Abbey, Alliance & Leicester and Bradford & Bingley to be rebranded Santander


The banks will be renamed by the end of 2010, the Spanish bank said on Wednesday.

Abbey and the B&B's savings business, bought by Santander in 2004 and 2008 respectively, will be the first to go, between January and March next year. A&L will follow later in 2010. The banks' names date back as far as 1851.

However, the Spanish bank it will begin introducing the Santander brand this year, by changing over Abbey credit cards under the group name, as well as the commercial and corporate banking arms of Abbey and A&L, which include 20 regional banking centres.

Antonio Horta-Osorio, chief executive of Santander's UK business, said customers would benefit from access to all of the group's 1,300-branch network after the rebrand is complete.

Santander is spending £12m on the rebranding, although it is aiming to save £180m from integrating the three businesses.

Around 1,900 jobs have already gone as part of its efforts to combine the acquired banks.

Mr Horta-Osorio said customer feedback had shown support for the Santander brand in the UK.

"Customers trust us as a global brand and they feel very safe about their savings," he said.

"It's important for customers who travel around the UK to have 1,300 branches to transact with - and they will have the same product and the same people facing them in the branches," he said.

Santander has expanded aggressively in the UK over the past five years, using the banking crisis as an opportunity to buy up struggling rivals.

The group is now the UK's second biggest mortgage lender and third largest savings bank following last year's dramatic move to snap up the savings and branch operation of collapsed B&B in October, just a month after its rescue takeover of A&L.

The Government nationalised B&B's £50bn loan book, which remains in State ownership and is unaffected by the Santander rebrand.

Santander has emerged relatively unscathed from the financial turmoil, picking up swathes of savers searching for safety.

It said earlier this year that Abbey's annual pre-tax profits lifted by more than a fifth to £991m, due largely to the boom in savings business.

Credit cards will be offered to new customers under the Santander brand from next month.

But the group said specialist brands will retain their existing names, including internet bank Cahoot, Cater Allen, James Hy, and Abbey for Intermediaries, as well as the international businesses of all three acquired banks.

Santander has 25m customers in the UK and employs 23,000 staff.

It was founded in 1857 and has since grown to become a global business with operations in 40 countries and a 170,000-strong workforce

Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank

Company Overview
Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank offers personal and business banking services. The bank provides deposit products including savings and checking accounts; loan products such as credit cards and personal loans; and online banking services. The bank was founded in 2003 and is based in Bootle, United Kingdom. Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank operates as a subsidiary of Alliance & Leicester PLC.

Bridle Road

Bootle, GIR 0AA

United Kingdom

Founded in 2003
Phone:
44 1519 288 181


Fax:
44 1519 662 009


www.alliance-leicestercommercialbank.co.uk
Key Executives
Mr. Alex Smith
Senior Product Manager for Business Banking Marketing
Mr. Steve Luty
Head of Business Centre Network
Mr. David Bell
Head of South West Business Centre
Mr. Adam Williams
Head of Global Infrastructure
Mr. John Graham
Head of Development Property Finance
Age: 53 Compensation as of Fiscal Year 2009.
Key developments for Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank
Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank Launches Enhanced Current Account
06/11/2009
Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank has launched its Free Business Current Account, an improved current account offer for small businesses with a turnover of up to GBP 1 million. The company said that in addition to free day-to-day banking and free cash deposits, the Free business current account will now also offer an in-credit interest rate of 6% AER (5.85% gross) fixed for the first year, on balances up to GBP 2,500. The account is available immediately and small business owners can apply at any Alliance & Leicester branch. The Free Business Current Account, which is recognized as offering the best value for small businesses, is now even better providing a real return on surplus funds in the account. In the current economic climate, it is more important than ever, that business owners review all costs including their banking arrangements in order to ensure that they are operating as efficiently as possible.

Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank Unveils New 12-Month Business Bond
06/9/2009
Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank has launched a new limited edition 12-month fixed rate business bond, available to businesses with a turnover of up to £1 million. The new bond has a fixed interest rate of 3.20% gross pa/AER and matures on July 1, 2010. This new business bond is available for business savings of between £50,000 and £2 million.

Alliance & Leicester Launches Prepaid Card Scheme for Housing Benefit Claimants
08/18/2008
Alliance & Leicester Commercial Bank is rolling out a prepaid card payments solution for local authorities in the wake of the government's scheme to transfer payment of housing benefit to claimants, as opposed to their landlords. The prepaid card scheme will allow local authorities to save up to 75% of their processing costs for the payment of housing benefits, as well as remove the-on average-10% charge to the recipients when converting checks to cash. The prepaid card solution is particularly aimed at the 800,000 UK citizens who receive housing benefit, while being classified as unbanked. The card aims at not only supporting the local authority in its efforts towards financial inclusivity for all recipients, but also seeks to improve efficiency and increase the services that can be offered to the unbanked benefit claimant through advanced functionality.

9 Reasons You Need An Online High-Yield Savings Account


Do you have an online high-yield savings account? If you don’t you need one!

Here’s why:

■Brick and Mortar Interest Sucks - I just checked the interest rate on my savings with the bank I do my checking with. Ready? 0.20% APY! It used to be that banks would offer a decent interest rate on savings to get you store your money with them; not quite the case anymore!
■Many Online High Yield Savings Accounts Offer Better Interest – I use ING Direct for my online savings. Currently they are offering 2.4% APY on their savings accounts. No, you won’t be Bill Gates rich with that rate but it is MUCH better than what the average brick and mortar bank offers. For me that’s 2.2% better than the bank where I do checking!! If you do a little research you’ll find banks with higher interest on their online savings than ING Direct. Let me tell you, that interest adds up! I love seeing how much I’ve earned every month and at the end of the year.
■Automatic Savings – Most online banks will let you set up automatic savings. What this does is pull a set amount at whatever time you set up to be pulled into your online savings account. This could be from your checking account or even from your paycheck if it’s direct deposit. Why automatic savings? So you don’t have the opportunity to spend the money first then try to save! Even if it’s a small amount it will add up over time (and that money earns interest and so on…).
■Bill Pay – Some online banks offer the ability to pay your bills from the site. Another option is using your routing and account numbers to set your account up to pay from on the site you have a bill with. For instance, we set up our car payment to pull from our online savings account. This way we don’t have to worry about having enough in our checking to cover the bill every month (we have more than enough in our savings to cover this). Yes, you can do this from a checking account as well but the money you need to keep there won’t be earning interest in the meantime.
■Out of Sight, Out of Mind – In a lot of brick and mortar accounts your checking and savings are accessible from an ATM. Falling short of funds in checking? Pull it outta savings. I don’t have access to my online savings at an ATM. As a result I don’t have that money staring at me every time I need an ATM. My savings stays saved!
■Relatively Easy to Access – So I can’t pull my savings from an ATM. That’s ok. If I should ever need it then I can have my money transferred to my checking in a few days or so. The money is still pretty easy to get should I need it but not so easy that I could take the savings for an impulse buy!
■Use of Sub-Accounts/Multiple Accounts – With ING Direct you can set up multiple accounts under one customer number. Wanna save for a new car? Create another account just for that purpose. Wanna show your child about the power of saving and compound interest? Set up an account for her to put gift money in. In fact you can set up automatic savings for any account as well. When my wife and I were engaged we set up an account to help save up for the wedding. The options are limitless!
■Great spot for Emergency Savings – Some might say online savings isn’t liquid enough for emergency savings. I say it depends. For us it’s a great place to stash emergency funds which will also earn interest!
■Great Customer Service – This one depends on who you use for your accounts. Again, we have been using ING Direct for their high-yield savings for years. Every time I’ve called I’ve gotten friendly, helpful people who were able to answer my questions and handle my needs without any problems. That’s a huge reason why we haven’t switched our account somewhere else with slightly higher rates. Knowing that my bank can handle any issue I have without being on hold for half an hour is important to me.

Online Savings Accounts

In the past few years, there's been quite an increase in direct-to-consumer banking, and in particular online savings accounts: FDIC-insured bank accounts that are accessed entirely online (money is typically moved in and out by electronic bank transfer to and from a traditional bank). Some of these are from online-only banks; others are online initiatives of established brick-and-mortar banks. They often pay higher interest rates than conventional savings accounts, due partly to lower expenses, and partly to the more rate-sensitive nature of the online market.

