What’s Behind the Wave of Bank Account Closures?

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

We’ve already reported that your bank could fail at any time thanks to the Fed’s fight against inflation. Banks adapted to a near-zero interest rate environment over the last two decades, and today they’re in bad shape overall.

Today, many are offering tempting yields on savings accounts. (Because it’s cheaper to borrow money from you, the customer, than from the Federal Reserve’s emergency funding program. I cannot stress this enough: no bank is truly safe.

Now, so long as your deposits stay under the FDIC’s insurance limits, a bank failure might be little more than a temporary inconvenience. When a bank does fail, the FDIC generally creeps in on a Sunday and makes sure everything is open for business as usual Under New Management the following morning.

Sometimes, though, banks can fail individual customers…

Say you’re standing in line at the grocery store, swipe your debit card to pay. Then you swipe again. After an embarrassing exchange with the cashier and an irate phone call, you’re astonished to learn that your bank has closed your account?

No warning. No notice. Simply cut off from your deposits…

Why would a bank do this? “We’ll do whatever we can to fix this”

These sudden bank account closures happen a lot more often than you might think. Recently, the issue came to the attention of The New York Times:

…they discover that their accounts no longer work while they’re at the grocery store, rental car counter or A.T.M. When they call their bank frantically, representatives show concern at first. “Oh, no, so sorry,” they say. “We’ll do whatever we can to fix this.”

But then comes the telltale pause and shift in tone. “Per your account agreement, we can close your account for any reason at any time,” the script often goes. These situations are what banks refer to as “exiting” or “de-risking.”

For some unspecified reason, the bank decides a customer is “too risky” and cuts them off.

This would be completely understandable if the customer were engaged in fraud, money-laundering or wiring money to a North Korean or Iranian bank account.

That’s not what’s happening in these cases.

Rather, the source of the problem might be something as simple as a software bug, according to Aaron Ansari, a programmer who helped develop banking risk algorithms:

There is no humanization to any of this, and it’s all just numbers on a screen. It’s not “No, that is a single mom running a babysitting business.” It’s “Hey, you’ve checked these boxes for a red flag – you’re out.”

In the criminal justice system, you’re famously innocent until proven guilty.

In the banking system, you’re only innocent so long as you aren’t suspicious.

So what constitutes “suspicious” activity, in the eyes of a bank’s risk-management algorithm?

How about a 10-year-old arrest?

Nick Seidel, 42, of Chicago, has had his bank break up with him three times. Chase dumped him first. Then, after an 18-month relationship with Fifth Third, it, too, shut down his accounts.

“I had never had any banking issues, no overdrafts or suspicious activity,” Mr. Seidel said. “Apparently some banks just run public searches of their clients and drop them if they are justice-impacted. It’s always a frustrating, inconvenient and embarrassing experience.”

The hilarious part of this story is, Mr. Seidel learned from his mistakes. He’s now employed by a federal regulator investigating securities fraud – he passed the background check to become a fraud investigator, but he can’t have a bank account!

Hopefully you’ve never had any run-ins with the criminal justice system.

But do you ever use cash?

That, too, is highly suspicious…

The owner of a bar used the same bank for years, depositing their profits on Fridays and Mondays. Then one day all their accounts were closed. Why?

Well, federal law requires depositors to fill out a form when depositing or withdrawing $10,000 in cash. Apparently, that’s not good enough any more:

The bank’s explanation is especially maddening, given that he and Ms. Maslanka had filled out plenty of the $10,000 forms over the years. “What’s to gain from not filling it out?” he said. “What’s the risk of filling it out? I’ve done both when deposits warranted that.”

“I’m still so confused,” Ms. Maslanka said. “Do you think I’m part of some underground Mafia, laundering money through my little beer bar?”

The point is, banks require compliance with a secret list of behaviors – and failure to comply with their unwritten rules gets your account closed.

It’s infuriating!

One such member of Chase named Naafeh Dhillon tried to pay for dinner in December and had both his credit and debit cards declined.

When he called the bank, a support agent said Chase had let him go, and a notice should be in the mail. The cause? “Unexpected activity.”

When he visited the bank, Chase cut Dhillon a cashier’s check for his balance with no further explanation.

Like most honest people, you could break the secret rules without even knowing it, without engaging in any illegal activity. Suspicion is sufficient evidence for banks to close your accounts.

Surely all this time and effort is making the nation safer from real criminals, right?

“In the majority of cases, no fraud is ever found”

If there was some major wave of criminal activity that banks were helping to prevent, and helping law enforcement catch and prosecute the criminals? That, at least, would be more acceptable.

Then you might feel a little bit better about having your account closed without warning or notice, right? “I’m just collateral damage in the war on crime,” you could tell yourself. Your inconvenience and frustration are a small price to pay to help keep America safe!

Sadly, that just isn’t the case:

The banks do this when they suspect some form of bank fraud. But experts say in the majority of cases, no fraud is ever found, leaving customers to wonder, Why Me?

One major force is regulatory scrutiny, according to banking expert J.D. Koontz:

Banks are always under the watchful eye of the regulators, who will fine them for not doing their job or not protecting consumers. And so by freezing or closing someone’s account, they don’t necessarily get penalized for that, and so they probably tend to err more on the side of caution, which, unfortunately, does create hardships for individuals. But a 2018 report by the Bank Policy Institute found that less than 5 percent of suspicious activity reports actually warranted follow-up by law enforcement.

That’s right – for every 20 customer accounts closed, less than one is deemed worthy of investigation by law enforcement.

