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Originally Posted by fielderLS3
That's a bit bizarre. The bank sent you a notice telling you to remove your money from their bank? Although I could probably believe anything if it was Bank of America. The fact that they have any customers left at all is actually more surprising to me than the take your money elsewhere notice.
Actually, the reason they did this is right in your post. You said your parents were debt free customers with plenty of money in their accounts. Like any other shady financial company, like the credit card companies, for example, they don't want customers with money in their accounts. They want people in debt up to their eyeballs who get into financial trouble so BOA can charge large interest rates, fees, and penalties that people in trouble will find very difficult to get out from under.
These types of institutions don't see responsible, debt free people with money in their accounts as a big enough revenue stream to be worth their time. The sad fact is, the way BOA is set up, an overdrawn account is much more valuable to them than one with money. They learned nothing in 2008-2009.
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Actually, in the past. When rates were higher. Banks wanted deposits. It was cheaper for them to pay higher rates on savings accounts, cd's ect then pay the fed. In todays market, it is the exact opposit. Most banks have so much cheap fed funds, they do not want large deposit accounts. In fact many larger banks (BoA, Citi, WFC) charge customers a service fee with large deposits.
My advice. Find yourself a local community bank. They may not have all of the fancy products BoA has, but their service will be second to none. Also, the taxes community banks pay, stay in your community.
Also, April is Community Banking Month.