This article aims to give a short overview of the history and current state of the industry.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------






Note: This article is very U.S.-centric; sorry to the non-Americans!
1995-2000: The online-banking stone age

It's worth briefly mentioning the rise of online banking in the 1990s as background. As the internet began to become popular amongst the general public, banks began offering online access to their accounts. This led some entrepreneurs to think: Many people are doing much of their banking through a combination of ATMs, checkwriting, and the internet, and you don't need branches for any of that. So, a slew of online-only banks was founded amidst the dot-com euphoria (many, as you might guess, no longer exist; anyone remember CompuBank?). These banks typically offered a similar range of products to traditional banks, and indeed tried to play up their similarity with "real" banks. To hook consumers, they typically offered lower fees and higher interest rates, but only a limited number of consumers were interested.

Fall 2000: ING Direct

In the fall of 2000, Dutch banking giant ING launched a different, and ultimately more successful, take on online-only banking with ING Direct. Rather than an online analog to a brick-and-mortar bank (ING was already a brick-and-mortar bank), ING Direct was (and is) a simple, no-frills savings account paying a high rate of interest, but with no checks, no ATM cards, and basically no other services besides an account in which to park money. Customers are expected to have a local checking account they use for their normal banking, and then transfer money between that account and ING Direct via ACH (automated clearing house, a system of electronic bank-to-bank transfers that typically takes 2-5 days). Somewhat notably, they didn't skimp on customer service--they reportedly have had good email and phone customer service, and now in some parts of the country they have a strange network of brick-and-mortar locations that provide in-person customer service but aren't bank branches, the ING Direct Cafés.

2003-present: More competition

ING Direct was without direct competition for its first three years, but now there are quite a few others offering essentially the same account, including some online-only banks (who arguably should've been the first ones on this bandwagon). I'll mention only a few of the more notable ones.

The next major entrant after ING was in fact an online-only bank, VirtualBank. It had been founded in the late 1990s as the online analog to high-class private banking, aimed at newly-wealthy techies. In mid-2003, they repositioned themselves and offered an account virtually identical to ING Direct's, which they called eMoneyMarket, and which followed the same strategy of no frills and high interest rates (the "money market" here means a money-market deposit account, which is FDIC-insured and basically a savings account; not to be confused with money-market funds, which are a different beast). Being a new entrant, they typically paid a few tenths of a percentage point higher interest than ING Direct, and so gained some customers.

The market expanded rapidly through 2003 and 2004, and a bunch of others began to open similar accounts by 2005. Emigrant Direct, the online initiative of a one-branch local New York City bank (so basically an online-only bank), caused a bit of a stir in January 2005 when they launched a 3.00% APY account at a time when the next-highest rates were 2.25%. HSBC, a global banking giant, entered the online-savings market with HSBC Direct in March 2005. This is an interesting variation, because it adds back in one frill: ATM cards that can be used at HSBC's brick-and-mortar locations worldwide, with very low currency-exchange costs--an interesting attempt to turn their large global network of branches into an asset even in the online-banking world.

Links to more information

BankRate.com seems to have become the canonical site to look up interest rates on. It doesn't have a specific section for online accounts, but you can search for rates on "MMAs" (money-market accounts) in the "checking & savings" section. It's useful to get an idea of what's out there, but beware of simply picking the highest rate that comes back in your search and signing up.

The Fatwallet.com forums are one of the best sources of information, and include some very long threads discussing many of these accounts. As with any forum it takes a huge amount of digging and reading to get the good information, but for raw information it's hard to beat. A good place to start is the Best Current APRs thread, which also links to a bunch of individual threads on specific banks.

I maintain a fairly bare-bones site at pfstuff.com, summarizing the interest rates and pros/cons of accounts that offer good rates but don't have any fees, minimums, or other strange requirements. I've also collected some information on the sign-up bonuses some banks offer, and pieced together enough information to plot historical graphs of various banks' interest rates.

Chase Online Banking

Chase Online Banking gives the account holders of the Chase Bank greater personal financial control and convenient banking. This facility can be availed by the customers at all times. In addition, this twenty four hour banking service can be accessed from any where right from home to the work station premises provided the customer has a personal computer along with a secured Internet connection. Chase Online Banking account holders can get hold of all the Online services provided by the Chase Bank. This Online banking facility entitles a customer of the bank to access and view his/her
savings account
checking account
credit card
mortgages
loans for the automobiles Now, let us see some of the services offered by the Chase Online Banking :-
Bills can be paid by the customer through the Internet from anywhere (home or work place or road) provided he/she has a PC along with online connectivity in it. This process is known as Online Bill Payment.


The already cleared checks known as the canceled ones can be viewed by the customers through Online. The image of such canceled checks can not only be viewed but can also be saved online or directly be printed out of the online site. This helps the person from the accumulation of the papers. At the same time, this facility is fast in this supersonic competitive age. Subscribing for this service attracts no additional fees or charges. All the account holders of savings or checking accounts are entitled to such viewing, saving and printing of the images of the checks.


Alerts of different kinds can also be set by the account holders for reminding them of certain situations or positions of their accounts. These alerts come handy to the customers for making their accounts a bit more secure. The customer can get hold of Security Alerts of Chase Online Banking for avoiding the fraudulent practices routed through online channels. Not only this, the free alerts are also available for reminding certain important bank account related positions such as due date of certain payment, present transaction, outstanding payment particulars, etc.


Chase Online Banking also provides its revered customers with the online generation of the statements. The paper statements cause certain problems for the account holders through stacking up. But with the online generation of the same are much more convenient to manage. At the same time they are very much valid as documents. The customer then only needs to take out a print out of the same directly from the online site. The online statements come in PDF format and can be accessed by the customer at any point of time of the day. These pdf format online statements can also be saved in th personal computers for further references.


A unique guaranteed payment option offered by the Chase Online Banking is called as Overnight Check. It helps its customers in making payments at the last minute.


The ATM service provided by the Chase Online Banking is one of the fastest and one of the most secured ones. These ATM transactions can be accessed through online channels besides the normal ones.
To get hold of all these facilities, the account holder needs to enroll himself/herself for the same. After this the services they are meant to get are :-
The customers can view all the present and historical transaction details (for the past three months) of his/her own account. These transaction details can also be downloaded to the personal computer of the account holder. This downloaded material can also be printed if it is required in any type of the documentation.


The customer of the Chase Online Banking are privileged to send the requisite funds to any account of any US bank which in itself is a USP for the Chase Bank because of its rarity.


The account holders are able to transfer money from one deposit account to the other within the Chase Online Banking.


Checks can be reordered by the clients.


The payments made through the paper checks can be stopped.


All possible types of transactions can be searched on the basis of date and amount of money.

Chase Online Banking provides the accounts of the account holders with all sorts of security. The online service gives its account holders with the flexibility and convenience to manage their own accounts. It also offers the facility of depicting the account with a nickname so that the customers are able to easily identify their own account. The customers of the bank can also enquire from the online bank help desk. They can also log on to the website for viewing the frequently asked questions. Customer service of Chase Online Banking can be accessed its banking customers through email facilities. The security services include a guaranteed payment option which assures the customers to feel secured with their money. The bank assures them that in case of any type of unauthorized utilization of the deposit account of the customer the bank remains liable to square off all the replaced amount from the account. Thus, the guarantee is 100%. But certain restrictions are also attached for availing this 100% guarantee option, such as
The customer has to report such snag within two days of occurrence of the problem.


The customer should close the system completely before leaving the computer, otherwise it becomes easier for the thief to do all the nuisance and consequently siphon off the money from the account holder's account.


The customer is required to take extra pre-caution in maintaining the secrecy of the identification number and password of the concerned account holder.

Online Banking for Small Business


Small Business > Banking > Online BankingOnline Banking for Small Business
Banking Has Never Been Easier


Manage your business with more confidence and convenience with Online Banking for Small Business. Get access to your deposit, credit, and investment accounts anytime, anywhere you have Internet access. You can check your balances, view transactions, transfer funds between accounts, pay and receive bills and more — and, it’s all FREE.

