focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied Materials
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied MaterialsView Video
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to mining
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to miningView Video

Latest Share Chat

Watchdog puts British banks on notice but no overdraft inquiry

Wed, 01st Jul 2020 08:24

By Huw Jones

LONDON, July 1 (Reuters) - Britain's financial watchdog will
not open a formal inquiry into how banks charge for overdrafts,
but put them on notice on Wednesday of a full evaluation of
their pricing next year.

The Financial Conduct Authority gave banks just two weeks in
January to explain changes to their overdraft rates which would
leave around eight million consumers worse off, or face action.

HSBC, RBS, Nationwide and Santander were among the lenders
to have announced plans to charge customers a flat rate of
nearly 40% for overdrafts, which was more than double some of
their previous charges, ahead of new rules in April.

"We have analysed the strategic, competitive and financial
drivers of banks' overdraft pricing decisions based on their
responses," the FCA said in a statement on Wednesday.

"Having reviewed the evidence we obtained we do not intend
to open a formal investigation at this stage."

The rule changes were designed to fix a “dysfunctional”
overdraft market, banning lenders from imposing fixed daily or
monthly fees and from charging more for unauthorised overdrafts
than for authorised overdrafts.

Most banks estimate that pricing changes would reduce their
total overdraft revenue by between a quarter and a third, or
more than half a billion pounds across them all, the FCA said.

But overdraft charges were still higher than other
mainstream borrowing like credit cards and personal loans.

"Despite banks increasing headline interest rates, the cost
of borrowing will go down or remain unchanged for most people,"
the watchdog said.

"We will be keeping a close watch on how prices develop,
particularly during and after the coronavirus pandemic."

Banks will for the first time have to publish in August
quarterly information on their overdraft pricing and this will
be scrutinised by the FCA.

It will also make a full evaluation of overdraft rules
starting after April 2021.
(Reporting by Huw Jones;
Editing by Alexander Smith)

Related Shares

More News
16 May 2024 20:05

PRESS: HSBC shareholder, Ping An, mulls options for stake — Bloomberg

(Alliance News) - Ping An Insurance Group Co is weighing options that would allow it to reduce its 8% stake in HSBC Holdings PLC, Bloomberg reported T...

14 May 2024 16:11

Kazakhstan opens thorny debate on 2025 OPEC+ oil quotas

LONDON, May 14 (Reuters) - Kazakhstan opened on Tuesday a thorny debate on OPEC+ production levels, saying it believed it should be allowed to pump ...

14 May 2024 06:27

UK ministers, companies visit Saudi Arabia to boost trade ties

(Alliance News) - UK Cabinet ministers are visiting Saudi Arabia in a bid to bolster trade links with the kingdom amid reports that Riyadh authorised ...

9 May 2024 17:33

London's FTSE 100 hits record for fourth session after BoE signals rate cuts

FTSE 100 up 0.3%, FTSE 250 adds 0.2% *

9 May 2024 17:06

STOXX 600 ends at record high; BBVA weighs on Spain

Mercedes-Benz, HSBC, Allianz trade ex-dividend *

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.