âThis is the first time in our 22 -year history of collecting this data that we have seen OD fees increase during a recession,â said Mike Moebs, CEO of Moebs Services, whose firm collects and analyzes pricing trends for government agencies such as the Federal Reserve and General Accounting Office, and financial institution clients.
Key results for 2009 include the following:
44.5 percent of all banks and credit unions have OD income greater than net income.
Higher OD fees were led by Wall Street banks, which charged a median price of $35 per overdraft vs. all financial institutions, which charged a median price of $26 per overdraft.
The South continued to lead in OD charges regionally, with a median charge per overdraft of $29.00 vs. $25.00 for the North, East and West regions.
The US Postal Service is increasing its price for OD fees more than Wall Street banks â to $35 per incident.
45 percent of Wall Street banks tier OD prices, vs. 2 percent of Main Street banks and credit unions. The OD charges range from a first-time charge of $25 up to a $35 charge per incident.
54 percent of all financial institutions offered a formal OD program, down significantly from 69 percent in 2008.
86 percent of all financial institutions that offer OD services allow the consumer to opt-out at any time.
Less than 20 percent of all financial institutions pay checks in the order from large to small, with the vast majority paying checks in the order of presentment to the financial institution.
35 percent of all financial institutions allow consumers to overdraw their accounts at an ATM or with a debit card, charging a median of $26 for this service.
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OD fees set a record, ya think people would learn.