See for yourself how Chevy Chase Online Banking for Small Business can simplify your life and save you time:

Access all your accounts — With the Chevy Chase Business Check Card you get instant access and expanded transaction power over all your deposit, credit, and investment accounts. Link all your accounts to your Business Check Card and enjoy 24/7 access to them through Chevy Chase Online Banking.Set balance alerts — Set balance alerts on your accounts and receive alerts via email, when you log in to Online Banking, or both.Transfer funds quickly and easily — Make transfers between accounts linked to your Card. You even can transfer funds from your checking account to make payments to your Chevy Chase Bank loans, lines of credit, and credit card.Schedule future-dated and recurring transfers — Schedule future-dated and recurring transfers between your deposit accounts. Plus, you also can schedule future-dated and recurring payments to your Chevy Chase Bank Working Capital Line of Credit, Business Loan or Business Line of Credit. Download transactions — Manage expenses quickly by downloading transaction activity into popular financial management software such as Quicken®, Microsoft® Money or QuickBooks®. Pay your bills online — No more writing checks and running to the post office — save time by paying your bills online. With our extended remittance feature, you can add invoice and credit memo information on payments sent to your payees. And, for payments due on the same date and the same amount, let our recurring payments feature work for you by scheduling the payments for you.Receive and pay your bills online with e-Bills — No more trips to the mailbox. Receive your bills online and view, pay and save them.Get your statements online with e-Statements — Get your statements faster and reduce clutter with e-Statements. Receive and view your checking, savings and money market account statements — all neatly organized in Online Banking. When your e-Statement is ready, we'll notify you by email. Learn more about e-Statements.View the front and back of your processed checks with QuickCheckSM online — No more waiting for your monthly statement or shuffling through messy stacks to find a processed check when you need it.Choose your statement style with StatementSelect — Select from one of four statement styles to best match the way you reconcile your account.Set up account preferences — Set up your own online preferences, including creating Balance Alerts that notify you when an account balance goes above or below an amount you specify. Customize your Online Banking home page with either the Online Banking Main Menu or your Account Balance Summary. Take advantage of other services whenever you need them: request stop payment on a check, shop securely online to reorder checks or contact us securely by email.

Enroll Today!Frequently Asked Questions
See the Demo
LoginAlso of Interest:
Business Credit Cards
Business CDs
Employee Banking
Remote Deposit

Online Banking Key Features


The EON CyberAccount is UnionBank's internet-based deposit account. It allows you to do absolutely all your banking transactions in a click of a mouse. You can even make electronic fund transfers to any bank in the country -- anytime, anywhere!

Access your balances and transaction history
No more waiting for statements to arrive in the mail, Internet Banking lets you view your account balance and transactions at any time.

Transfer funds
No more waiting in queues to transfer funds or pay bills. Transfer funds between your own or to other UnionBank accounts. You can also enroll in the facility to transfer funds to other banks.

Pay Bills
On your own time and from you home, you can pay your credit card, insurance/pre-need/premiums, utility bills.

You can even schedule a bills payment for a later date!

The fastest, the most convenient way to bank!
No branches. No passbooks or checkbooks. No transaction slips. No time wasted. Do your banking transaction in 60 seconds! At home, or anywhere in the world where you have internet access.

No minimum balance to maintain!
Transfer funds from your EON account to another UnionBank account or any other bank account in the Philippines.
EON is the country's first electronic fund transfer facility among other banks. All you need to do is specify the Bank, the Beneficiary or Account Holder's Name and his /her Account Number and you're all set!

Pay Your Bills On-line!
Just enter your billing details - the corresponding reference number and the amount to be paid. You will receive a confirmation number as your receipt for every payment made.

Make balance inquiries, get account summaries
including transaction details. Monitoring your account has never been this easy

Customer Service
You can also send any requests for product information, or even report a stolen ATM or credit card via the mail facility.

ING offers interest on online checking

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Online banking pioneer ING Direct helped transform the banking industry through its high-yield savings accounts, sparking a wave of copycats competing to attract tech-savvy consumers eager for a higher return.

Now the innovative virtual bank is looking to lure more customers from traditional brick-and-mortar banks through another offering: high-yield checking accounts. But will investors go ga-ga over the chance to earn more on money usually set aside to pay bills anyway?


Current Savings Rates

Type Overall avgs


MMA 1.20%
$10K MMA 1.23%
6 month CD 1.28%
1 yr CD 1.65%
5 yr CD 2.61%

Find personalized rates:

Industry experts are skeptical.

How fast will my savings grow?
"A savings account is a very important model for banks because it's a force for gathering deposits," said Madhavi Mantha, senior analyst at independent consulting and research firm Celent LLC. But checking accounts are less important - and less profitable - for banks, which usually use them to try to then sell other products to customers.

Consumers generally don't keep large amounts of cash in their checking accounts, making the lure of higher returns modest, analysts said.

"If you have a couple of thousand dollars sitting idle in a checking account, you may make $30 a year," said Asaf Buchner, analyst at research and consulting firm Jupiter Research. "That doesn't outweigh the fact that people still want branches for more complex activities."

But ING Direct CEO Arkadi Kuhlmann, who spearheaded the bank's high-yield savings accounts, said the widespread adoption of the Internet has pushed consumers who were once willing to settle for any return to demand more from their financial institutions.

When it comes to deposits, traditional banks are already tripping over themselves by offering perks like free checking and higher yields on savings accounts. Given the competitive pressures, Kuhlmann said online high-yield checking accounts are a natural next step in the banking industry's evolution.

"You've got pressure on bank margins, declining savings rates, low interest for all kinds of lending products and every bank is trying to grow organically," Kuhlmann said. "Checking accounts are going to be paying much more interest than in the past. It's a value proposition."

And if early consumer response is any indicator of success, then ING Direct - a unit of ING Groep NV (Charts) of the Netherlands - may be on to something.

Kuhlmann said ING Direct's new product - known as Electric Orange in keeping with the company's use of the color in its marketing - has attracted over 60,000 new checking accounts in just over two months, bringing in more than $2.2 billion in new deposits. ING Direct has some 4 million customers and $60 billion in assets.

Financial research and consulting firm Celent estimates that $120 billion in deposits were gathered online as of the end of 2005 and expects that figure to more than triple to $380 billion by 2010.

Why Sallie moved at Citi
Electric Orange allows checking customers the opportunity to pay bills online, access money through a MasterCard-branded debit card for free at 32,000 locations nationwide, send money through free electronic checks and provides free overdraft protection. And any money that sits in the account up to $50,000 earns a 3 percent yield. For checking balances beyond $50,000, consumers can earn up to 5.3 percent in interest.

He added that other banks are likely to go down the same route in order to remain competitive.

Some traditional banks are already jumping on the band wagon. HSBC Direct, the online arm of international bank HSBC (Charts) which recently raised its yield to 6 percent for new online savings accounts, is planning to launch a high-yield checking account in the first half of 2007.

HSBC spokesman Stephen Cohen said details are still being finalized and he declined to comment on what kind of yield would be offered. Currently, HSBC consumers earn 0.15 percent interest on their regular checking accounts.

E-Loan, which already provides online savings accounts, plans to branch out into checking later this year.

Citigroup's (Charts) Citibank Direct offers online checking, although it's not a high-yield account, said Citi spokesman Rob Julavits. Other banks with high-yield online savings include Capital One (Charts) and Emigrant Bank's EmigrantDirect. Neither offer high-yield online checking.

While online banking is becoming more popular, paving the way for innovations like high-yield checking, analysts aren't expecting consumers to abandon traditional banks any time soon.

According to a report by Jupiter Research, nearly half of U.S. households will use online banking by 2011, up from 36 percent in 2005. Jupiter Research's Buchner said while consumers may prefer to check statements and pay bills online - all standard options in ING Direct's checking account - they still prefer to open accounts and shop for complex products like mortgages in branches. Some consumers also prefer depositing checks at branches, he said.

ING Direct's checking account currently doesn't allow consumers to deposit checks at ATMs. Instead users can either choose to direct deposit checks electronically into their online accounts or mail it in to the company - a slower process.

Fortune 500: Biggest commercial banks
And if online checking accounts do catch on the way online savings accounts have, some analysts think traditional banks may have an advantage over ING Direct's virtual model.

"Cost of funds may actually be lower for some of the (traditional) banks because they have other lending products they can leverage," said George Tubin, research director at research advisory firm TowerGroup. "ING Direct started out as only a savings product and they've realized that's not a winning formula so they've expanded out to other product lines."

And if a price war for high-yield online checking begins, then ING Direct - once the market leader in offering high-yield products - may find itself outshone by competitors.

Still, ING Direct's Kuhlmann said the company isn't worried about being the provider with the highest yield in savings or checking accounts. The company will make money off card activity as well as any interest incurred on the account's credit line, he said.

