Move Your Money: Surveying Deposit Changes From the First 90 Days

Nearly six months after we launched moveyourmoney.info, we're now able to see the numerical effects of the Move Your Money concept.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

On December 29, 2009, MoveYourMoney.info came online. The concept became a media phenomenon, and the zip code search application -- which I found myself literally programming on the kitchen table during the holidays -- became one of the early killer apps of 2010. Traffic spikes more akin to a media site came into IRA's servers, which had until then been optimized to automate operations and maintenance timelines for professional users. By mid-quarter, 100% of all zip codes where an FDIC member branch bank was listed had been explicitly searched on the internet.

Until now, rumor and anecdote have been the order of the day in terms of who's won, who's lost and who's slid sideways when it comes to garnering the bank deposits favor of "ordinary people". We've seen bankers and their trade associations react both enthusiastically and cooly. Some, as the data will show, have been having a field day. Others have been able to maintain their business positions in this still tenuously recovering economic climate. Some have continued to flounder.

And lest one think they are asleep at the wheel, the big banks -- which until now have not had to contend with the menial market shares of the smaller banks -- have watched carefully. They have modified their practices quietly as the proverbial "stickiness" of customers started to liquify (at least in the eyes of the media and the Internet).

The end of December 2009 conincided nicely with the end of the 4th quarter of 2009 FDIC operating period for banks. This delivered a point in time capture of the industry's deposits deployment in the CALL/TFR reports. Ninety days later the 1Q2010 CALL/TFR operating period ended, giving us the first look at the numerical effects of the Move Your Money concept.

The reporting window for banks to submit to the FFIEC's Central Data Repository (CDR) closed last weekend. IRA has been tracking CALL submittals into the CDR as they've been coming in and has constructed a state-by-state survey of changes in reported total deposits for those banks that meet Move Your Money's guidelines for inclusion in its Zip Code Search Tool. See the survey for yourself.

Barely past its own first 100 days, Move Your Money is still a concept in its infancy. It continues to gain new grassroots energy. Its original purpose, to create broad pressure to bring the "Main Street" banking system back into contact with consumers, is still being explored. It remains a plural initiative beholden to neither left nor right. I'm told it's been reported in Japan as one of the American cultural phenomena of early 2010.

The second quarter continues.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot