According to financial information service Moneyfacts, authorised overdraft rates have hit their highest level for ten years.
According to financial information service Moneyfacts, authorised
overdraft rates have hit their highest level for ten
years.
The average interest rate applied to agreed overdraft is currently at
14.22%, despite the Bank rate remaining at a record low of 0.5, putting
it at the highest since May 2000.
The last time overdraft rates were this high, the
Bank rate stood at 6%.
The research from
Moneyfacts shows that authorised overdraft rates fell to their lowest
point in a decade, to 11.81% in May 2004.
However, some banks changed the way in which they charge people who
go overdrawn after continued debates and court cases regarding the
unauthorised overdraft charges.
This has cut the
amount of income brought in by people who go into the red without
permission.
"Changes made to reduced unauthorised
borrowing charges meant banks lost a significant revenue stream,
something they can ill afford in the current climate," said Michelle
Slade of Moneyfacts.
"As one revenue stream
closed, inevitably they have moved to find another.
"The loss of income gained from a minority of customers is now
being recouped from all customers who use an agreed overdraft.
"Banks are likely to be making more now from these
increases than they ever were from penalty charges."
However, the British Bankers' Association (BBA), which represents
the banks, branded this theory as too simplistic.
"[Moneyfacts] are comparing interest rates today with interest
rates during the easy credit era," a BBA spokesman said.
"The interest rate offered during that period and cost
of banking was unsustainable. The economics of the industry has
changed.
"To point out one factor as the main
influence on pricing
Savings Accounts makes no sense."
| Additional articles about savings accounts |
|
|
| About the author |
UK Price Comparison website http://www.which4u.co.uk Compares Credit Cards, Savings Accounts, Fixed Rate Bonds, Bank Accounts, ISAs, Loans, Mortgages, Insurance, TV & Broadband and Gas/Electric bills to find the best UK deals |
| Please Rate This Article |
Number of ratings: 0
Rating: 0