And it's still coming up with innovations such as a high-yield online savings account for small businesses, due to launch in April. "We never said we'd have the best rate always," he said. "We tend to look at providing consumers with an ongoing steady proposition

Online Banking Review: ING Direct's Orange Savings Account

The Orange savings account from ING Direct is a great financial product that can help you save money by earning a high interest rate. This online bank account is easy to open, convenient to use, and safe and secure. ING Direct is a member of the
FDIC, so your deposits are insured by the federal government up to $100,000. The Orange savings account has no minimum balance requirement, no maintenance fees, no service charges, and can be linked to your existing checking account with another bank. The account is currently paying 4.35% APY interest and interest is credited to your account monthly. Interest rates do change and lately they have been going up, so you can check their website for their current rate. Their website is www.ingdirect.com. Why continue to accept a low interest rate from your local bank when you can earn more with ING Direct? And since you can link the savings account to your existing checking account, you don’t even have to change banks or order new checks. The reason that they can pay you a higher interest rate is because all of their transactions are done electronically, so their expenses are much lower than traditional brick and mortar banks. Without physical bank branches spread throughout the country, they have less operational costs, fewer employees to pay, and can pass this savings on to you in the form of higher interest rates.

There are a few different ways that you can apply for an account. You can go to their website and apply for an account directly online. Or, you can download an account application from their website, complete it, and mail it in. A third option is to call 1-800-ING-DIRECT to request an account application be mailed to you. Once the account is open, you can bank online 24 hours per day. Or, if you prefer, you can bank by phone through their automated touch tone system or by speaking to an ING associate from 7am to 9pm EST seven days a week.

Netlink online banking blog

At Police & Nurses, we believe in the value of keeping our members informed of changes to our products and services. We also welcome your opinions and feedback.

We are therefore pleased to introduce you to our online blog, which provides you the opportunity to learn about issues that affect your banking and provides a forum for you to share your opinions and ideas.

The terms and conditions of the blog can be accessed at the bottom right of this page.

We look forward to hearing from you.



Our first topic of discussion is the upgrade to our Netlink online banking, which will be occurring on Monday 22nd June 2009. The upgrade will provide our Netlink online banking site with a fresh new look, which incorporates changes to the layout of the Account Summary screen and some new security features, to assist us to protect your funds.

The additional security features are a necessity to remain one step ahead of criminals and whilst we acknowledge it introduces an additional step when creating new external transfers and BPays, the impact to you should be minimal.

We welcome any comments and opinions about these changes

Online Banking Fraud on the Up

The device is called keylogging, and enables fraudsters to gather passwords and credit card numbers.

Last year alone, online banking fraud reached a massive £52.5 million, compared to £22.6 million in 2007, and again, just £12.2 million in 2004, according to UK payment association – Apacs.

Losses due to fraud related to UK credit and debit cards also rose by 14%, reaching £609 million. However, most victims of card fraud aren’t liable and therefore get their money refunded.

Recent years has seen an increase in the number of people choosing to bank online, from the comfort of their own homes, as opposed to having to queue.

One Step Ahead

The problem of this is that fraudsters are usually one step ahead of consumers, and therefore, quickly adapt new technology. This has been seen clearly by the steady increase of internet banking fraud in the last few years.

The programmes that are used to target us by tracking our details usually find their way onto our computers via unsolicited emails.

A spokeswoman for Apac said: “The industry continues to remind customers to ensure that they have their computer’s firewall switched on and anti-virus software up to date.”

The introduction of card chip-and-pin numbers seemed to be doing the trick when it came to reducing card fraud, however, 2007 and 2008 has seen the number begin to rise once more.

Goods that are bought on the internet, over the phone, or via mail order are currently the number one target when it comes to card fraud. In these areas, pin numbers are not required, so it is hardly surprising that fraud in this area has risen by 13% to £328 million.

PIN Numbers Work

However, the most significant rise was 39%, which correlates to the number of people who take over other people’s accounts – ID theft.

Apac have admitted that, overall, card fraud losses have increased, but it says that if these losses are taken as a percentage of card turnover, these were actually falling.

It also pointed out that in the last 5 years, the most rapid acceleration in fraud was actually by fraudsters using cards overseas, especially in places where chip-and-pin is not in place. Apacs is therefore pressuring on many countries, including the US, to introduce chip-and-pin.

Anyone in the UK caught out by card/internet fraud is not liable according to the terms of the Banking Code as long as they have acted with ‘reasonable care’, and will subsequently be reimbursed.

However, the code also says that if the card is used before it is reported missing, or is someone knows a PIN, the victim has to pay the first £50 they lose.

Online bank fraud concerns consumers

It's the most unnerving story imaginable for a bank customer -- money disappearing from their account. A mysterious transaction, and no recourse. All the money, simply gone.

The case of Joe Lopez, detailed Tuesday by "NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams," is just one example. Lopez lost $90,000 when an unauthorized wire transfer moved the funds from his small business account to a bank account in Latvia. As a small business account holder, Lopez has fewer rights than consumers would if facing the same situation. But the story highlights increasing concern over the way financial institutions verify just who is moving money around their systems.

Online banking is increasingly popular in the United States. This year, about 55 million people will bank online, according to analyst firm Gartner. But the system is fraught with perils.

Chief among them are phishing e-mails that trick consumers into giving away their bank login information or other personal data. Nearly 2 million consumers said they'd fallen for the trick during one 12-month period, Gartner analyst Avivah Litan said earlier this year. It's not clear how many of them suffered an eventual attack on their online bank accounts, Litan said, but the stolen information is clearly valuable to would-be criminals.

While consumers who do suffer account losses are often refunded the money, there's still paperwork headaches to deal with, and not everyone does recover everything they've lost.

"In most cases, especially those involving credit card fraud, consumers get their money back pretty easily," she said. "But in other cases, like new account fraud or illegal transfers, it's not so simple and consumers often can lose out. They need to be aware of the holes in the system that are more apparent than ever with all the electronic doors into and out of their bank accounts."

Next Generation Online Banking Solutions

I have been receiving many inquiries from banks about what to do with their aging online banking platforms. They recognize the need to upgrade but question what their provider is suggesting or simply would like to know more about where the market is headed. I have spent a lot of time researching the market and I have a pretty strong opinion regarding the types of features/functions that banks need to offer. Usability and customer experience are paramount. Some of the key areas of discussion lately have been:

•Vendor solutions. Should I stick with my current vendor or switch to a new provider? Who has the best solution out there? This is not a simple question to answer, and one that requires plenty of investigation. Celent has recently evaluated the vendors of retail online banking solutions (see the following report). Banks have been approaching us for custom evaluations where we plug in their specific requirements. I enjoy these projects as they always produce different results and I get to meet a lot of interesting and knowledgeable people.


•Web 2.0 Rich Internet Applications. Banks are trying to sift through the hype. They want to build Rich Internet Applications (RIA) but are having a hard time defining the business case. It’s a slow-moving process, but banks are recognizing the shift and the need to remain competitive. Non-banks are leading the Web 2.0 charge and banks are realizing that they are playing catch-up when it comes to customer experience.


•PFM. I have blogged about this extensively. Banks know they need to jump on the PFM bandwagon. Should they build a solution, buy pieces, outsource the entire thing? They also want to know how to integrate PFM properly into online banking. Lots of questions here.


•Social Media. Twitter is the talk of the town. I am receiving a ton of inquiries about how banks can leverage Twitter and other forms of social media. Banks also want to know how to integrate this into online banking and customer support.


While retail online banking has been the subject of most inquiries, small business online banking has proven to be a popular topic as well. Most banks tend to lump their small business customers onto retail solutions and ignore their unique requirements. The last thing a bank wants to do is let a small business customer fall through the cracks. They require customized features, some of which will need to be scaled down from cash management solutions (e.g. ACH, wire transfers, entitlements). The same can be said for high net worth customers who may require sophisticated capabilities.

In any case, I have been conducting a lot of online banking research lately and I am enjoying the fresh perspective that certain banks are thinking about or even starting to take. If you would like to discuss any of these please comment or feel free to send me a note

Online Banking Benefits


There are multiple reasons to actually use online banking. It is a tool that can be useful in more ways than one. You can easily see various aspects of your financial situation in real time.

24/7 Banking
24/7 banking allows you to do multiple things whenever you would like. You can easily check your balance for any account in seconds. You can see all of your transactions, which may help you with balancing your checkbook. You can easily perform most banking functions online at whatever time of day is convenient for you.

Online Transfers
Transferring money between accounts used to require a trip to the bank. While this was not difficult, it was simply frustrating to go out of your way to move money between your own accounts. Now, with online banking, you can easily transfer your money between accounts. Move your money between your checking account and savings account with ease. It has never been easier to change the amount of money in each account you have.

Online Bill Payment
Bank online allows you to pay bills online. This is an incredibly efficient and beneficial system. You can single-pay (choose when you pay) each bill individually. You can also set up recurring payments. This means that the money will automatically be paid to the bill on a specific date. If you are forgetful, this is a great way to make sure that you do not miss any payments

Private Banking

Barclays Wealth is the largest private wealth management group in the UK* with over £48.8 billion of client assets under management.

Our long-established Private Bank offers a dedicated, one-to-one service for successful high net worth individuals in over 50 countries worldwide.Our understanding is built on the heritage and experience of the Barclays Group which has been managing the wealth of individuals and families for over 300 years.

Global market research
We deliver objective advice sourcing the best solutions from the entire market. Through our relationship with Barclays Capital, a leading investment bank, our clients also gain access to market-leading investment advice often reserved for institutional clients.

Personal service
To deliver a superior level of service, we match you with your own dedicated Private Banker. Their role is to anticipate and understand your needs to help you achieve your immediate and long-term wealth goals. We never underestimate the importance of personal chemistry. They are also your gateway to the entire range of expertise that the Barclays Group provides.

Our appreciation that every investor is different has led us to develop an innovative approach that we call our investment philosophy.

Secure and Safe: Tips For Online Banking

Just within the last several years, the Internet has emerged as a highly convenient way to conduct banking business, as well as shop for financial services. As the use of the Internet continues to expand, more banks are using the web to offer products and services or enhance its communication with existing customers.

However, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), safe online banking involves making wise choices – decisions that will help users avoid costly surprises or even scams.

Whether selecting a traditional bank or an online bank with no physical office, users should make sure a bank is legitimate and that deposits are federally insured. The following are tips for consumers considering banking over the Internet:

Read key information about the bank posted on its Web site. Peruse the "About Us" section on the bank's Web site where a brief history of the bank, its official name, address, and its insurance coverage from the FDIC is featured.

Protect yourself from fraudulent Web site. Be careful to avoid copycat Web sites that use a name or Web address similar to, but not the same as, that of a real financial institution. Their intent is to lure potential customers in giving personal information, such as your account number and password. Making sure you have typed the correct Web site address of your bank before conducting a transaction.

Verify the bank's insurance status. To verify a bank's insurance status, look for the familiar FDIC logo or the words "Member FDIC" or "FDIC Insured" on the Web site. Internet users may also check the FDIC's online database of FDIC-insured institutions.

Due to insurance purposes, a bank may use different names for its online and traditional services. Your deposits at the parent bank are added together with those at the Web site and insured for up to the maximum amount covered for one bank.
Only deposits offered by the FDIC-insured institutions are protected by the FDIC. Nondeposit investments and insurance products, such as mutual funds, stocks, annuities, and life insurance policies sold through Web sites or at a bank are not FDIC-insured, are not guaranteed by the bank, and can lose value.

Quite often banks that are chartered overseas are not FDIC insured. If you choose to use a bank chartered overseas, it is important to note that the FDIC may not insure your deposits.

Consumers often want to know how their personal information is used by their bank and whether it is shared with affiliates of the bank or other parties. Beginning in July 2001, banks are required to provide customers with a copy of their privacy policy, regardless of whether you are conducting business online or offline. Here, customers can learn what information the bank uses regarding its customers and whether it shares this with other companies.

It's important to remember that the Internet is a public network. So, it's important to learn how to safeguard banking information, credit card numbers, Social Security Number and other personal data. Look at the bank's Web site for information about its security practices, or contact the bank. Also, be informed about the Website's security features including:

1. Encryption: the process of scrambling private information to prevent unauthorized access.

2. Passwords or personal identification numbers (PINs): Used when accessing an account online. Choose a password unique to you and consider changing it regularly.

3. General Security: Security provided by your personal computer such as virus protection and physical access controls should be used and updated regularly.

Considered an added convenience to customers, some banks may offer links to merchants, retail stores, travel agents and other sites. Keep in mind that nonofficial Web sites linked to your banks' site are not FDIC-insured. These company's products and services may not be insured by the FDIC and your bank may not guarantee the products and services. Make sure you are comfortable with the reputation of a company before making a transaction and never provide a credit card or debit card number unless you initiate the transaction.
Related Categories

How Does FDIC Insurance Work With Online Banking?

FDIC Insurance is treated no differently wheter the account is online or offline. "The FDIC protects you against the loss of your insured deposits in the unlikely event that an FDIC-Insured Institution fails. If you or your family's deposit accounts at one FDIC-Insured Institution total $100,000 or less, your deposits are fully insured. If you or your family has more than $100,000 at one insured institution, you can still be fully insured if your accounts meet certain requirements. You can use EDIE to determine your insurance coverage beyond the basic $100,000 amount."

Here is an easier way to explain it:

If you are single, for every bank that you have an account with the FDIC will insure up to $100,000. This means if you use Bank A, when you add up the balances of your savings, checking, and CDs any amount over $100,000 is not covered. If bank declares banKruptcy and over all of your accounts you have $110,000. You are out $10,000.

If you're married or have a joint partner, you can get some killer coverage. You can actually get up to $400,000 of coverage between you. Here's how:

Account 1- Take out an account or several accounts in your name. That will get you up to $100,000 of coverage.

Account 2 - Have your husband, wife, or partner create an account or several accounts in their name. This will get you another $100,000 of coverage.

Account 3 - Create joint accounts with your husband, wife, or partner. Because they are in both of your names you get up to $200,000 of coverage.

Let see, That's:

Account 1- $100,000

Account 2- $100,000

Account 3- $200,000

A total of $400,000 of coverage.

Bank of America Closing Branches


Bank of America is closing branches all across the country to cut back on expenses. Bank of America is planning on closing 10% of its branches which would equate to around 610 branch closings.

Bank of America says that this move will save money for the bank, but won’t dramatically reduce the customer experience as many account holders do online banking as opposed to making branches visits for deposits. Based on that statement you would expect them to cut out branches that are in close proximity to each other and not phase out certain regions, but who actually knows. They have not stated which branches they have decided to close yet.

Bank of America stock is up $0.25 or 1.91% at the time of this writing so it appears that stock holders agree that this is a move to just cut the fat off of BofA.

Bank of America was one of the larger recipients of government bailout money receiving $45 billion that has yet to be paid back. What do you think of the move? Are they in trouble or just cutting on unnecessary expenses?

Marketing:Standardized Letters: Online Banking Services

Dear {Bank},

Your online banking service should allow customers to use Mozilla Firefox but currently doesn't. According to http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp, Firefox is used for almost 20% of page views on the Internet and this is increasing by almost 1.5% each month. It was downloaded 5 million times in a fortnight from www.mozilla.org and received reviews such as "the browser is an absolute joy to use — smart, fast and very user-friendly. Once you try Firefox you'll wonder why anyone uses any other web browser," from Wired Magazine.

Your banking system actually allows Netscape Navigator, but this is only used for about 2 percent of internet page views. Firefox is actually based on Netscape but is far more popular. Visit www.mozilla.org for more information about Firefox. Firefox has all of the necessary encryption technology and works perfectly with the online banking systems that do not artificially block it. In fact, I have successfully been able to use Firefox to access your online bank by making it say it was Internet Explorer.

You may be aware that the the U.S. government's Computer Emergency Readiness Team is warning Web surfers to stop using Interner Explorer and switch to other browsers. According to them, the available security updates still leave too many security flaws and are a cause of credit card number theft. The continuous updates for Internet Explorer are often difficult and time consuming to install. Updates for Firefox are small and infrequent, and can be set to download automatically.

According to www.secunia.com, an independent security monitoring organization, Firefox currently has no outstanding security issues, out of a total of 13 security advisories in the last two years. None of these were labeled "extremely critical" and 2 were labeled "highly critical". Currently, Secunia lists 18 outstanding security issues out of 69 advisories for Internet Explorer 6.0 in the last two years, 15% of which were labeled "extremely critical" and 30%, "highly critical". If you aren't using Windows XP and haven't been able to download Service Pack 2, there are even more outstanding security issues which viruses can use to install themselves on computers.

People on Macs or Linux shouldn't have to install Internet Explorer to access your online banking (it is far more difficult than installing Firefox), and anyone not using Windows XP can no longer get IE security updates from Microsoft, compounding the security problem.

