Why Charging for Mailing Paper Bank Statements May Cost the Banks the Big Bucks

CIBC recently introduced a fee for receiving paper bank statements. A close relative had a US Dollar account with CIBC that used to issue quarterly paper statements. There is no passbook option for this account. This US Dollar account pays a low rate of interest. And that’s partly why it is now going to cost CIBC a lot more money to do the same business than it cost to print and mail one statement every 3 months.

My relative phoned CIBC to discuss this new fee of $2/statement. She does not have a computer or a cell phone, nor does she
intend to get either. In the past, she reviewed her quarterly statement to make sure the transactions were correct. She also made a note of the interest paid each month for when she filed her tax returns.

How Can One Be Held Responsible for Transactions that May have Been Booked in Error by CIBC?

When this customer phoned CIBC to cancel paper statements because of the new fee, the customer was told she was responsible for ensuring she reported any errors in the account transactions within 30 days of the end of the month. She would be deemed to have received the e-statement at the end of each month.

“Customers must review their account transactions through CIBC Online or Mobile Banking, CIBC Telephone Banking or CIBC bank machines at least once every 30 days and examine all entries and balances at that time. If there are any errors, omissions or irregularities, customers must notify CIBC in writing within 60 days after the date on which the entry was, or should have been, posted to the account.” https://www.cibc.com/ca/chequing-savings/us-personal-acct.html

How, she asked, would she know what transactions had been booked if she couldn’t see the statement? There is no passbook option for the account. CIBC could erroneously book a transaction against the account.

The support person said she could telephone CIBC to check the account balance. (She could also perhaps check the actual transaction history by telephone, that was not clear.)
The customer said “So you mean I’m going to have to now telephone every month to check on my account instead of reading a paper bill once every three months. How is this improving my service?”

The support person had no direct answer. Instead, the support person pointed out that both Rogers and Telus are already using e-statements.

The customer said that comparison has no value. Those are cell phone companies not banks. And the customer does not have a cell phone.

How Can One Check One’s Taxable Earnings without a Statement from CIBC?

Next, the customer explained she had been using the statements to report her interest earnings for income tax. The customer support person said a T5 would be issued for interest over $50. The customer countered that while that is true, the interest on this account would never be high enough to result in a T5.

The customer support person then ALMOST said but you don’t have to report the interest on your taxes. She didn’t quite say it, though it was implied.

The customer explained she always reports all of her interest income and has no intention of breaking the law now. The customer support person then agreed that she could check her interest earnings by telephone each month.

The Cost of One Quarterly Mailed Statement from CIBC vs 12 Telephone Calls to Their 1-888 Number

As a result of this change to a fee for paper statements, this customer has cancelled her paper statements. Instead, she is planning to telephone each month to check her balance, in case there are any unexpected transactions, and to determine the interest paid on the account.

So CIBC is going to have to pay a customer service representative to answer a phone call each month to check the account balance and the transaction history.

I wonder whether the $1 they save on mailing a paper statement will be enough to pay for the time their CSR will be wasting? Not to mention the increased customer dissatisfaction when other banking customers can’t get through to a CSR because the phone line is clogged up with calls checking on transaction balances.

Ridiculous Fees and Ridiculous Demands May Cost CIBC Customers and Free Money

My relative also warned the CIBC customer support person that she may just close the account altogether.

Since CIBC was paying a very low interest rate on the money in that type of account, CIBC will effectively be robbing themselves of using that money for free. Multiply that effect by a few thousand customers and that could be significantly more than the cost of mailing out a few statements.

In conclusion, I think CIBC didn’t really look at all the costs and benefits of these paper statements. Cancelling the paper statements could result in increased call centre volume, increased call centre hold times, losing customers and accounts, and losing access to money at well below overnight posted borrowing rates. It will all depend on how much customers are willing to push back at the banks that are charging their customers money to hold their own money. (Some of us are old enough to remember when banks paid you money to hold your money. And sometimes even gave out toasters with new accounts!)

Related Reading

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Are you tired of banks charging you for the privilege of telling you what they have done with YOUR money? Do you remember the days when banks paid YOU to keep your money in the bank? Please share your experiences with a comment.

Retirement Roundup or Why I Won’t be Free at 55 Unless It’s for Lunch on Friday

As the RRSP frenzy has calmed for another 10 months, it’s time to consider the second R in that acronym: Retirement. In past posts, I’ve discussed the need to account for your personal rate of inflation when budgeting for retirement and what you need to budget for the long term costs of maintaining a house. I’ve been reading a lot of “Financial Facelifts,” “Family Finance,” and “Monday Makeovers” many of which are about retirement planning. The comments on these personal financial profiles lead me to investigate What Does It Really Cost to Eat for a Month? That will be another important factor in our retirement budgeting.

Then I went clicking through the internet looking for more retirement news. Here’s some of what I found:

Retire Happy gives a simple way to estimate how much CPP you will receive based on how many years you have paid in the maximum annual contribution at http://retirehappy.ca/how-much-will-you-get-from-canada/ . Some of the early comments also make for excellent reading.

Boomer at Boomer and Echo helps you Create a Retirement Income Plan.

Michael James on Money has done the math and determined that for some low-income seniors it’s actually best to collapse an RRSP all in one year rather than take it out slowly through a RIF. Read why at Handling RRSPs and RRIFs for Low-Income Seniors.

Jane at The Money Puzzle passes on some anecdotes about how people reacted in What Can Happen If You Receive an Early Inheritance. For sure some of these people should have made better choices.

The Blunt Bean Counter works the numbers to prove that for almost everyone who can afford to contribute to an RRSP the tax benefits make it worth while in The RRSP Hullabaloo.

Big Cajun Man explains in CPP Splitting a Different Process that pension sharing doesn’t mean the same thing when you’re talking CPP as when you’re talking income taxes and why it matters.

StatsCan reviewed retirement and found some interesting trends including an increase of 2 years in the average age of retirement for workers in 2009 compared with workers in 1998. Check it out to find out what that average age was.

Lunch, anyone?
I won’t be able to retire at 55, but if you do and you want to take me out to lunch, please send me an email!

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Do you have a favourite retirement article? Would you like to give some retirement advice? Please share your views with a comment.