. Then left almost all my money there when I moved to Arizona and have just enough to pay regular bills in my bank here with a small cushion in savings for emergencie­s.

This works great for me. There is no law that says the majority of your money has to be held in the state where you live or in a large bank or financial institutio­n. The only way to get the attention of those entities is to hit them in the pocket book - MOVE YOUR MONEY!!!!
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
10:07 AM on 01/30/2010
Why shouldn't the government go into the home mortgage business? Non-profit - not like Fannie and Freddie, with shareholde­rs whose pressure for profits causes bad loans to be made.

It will not cost the taxpayers anything. After all, if banks can make big money on mortgages, the government can do it for lower cost and break even. The Post Office proves that.

It's easy, all done by the IRS. You get a once-in-a-­lifetime tax credit to buy a home, then you owe it as back-taxes­. The IRS automatica­lly adds a payment to your tax bill each year, perhaps charging you less while your income is low, more if it rises or you have a windfall. The interest rate would be the Fed rate, the same rate banks borrow money at.

Fundamenta­l truth: return on investment drains money from an economy, to the very rich from everyone else. The very rich return the money to economy through debt, which increases their share until they own all assets. The very rich (top 1%) now own 90% of US assets, and rising. Only eliminatin­g profit through debt will end this process.

Without debt to fund them, the rich will have to invest their money in something productive­, like companies that make things. The stock market would rise as a result, except of course for financial stocks.

(Also posted as a Reply; sorry)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PotomacOracle
The Solution:debt free credit clearing systems
10:41 AM on 01/30/2010
Absolutely­, Fanned

The optimal arrangemen­t is presented in various agruments by Ellen H. Brown, Stephen Zarlenga and others, they posit that a monetary system where no-interes­t credit is viable since all borrowers repay principle. How easy is that to develop. The penalty for not repaying principle is a fee paid for every late payment. How simple is that. The entire structure of interest profit...u­sury...is counterpro­ductive to the notion of national progress. Usury benefits only the creditor.

The perfect real world example is the Bank of North Dakota see www.webofd­ebt.com
05:51 PM on 01/30/2010
And the most heinous example of usury interest is the Federal Government paying any interest at all to the FED for the use of Our own money.