I hope you will choose to add Firefox to the list for your Online Banking software so that it does not refuse to allow Firefox users.


Thanks for your consideration,

West-America-Bank-Online-Services-lb

: 4029, 4029 com, america bank, america com, america investment services, america job bank, america line, america on line, america on line, america online, america online, america online banking, america online com, america west, america west, american bank, american bank com, american job bank, american online, american security bank, american west bank, americans for job security, americans for job security, bank account details, bank america, bank america, bank america com, bank america online, bank america online banking, bank american, bank com, bank of america .com, bank of america account, bank of america account online, bank of america banking on line, bank of america banking online, bank of america bill pay, bank of america bill pay online, bank of america ca, bank of america checking, bank of america checking account, bank of america checks, bank of america com, bank of america headquarters, bank of america investment services, bank of america investments services, bank of america jobs, bank of america on line, bank of america on line, bank of america on line banking

Negatives of Online Bank Accounts


Online bank accounts can be a boon as well as a bane. We all know how online banking saves our precious time and costs but there are quite a few reasons that show why online banking can be avoided as well.

What are the negatives?

1. New Account- Opening a new online account is still a tedious task such as depositing documents and proofs. There is also the problem of “time out”, as complained by customers. In such a case, the whole process has to start over again. Therefore, it is better to bank with those banks in which you already have account.

2. Technical Difficulties- Electrical things can develop snags and often they are when you need support most. Websites and phone lines may get jammed. Therefore, it is better to keep an account open in any local bank or credit union so that you are not rendered penniless in times of need.

3. Customer Satisfaction- When you deal with banks physically, then you get to know the employees, which in return ensure a two-way relationship between the bank and the customer. But in online banking, they are just voices, trained voices, communicating with you and whether they understand your problem is a different issue. There are problems which can’t be solved over phone and therefore, knowing the staff of a bank becomes profitable.

4. Speed Of Clearance- Whether it is the necessity of clearing of checks or for depositing money in account, it takes a long time whereas the internet is supposed to process things faster. Internet banking is good for checking account balance or for transferring money and other than that, it is better going to a bank personally.

5. How To Spend? - Online banking does not give access to money instantly. I mean online banking does not give you money, it is done by ATMs. The PC or laptop cannot be carried everywhere. Online accounts are better for paying outstanding bills and other things.

Features & Advantages of Online Banking

Gone are the days where it required the customer to go to a bank to make a financial transaction. The evolution of Online Banking has brought about a seeping change to the whole financial industry. Customers can now bank online from their homes. Make Transfers, Check your Account Balances, View your statements or order your statements online, Make Bill payments or Order your check books, all online from your home. All it requires is a computer and an internet connection. And if you are going to think it’s going to cost you anything, your absolutely mistaken, all the above services are performed absolutely free of cost.

Citibank which is one of the leading financial institutions has only 4 locations in the whole of England. All the four are in London, however the number of customers Citibank has in London is enormous. How is it possible? Online banking makes it possible. It’s cheaper, faster, efficient and more reliable.

Is it Secure: A lot of people are apprehensive of ordering products and utilizing various online services apart from banking to make a purchase or pay for a service? Why? Because websites are hacked very easily today and your credit card number or debit card number can be easily accessed. However banks, when they offer Online Services, make sure that their website is secure and safe for customers to conduct transactions online. A bank today virtually takes responsibility as it’s dealing with the most wanted product, MONEY. It takes all the necessary protection and precaution to see to that their websites are secure.

So a customer can forget about his card numbers being hacked as banks assure their customers that their money is safe. If you're like most people, you've heard a lot about online banking but probably haven't tried it yourself. You still pay your bills by mail and deposit checks at your bank branch, much the way your parents did. You might shop online for a loan, life insurance or a home mortgage, but when it comes time to commit, you feel more comfortable working with your banker or an agent you know and trust.

Online banking isn't out to change your money habits. Instead, it uses today's computer technology to give you the option of bypassing the time-consuming, paper-based aspects of traditional banking in order to manage your finances more quickly and efficiently.

Origin of online banking

The advent and growing use of the Internet and the popularity of personal computers and mobile phone users, presented both an opportunity and a challenge for the banking industry. Customers today want Email and SMS alerts of all their financial transactions and latest updates.
For years, financial institutions have used powerful and efficient computer networks to automate millions of transactions everyday. Today, paper records are most often used only at the point of sale as a customers receipt. Now that its customers are connected to the Internet via personal computers and mobile phones, banks envision similar economic advantages by adapting those same internal electronic processes to home use.

Today banks view online banking as a very powerful and a value added tool to attract and retain new customers, while helping to eliminate costly paper handling and teller interactions in an increasingly competitive banking environment. Paper records are also difficult to maintain and is destroyable.

Virtual banks

If you don't mind foregoing the teller station at the banks and kind bank officers, a "virtual" or e-bank may save you very real money. Virtual banks are banks without bricks- it means that they do not exist physically. From the customer's perspective, they exist entirely on the Internet, where they offer pretty much the same range of services and adhere to the same federal regulations as your physical bank does.

Virtual banks pass the money what they save on overhead like buildings and tellers along to you in the form of higher yields, lower fees and more generous account thresholds.
Brick-to-click banks

Almost all large national banks, many regional banks and even co-operative banks, thrift institutions, credit unions and other depository institutions offer some form of online banking, otherwise known as PC banking, home banking, electronic banking or Internet banking. Those that do are referred to as "brick-to-click" banks, both to distinguish them from brick-and-mortar banks that have yet to offer online banking, as well as from online or virtual banks that have no physical branches or teller stations whatsoever.

Most of the large banks now offer fully secure, completely functional online banking for free or for a very small fee. Citibank, one of the largest depository institutions encourage their customers to go online and bank with them. Smaller banks offer limited access or functionality, for instance, you may be able to view your account balance and statements but not initiate transactions online. As more banks succeed online and more customers use their sites, completely functional online banking definitely will emerge as commonplace as automated teller machines.

The challenge for the banking industry is that it has been to design this new service channel in such a way that its customers will readily learn to use and trust it. After all these banks have spent generations earning our trust; they aren't about to risk that on a Web site that is frustrating, confusing or less than secure.

Advantages of online banking

- Convenience: Unlike your normal physical bank, online banking sites never close. They're available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and they're only just a mouse click away
- Ubiquity: If you are out of station or even out of the country on a tour or on an official trip, when you’re facing a money problem, all you have to do is log on to the internet and transfer funds from one account to another and take care of your needs and business 24 /7
- Transaction speed: Online banking initiates speedy transactions and they are very cost effective and is generally quicker than the transactions conducted at the ATM’s or at the bank
- Efficiency: Feel free to access, manage and control all your bank accounts, including Individual Retirement Accounts, CDs, even securities, from one secure site
- Effectiveness: Manage your money, investment, bank accounts without even going to the bank. Get email and wireless alerts on your transactions. Get your statements online. Make your bill payments online and transfer funds, all for free

Online banking is banking at your convenience. All banks today are encouraging customers to bank online rather than going to the bank and making transactions. This helps the customers to save money and time. The transactions conducted online are absolutely free and within the customers control too. All you need to do is just log on and make life easier for yourself. Transactions like bill payments, viewing of statements, requisition of cheque books and directing the bank to make auto debits are increasing features of online banking. When you have the opportunity to bank from home, why do you want to go to a bank.

The advantages of online banking

Going to a bank can take a lot of your time, considering the fact that banks have a fixed timetable and the most of the times you have to queue up because everybody seems to go there at the same time with you.

This is one of the reasons why more and more people get onto online banking. If you want to save more of your time as well as manage your finances in an easier way you should combine online banking with Microsoft� Money 2004.
Here we would like to present you the advantages of using Money 2004 and online banking. And they are not just a few, if we take into consideration the fact that the number of people who use online banking has exponentially raised from 0.4 million to 17.2 million, according to Mintel survey.

And this happened because with online banking:

A lot of your time will be saved because you don't have to visit a bank and wait in a long queue;

Online banking is more accessible because it gives you the opportunity to check your bank account at a time and a place that is favorable to you;
No matter the place where you are, as long if you have Internet access, you can take care of your finances through online banking service;

Online banking involves no difficulties in carrying out financial transactions, which are safe and secure;
Almost every financial institution offers you the possibility to see your latest transactions, transfer money to people or institutions, pay checks, apply for loans and arrange or change standing orders and direct debits.