I‘ve said it before, and I’ll say it again:

Your bank accounts are NOT your assets – they’re the bank’s liabilities.

When a bank has your money, the bank has control – not you.

Your money isn’t always safe in a bank because it’s not your money anymore.

At any moment, for any reason (or no reason at all), your bank might choose to exercise that control – leaving you standing in line, arguing with a cashier and swiping your debit card over and over.

There are some things you can still trust

Since you can clearly see that your money isn’t always safe in a bank, even if that bank hasn’t failed yet, that means you should be prepared with other options.

Here are some suggestions to consider:

Have accounts with more than one bank. If you bank with a national chain, consider opening an account at a regional or local bank or credit union. Like grandma used to say, “Two is one and one is none.”

Keep some “emergency fund” cash on-hand. This is just common sense if you live in a disaster-prone region. When a hurricane or earthquake disrupts electricity for your area, all the ATMs are down and credit card machines won’t work. Having a few hundred bucks handy can make a huge difference – whether paying for groceries or filling up the tank to get out of Dodge.

Diversify with unbanked assets. There are a few financial assets that live outside the banking system and have been considered safe-haven stores of value even before the invention of banks: Physical precious metals. Diversifying your long-term savings with assets like gold and silver could give you a tangible, physical asset you can always access whether or not the banks are open.

Physical precious metals like gold and silver historically acted as reliable safe havens, for example, when Washington Mutual bank failed in 2008, or when SVB failed back in March.

More recently, gold has handily outperformed inflation, and is more liquid than you might think.

The people in Washington are destroying your retirement account! Slowly but surely, the value of your 401(k) or IRA is being eaten away thanks to out-of-control inflation. And our elected officials in D.C. don’t care! In fact, they seem to be accelerating this trend with new legislation to print trillions of new dollars. And this is why I recommend Gold IRAs. To see how they work, Get this FREE info kit from Birch Gold Group about Gold IRAs. (Comes with NO obligation or strings attached.)

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14 Comments
Lucretius
Lucretius
November 25, 2023 2:58 pm

Credit Unions for the win! I haven’t used a bank in 30 years, local credit unions are more conservative with YOUR funds than any bank. Only activity, SS in, one money order /mo (mortgage ) , occasional tank of fuel w/ debit card. Pay utilities in person with either green or debit card. Anything else comes out of MY wallet!

I try to never accept checks from anyone, bullets, beans, bullion or last resort, green fake money. I trust banks about equally as .gub .

You can’t be used if you shun the usury!

Peace, L.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Lucretius
November 26, 2023 9:56 am

For the win…

CU’s are by far better to use but they too cannot be trusted, they use the same software that banks use. The numbers tell them whether you can have a loan/mortgage and not your personal relationships with the people you’ve known there forever.

Avoid banks, use payment cards sparingly and use cash most often, avoid stock markets and other ‘investment vehicles’, your pensions are not safe either. Like the article states, put what you can into tangible assets, bullets, beans, gold, dirt and trust God to see you thru the coming storm.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 25, 2023 3:09 pm
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 25, 2023 3:31 pm

I’m sure gold is great for some people. If I invested in gold, there’s a good chance I would end up with either 1) a piece of paper that says I own X amount of gold (which turns out to be bullshit) or 2) some yellow coins that turn out to be gold-plated tungsten.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Iska Waran
November 26, 2023 9:58 am

No man, by all metrics gained from past comments, you ain’t that stupid.

Bluesky
Bluesky
  Iska Waran
November 26, 2023 11:56 am

Silver is a better investment

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
November 25, 2023 4:29 pm

What would George Gammon say about all this? (Auntie thinks he provides the clearest explainations of The Dismal Science of all time – “…in three easy steps.”)

Jdog
Jdog
November 25, 2023 5:57 pm

Banks are screwed because they are all deeply invested in 30yr Treasury notes at a fraction of one percent interest.
They cannot sell those Treasuries without taking big losses, but at the same time more and more depositors are withdrawing their deposits to reinvest in short term treasuries and money markets that are now paying a decent interest rate.
The more people who withdraw money, the more loss they have to realize as they are forced to sell their 30yr notes.
The fed is losing nearly a trillion a year, and is in no position to help them out. It is a slow motion train wreck, that is getting worse by the day.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Jdog
November 26, 2023 12:14 am

Banks are being “failed” by design.
Paper money is being devalued into nothing by design.
The end game is a digital currency controlled by evil, evil creatures.

“Give me control over a nation’s currency, and I care not who makes its laws.”
Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1743–1812)”

Jdog
Jdog
  Colorado Artist
November 26, 2023 10:58 am

You are an idiot. Banks are not being failed by design, they fucked up. That however does not change the outcome which will be economic depression.

"You are an idiot."
"You are an idiot."
  Jdog
November 26, 2023 11:30 am

Just a suggestion:

Prolly NOT well received when You are entreating Your Humble, Duly Elected, Public Servants ?

Might wanna change the salutation?

Please, do let Us know if You get better results?

Could be THE Hope & Change we can believe in.

Again, John Fricking Doe
Again, John Fricking Doe
November 26, 2023 3:24 am

Under a CBDC regime gold would either attain the state of barbarous relic or the only significant haven of privacy in transaction, any which would have to be run through the system by some means opaque, most likely some kind of corruption.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Again, John Fricking Doe
November 26, 2023 10:00 am

Under oppressive regimes the black market always does well.

Can’t stop the signal mel…

Bluesky
Bluesky
November 26, 2023 11:55 am

They’re stealing people’s money