AJB Temple
Finely figured
For general info: from 1 June this year the FCA changed the way in which banks must categorise and deal with complaints. The letter received from NatWest is pretty much in standard form.
Banks used to make a lot of money from the uncleared funds float. But that has not been the case for some while now. Interbank interest deposit rates on client money are well below 0.5% and teh FCA and PRA changed the client money rules over a year ago which restrict substantially what banks can do with the money. Many banks now regard handling client current account money as an expensive nuisance as the rules are now onerous. This protects client money but also means that banks are far less flexible with customers.
Cheques are not cleared at the whim of banks. There is an interbank clearing system that defines what happens and when and all banks must adhere to the protocols. This is quite a good industry website with facts for those who are interested: http://www.chequeandcredit.co.uk/cheque ... ues-clear-–-advice-consumers
Cheques are a costly nuisance in the banking system as they are high risk (fraud, error, legibility, manual handling at counters etc, call backs and other clearing problems). This is why banks take 6 clear working days to treat cheques as irrevocably cleared, and even then they can be recalled if the bank suspects fraud.
Banks used to make a lot of money from the uncleared funds float. But that has not been the case for some while now. Interbank interest deposit rates on client money are well below 0.5% and teh FCA and PRA changed the client money rules over a year ago which restrict substantially what banks can do with the money. Many banks now regard handling client current account money as an expensive nuisance as the rules are now onerous. This protects client money but also means that banks are far less flexible with customers.
Cheques are not cleared at the whim of banks. There is an interbank clearing system that defines what happens and when and all banks must adhere to the protocols. This is quite a good industry website with facts for those who are interested: http://www.chequeandcredit.co.uk/cheque ... ues-clear-–-advice-consumers
Cheques are a costly nuisance in the banking system as they are high risk (fraud, error, legibility, manual handling at counters etc, call backs and other clearing problems). This is why banks take 6 clear working days to treat cheques as irrevocably cleared, and even then they can be recalled if the bank suspects fraud.