At all these advantages of online banking, add the power of Money 2004, which provides you a range of instruments meant to help you control your finances. To simplify the process even more, you will receive a complete manual that guides you through the entire process of online banking step by step.
Money 2004 helps you in many ways to manage your capital online. Using online banking and Money 2004 you are able to get a financial SNAPSHOT of your bank and building society and savings. Also you can download online statements from your financial institution to your computer, find out which dealings have been carried out as soon as they were passed over successfully. Furthermore, online banking and Money 2004 allow you to double-check your entries automatically.

These are some of the reasons why you should get started with online banking. You can only win!

Online Banking - 5 Advantages to Save You Time and Money

If you haven't starting taking advantage of your bank's online services, you should! Online banking has many advantages over traditional banking:

1. Download Banking Transactions. You can download your banking transactions directly into your financial software as often as you like. If you use your ATM card often, this is a must, because it keeps your bank balance current in your financial software. You won't have to worry about keeping all those debit card receipts.

2. Download Credit Card Transactions. You can download credit card transactions directly into your financial software. Don't waste time entering credit card charges by hand - download them! This is probably one of the biggest advantages of online banking, since entering credit card transactions manually can be very time consuming.

3. Online Bill Payment. Online bill payment is easier and less expensive than generating and mailing a paper check. Your bank may offer free bill pay services - if so, this saves the expense of ordering checks and buying stamps. Checks will be generated and mailed by your bank at your authorization. Plus, the checks will have the vendor names directly on your bank statements, next to the amount of the check and check number. This is not true for traditional checks.

4. Quickly Verify Bank Balances. If you need to verify your bank account balance, just signin to your bank's online services. No more waiting for the bank statement, or calling the bank to get your balance. To get an accurate balance, take the bank's balance as shown online, subtract any outstanding checks, and add any outstanding deposits.

5. Quit Paying Bills. Use your vendor's auto-debit or auto-charge feature. Once established, your bill will be paid automatically through your bank or credit card account. This eliminates the step of manually paying the bill! Perfect for gas, electric, water, cable, phone, and other utility-type payments.

Save yourself time and money by taking advantage of online banking. Call your bank and credit card companies today to find out how to enroll in their online services.

Online Banking - 5 Advantages to Save You Time and Money

If you haven't starting taking advantage of your bank's online services, you should! Online banking has many advantages over traditional banking:

1. Download Banking Transactions. You can download your banking transactions directly into your financial software as often as you like. If you use your ATM card often, this is a must, because it keeps your bank balance current in your financial software. You won't have to worry about keeping all those debit card receipts.

2. Download Credit Card Transactions. You can download credit card transactions directly into your financial software. Don't waste time entering credit card charges by hand - download them! This is probably one of the biggest advantages of online banking, since entering credit card transactions manually can be very time consuming.

3. Online Bill Payment. Online bill payment is easier and less expensive than generating and mailing a paper check. Your bank may offer free bill pay services - if so, this saves the expense of ordering checks and buying stamps. Checks will be generated and mailed by your bank at your authorization. Plus, the checks will have the vendor names directly on your bank statements, next to the amount of the check and check number. This is not true for traditional checks.

4. Quickly Verify Bank Balances. If you need to verify your bank account balance, just signin to your bank's online services. No more waiting for the bank statement, or calling the bank to get your balance. To get an accurate balance, take the bank's balance as shown online, subtract any outstanding checks, and add any outstanding deposits.

5. Quit Paying Bills. Use your vendor's auto-debit or auto-charge feature. Once established, your bill will be paid automatically through your bank or credit card account. This eliminates the step of manually paying the bill! Perfect for gas, electric, water, cable, phone, and other utility-type payments.

Save yourself time and money by taking advantage of online banking. Call your bank and credit card companies today to find out how to enroll in their online services.

Online banking is booming


Once a niche market, online banking has grown into a widely-used tool for the average consumer.

Among 3,988 adults surveyed in the U.S. by Gartner Group, 47 percent said they now bank online. In the U.K, 30 percent echoed the same response.

Results varied according to income. Gartner found that over half of all consumers earning more than $30,000 in the U.S. and 15,000 pounds in the U.K. bank on the Internet. Among lower-income households, 25 percent in America and 17 percent in the U.K. use online banking.

"Over the past several years, online banking has been seen as a way of appealing to more affluent and younger clients," said David Schehr, Gartner research director. "However, what is becoming clear is that the overall level of consumer Internet use and the increasingly narrow segment of nonusers--particularly in the U.S.--are shifting the dynamics of who is using online banking and what they seek from it."

Among people who don't bank online, no one single reason was cited above all others, noted Gartner. Around 61 percent of U.S. households and 58 percent of those in the U.K. said they simply prefer to use other methods. However, 41 percent of U.S. consumers and 38 percent in the U.K. blamed security as the most important reason for not banking over the Internet.

"To strengthen their position and better support these customers, banks need to add more payment options, deploy online and mobile alerts with greater visibility, and continue to hammer home the message that online bill payment is free."
--Edward Kountz, Forrester senior analyst Gartner conducted its survey in December 2008 and January 2009 and questioned people 18 years and older.

Overall, the number of households paying bills online is slated to jump 5.4 percent from 48 million this year to 63 million by 2014, according to another report from research firm Forrester.

The report notes the effect of bill consolidation sites, such as Yodlee and Corillian, where consumers can manage and pay all their bills. Such sites are starting to woo more people from the banks' own bill payment sites and will own a greater share of the market by 2012. Banks will need to do a better job spreading the word about their own online services, according to Forrester.

"eBusiness executives at banks need to work to establish earlier and stronger bill payment relationships with young affluents and other young adults," said Forrester senior analyst Edward Kountz. "To strengthen their position and better support these customers, banks need to add more payment options, deploy online and mobile alerts with greater visibility, and continue to hammer home the message that online bill payment is free."

Advantages And Disadvantages Of Online Banking

Advantages of online banking

•Convenience: Unlike your corner bank, online banking sites never close; they're available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and they're only a mouse click away.
•Ubiquity: If you're out of state or even out of the country when a money problem arises, you can log on instantly to your online bank and take care of business, 24/7.
•Transaction speed: Online bank sites generally execute and confirm transactions at or quicker than ATM processing speeds.
•Efficiency: You can access and manage all of your bank accounts, including IRAs, CDs, even securities, from one secure site.
•Effectiveness: Many online banking sites now offer sophisticated tools, including account aggregation, stock quotes, rate alerts and portfolio managing programs to help you manage all of your assets more effectively. Most are also compatible with money managing programs such as Quicken and Microsoft Money.
Disadvantages of online banking


•Start-up may take time: In order to register for your bank's online program, you will probably have to provide ID and sign a form at a bank branch. If you and your spouse wish to view and manage your assets together online, one of you may have to sign a durable power of attorney before the bank will display all of your holdings together.
•Learning curve: Banking sites can be difficult to navigate at first. Plan to invest some time and/or read the tutorials in order to become comfortable in your virtual lobby.
•Bank site changes: Even the largest banks periodically upgrade their online programs, adding new features in unfamiliar places. In some cases, you may have to re-enter account information.
•The trust thing: For many people, the biggest hurdle to online banking is learning to trust it. Did my transaction go through? Did I push the transfer button once or twice? Best bet: always print the transaction receipt and keep it with your bank records until it shows up on your personal site and/or your bank statement.

What is online banking? बी Wasif


If you're like most people, you've heard a lot about online banking but probably haven't tried it yourself. You still pay your bills by mail and deposit checks at your bank branch, much the way your parents did. You might shop online for a loan, life insurance or a home mortgage, but when it comes time to commit, you feel more comfortable working with your banker or an agent you know and trust.

Online banking isn't out to change your money habits. Instead, it uses today's computer technology to give you the option of bypassing the time-consuming, paper-based aspects of traditional banking in order to manage your finances more quickly and efficiently.

Origin of online banking
The advent of the Internet and the popularity of personal computers presented both an opportunity and a challenge for the banking industry.

For years, financial institutions have used powerful computer networks to automate millions of daily transactions; today, often the only paper record is the customer's receipt at the point of sale. Now that its customers are connected to the Internet via personal computers, banks envision similar economic advantages by adapting those same internal electronic processes to home use.

Banks view online banking as a powerful "value added" tool to attract and retain new customers while helping to eliminate costly paper handling and teller interactions in an increasingly competitive banking environment.

How banking on a mobile phone can help the poor


What's the most revolutionary cell phone in the world today? Hint: it's not Apple's new iPhone. It may not run iTunes or switch seamlessly to Wifi, but an ordinary, hand-me-down phone can be revolutionary (pdf) when used as a virtual bank. "Yawn," the gadget geeks will say—mobile payment options are old hat in places like Japan, where mobile phones linked to credit/debit cards have become as much a part of the culture as sushi. But mobile banking, or m-banking for short, is about more than just added convenience; it's about giving millions of poor people in developing countries access to financial services for the first time. And that could change the world.

The World Bank estimates that in many countries, over half the population—"the unbanked"—has never had a bank account. The poor tend to be terrified of banks, since they're often humiliated or ignored when they try to enter them. That means they can't leave their savings anywhere safe, pay a bill without walking the cash to the office, or prove that they're credit-worthy. Meanwhile, mobile phone penetration is through the roof, especially in Africa. In 2000, fewer than 8 million Africans had a mobile phone - now over 100 million do. That's one in nine. Now, anyone with access to a cell phone has a place to keep his or her savings without needing a traditional bank account. We won't see millionaires suddenly emerging from the shantytowns just because they're "banked," but even a small nest egg needs a safe resting place.

At the moment, enthusiasm for m-banking has outrun its implementation. For one thing, regulators break out in a cold sweat at the thought of all the overlapping issues involved. But there are success stories. Leading the way is the Philippines, with over 3.5 million users split between G-cash and competitor SMARTmoney. South Africa is the other heavyweight, with MTN Mobile Banking and Wizzit both entering their second year of operations. In Brazil, m-banking may even surpass Internet banking in just five years. And on January 22, SafariCom, partly owned by Vodafone, is set to expand its M-Pesa pilot to all of Kenya.

These telecom companies aren't offering m-banking out of the kindness of their hearts. They like m-banking because it's a way for them to attract new customers by doing what they already do well—processing millions of tiny transactions. Banks aren't as interested, because they don't expect to profit from poor clients who won't be taking out a mortgage anytime soon. But the telecoms could start siphoning away bank customers who don't need all the bells and whistles.

Remittances is where m-banking will really be world-changing. In Latin America, for instance, fewer than 10 percent of remittance recipients have bank accounts. That means they're hiking to Western Union to pick up their money, which cost somebody a 15 percent commission to send. In the Philippines, SMART's customers are already sending an estimated $50 million in remittances each month via their mobile phones, and that's only the tip of the iceberg. In most of the world, remittances account for more financial flows than foreign direct investment or foreign aid combined. Lowering transaction costs even one percent would mean over one billion extra dollars would directly reach the poor each year, and that's not chump change.

Mobile banking: Safe, at least for now


Someone asked me recently whether I thought mobile banking was safe or not. I admitted that I don't do it but that doesn't really say much. Then I mumbled something incoherent and vowed to get a real answer.

After talking to a number of mobile and security experts, I've come to the conclusion that far from being less secure, mobile banking may even be more secure than logging on to your bank Web site over your PC. And the consensus is that it's probably less risky than using checks, which can be forged, and credit cards, which can be stolen or skimmed at ATM machines for clones to be made.


As Bruce Schneier, chief security technology officer at BT, summed it up: "Yes, there are going to be security issues and they will have to shake out. The question is, if something happens will the bank make it up to you?"

Apparently it will. The rules regarding liability in mobile banking are the same as they are for other methods of banking, said Jim Van Dyke, president of Javelin Strategy & Research.

"Credit card companies have zero liability policies that apply regardless of channel," he said. For instance, "Wells Fargo has a written guarantee that they will cover all your losses if it is through mobile banking."

That's good news for the brave few who have ventured into the market. Of all U.S. Internet users, 6 percent have done mobile banking in the last week, and 12 percent have done it in the last month, according to Javelin figures.

An estimated 30 million consumers in the U.S. do mobile banking, and half of all consumers think it's not secure, the research firm said in a mobile banking security standards report in December.

Despite the fact that online banking options abound in the U.S.--from AT&T, Nokia, Sprint Nextel, Visa, and the major banks--consumers have been reluctant. That could be for several reasons, my colleague Marguerite Reardon has concluded: they don't like downloading apps to their phones as is required by some banks, they are turned off by the small screen, and they can do it on their PCs more easily.

"We're not hearing of security issues in the mobile world," because the security benefits with mobile banking outweigh the disadvantages, Van Dyke said.

First, the con to mobile banking security:

Mobile devices are easy to lose: "It's more or less as safe as banking you would do from your home computer, maybe slightly more risky, similar to using a laptop at Starbucks," said Charlie Miller, a principal analyst at consultancy Independent Security Evaluators. "The biggest difference is you are carrying the thing around with you and are more likely to lose physical custody of it than a computer."

Even so, the convenience outweighs the risk, he said. "It is no riskier than calling someone using your debit card or buying on Amazon with a debit card."

Now for the pros:

Mobile banking can be done anywhere at any time: Because people can do mobile banking at any time, they are more likely to log on more frequently and thus the chances of them detecting fraud are increased, said Van Dyke.

Mobile has a diversity of platforms: In the mobile world in the U.S., there is no one dominant mobile platform that can be targeted by malicious hackers like there is with Windows in the PC market. The lack of standardization also reduces the chances that malware will be interoperable with a broad range of mobile software and get widely distributed, Van Dyke said.

No banking-related mobile viruses or malware yet: "In the mobile era, we're not seeing any such Trojans," said Roel Schouwenberg, a senior antivirus researcher for security firm Kaspersky, which has partnered with Barclays in the U.K. to offer security software to mobile customers.

Mobile banking functions are limited at this time: In general, U.S. consumers can check their account balances, transfer funds between their accounts, and see recent transactions over their mobile devices.

"You're getting information that is not transactional," said Nick Holland, a senior analyst at consultancy Aite Group. "In most instances, if someone found your phone and logged into your mobile banking account, the worst they could do is pay your electricity bill."

However, things will change as more transaction functions are enabled on mobile devices, the experts said. For instance, point-to-point transactions and cross-border money transfers are on the horizon, according to Holland.

"There will be more risk as payments move over to mobile devices because criminals will put more focus there and you will get spoofing attempts," said Van Dyke.

The ability to use your cell phone to buy things will undoubtedly put a dent in the credit card business, but it will also give mobile carriers additional revenue to make up for voice business they are losing to things like Skype and text messaging, said Jan Volzke, head of global marketing for McAfee Mobile.

"There is no reason people have to pull out a plastic card with a magnetic strip, technology developed 30 years ago, to buy a latte," he said. "Just hold the phone next to a cashier, it goes beep and there you go."

Other countries are already offering mobile transactions. For example, NTT Docomo in Japan, which uses McAfee security software to monitor for malicious activity on its mobile phones, initially started allowing consumers to use their phones to pay for public transport, and then added payments for things like ice cream and eventually banking, according to Volzke.

In the U.S., banks are more cautious. Payments and banking are the biggest security concern for mobile device manufacturers, according to a Mobile Security Report McAfee is set to release on Monday.

At the same time, the manufacturers aren't installing additional security protection on the vast majority of the devices and won't allow consumers to install security software like they can with computers, said Volzke.

To safeguard against security risks, mobile users should use their device PIN codes, download mobile apps only from their financial institution, switch Bluetooth off when not in use, and avoid lending their phone to strangers to minimize the chance of someone downloading a malicious app onto the device.

All in all, "mobile banking is secure and there's not really any cause for concern," said Holland of Aite Group.

Tower Group's latest projection on mobile banking


In a recent report, the Tower Group reported that mobile banking has now become "mainstream". (Read here) In this report, it is predicted that the number of mobile banking customers will reach 10 million at the end of 2009. (I presume that this is in the US, as this number has been reached at least two years ago globally). The report also predicts 53 million by 2013.

Seeing that I know that Tower Group made such predictions previously, I thought that I would go and check it out. This is what I found:

The first time that I could find that Tower Group made any prediction was in June 2007 (Read here). According to this report 400 thousand people used mobile banking then and was expected to grow to at least 22 million by 2012 (or even higher). Then a report was produced in November 2007 (Read here) where it was predicted that a million subscribers would be reached by the end of the year with 40 million by 2012. In a quote that I saw, Tower Group indicated that the tipping point in mobile banking has been reached in 2008.

If I collate all these predictions and fill in the gaps - the predictions was pretty accurate and remained consistent. Something tells me that the current predictions will not be that off the mark.