• Home
  • Small-Business Marketing Statistics and Trends
  • What Is Mobile Banking?
  • How Student Loans Affect Credit Score?
  • Refinancing an Inherited House
  • How to Build a Kitchen?

Hanover Mortgages

The Refined Mortgage Lending Company & Home Loan Lenders

Financial Services

Apache is functioning normally

June 4, 2023 by Brett Tams

ESSA Bank & Trust will pay over $3 million to resolve redlining allegations, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday evening.

The Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania-based bank, from 2017 to 2021, did not sufficiently serve the credit needs of majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in and around Philadelphia by “failing to provide mortgage lending services” and “discouraging such borrowers,” the DOJ alleges. The city has a history of redlining practices that goes back to the 20th century.

Per a consent order, which is subject to court approval, ESSA will invest $2.92 million in a loan subsidy fund to increase access in minority neighborhoods, $125,000 on community partnerships and $250,000 on outreach and consumer financial education efforts. 

At least 50% of the subsidy fund must be used for consumers applying for loans in majority-Black and Hispanic census tracts within a five mile radius of the bank’s Upper Darby and Lansdowne branches, the court order said.

Additional stipulations of the order require the bank to hire two new mortgage loan officers to serve its existing branches in West Philadelphia, and for ESSA to conduct a research-based market study to identify the needs for financial services in communities of color. These requirements will stay in effect for five years. 

ESSA’s President Gary Olson said he “vehemently [denies] the government’s allegations of redlining” but added that the company “cooperated expeditiously and fully with the investigation into this matter.” 

Olson called the settlement a “constructive resolution to a dispute that has lasted several years.”

“We plan on using these loan subsidy funds to expand opportunities for qualified borrowers who can benefit from this assistance,” he added.

The now-settled allegations were brought to the attention of the DOJ by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in June 2022, prompting the department to open an investigation on Aug. 15, 2022. 

“Redlining in Philadelphia has deep roots, which has led decades of disinvestment in communities of color,” said Jacqueline C. Romero, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in a written statement. 

“Accessing the American dream of owning your own home is possible only when there is equality for all in their opportunities to access lending in the residential mortgage markets,” she said. “We appreciate ESSA’s prompt cooperation with the department’s investigation.”

The settlement with ESSA is part of an interagency initiative involving the DOJ, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which was launched in October 2021 by Attorney General Merrick B. Garland to combat redlining.  

Since then, the DOJ has announced seven redlining cases and settlements totaling over $87 million in relief for communities of color, the department said. This includes a $9 million settlement with Park National Bank in March and a $31 million settlement with City National Bank in January, the largest in the department’s history.

Source: nationalmortgagenews.com

Posted in: Refinance, Renting Tagged: 2, 2017, 2021, 2022, All, American Dream, Appreciate, Bank, black, borrowers, city, color, communities of color, company, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Consumers, court, Credit, currency, decades, Department of Justice, deposit, deposit insurance, dream, education, existing, Financial Education, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, fund, funds, General, government, Hispanic, history, home, in, Industry News, Insurance, Invest, lending, loan, loan officers, Loans, market, markets, Mortgage, mortgage lending, mortgage loan, needs, neighborhoods, new, office, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, park, Partnerships, Pennsylvania, plan, Politics and policy, president, protection, Racial Bias, Redlining, Research, Residential, resolution, settlement, trust, will

Apache is functioning normally

June 3, 2023 by Brett Tams

In spite of bank failures over the past three decades, most banks and credit unions in the U.S. remain secure places to store your money. One of the benefits credit unions and banks offer is easy access to your money.

shaking hands

Account holders can withdraw money quickly from a checking account at a bank branch or with a debit card, often with no fees. They can also find easy access and higher interest rates with a savings or money market account.

FDIC Insurance (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)

Keeping your money in a bank or credit union is considered safe because your money is insured up by the FDIC or NCUA, respectively.

In the event of a bank failure, which occurred more than 100 times during the financial crisis that spanned 2008 to 2012, some of your money is still protected by the federal government. Money in all U.S. banks, including the nation’s five biggest banks, is FDIC insured up to $250,000, per person, per account.

Fortunately, bank failures are less common today. The FDIC reported that the last time an FDIC insured bank failure occurred was October 2020. The FDIC paid out an estimated $18.3 million to account holders.

Credit unions carry similar protection in the form of insurance through the National Credit Union Administration.

How to Choose a Safe Bank Account

You already know that if a bank fails, the federal government will protect a large portion of your funds through FDIC insurance. You can spread your money between multiple checking and savings accounts so that no account holds more than the maximum $250,000 that is FDIC insured.

When you’re looking for the safest bank to open a new bank account, you want to compare other factors, including the bank’s total assets, security measures, fraud liability policies, history, and more.

What We Mean By a Safe Bank

You can see from this list of safest banks in the U.S. that bank security doesn’t always depend on the bank’s size. You’ll find financial institutions ranging from smaller banks to the largest banks on this list.

Bank safety means that the bank uses state-of-the-art security measures to protect your money, including:

  • Data encryption for their own systems and for online banking
  • Secure online bill pay
  • Two-factor authentication
  • Alerts for unauthorized transactions
  • Guarantee against unauthorized access
  • Card locking by app or phone
  • Direct deposit

We’ll look at these and other safety measures. Then, we’ll explore what makes some of the biggest banks in the U.S. some of the most secure banks and which other banks are keeping pace. Read on to find out: What is the safest bank in the U.S.?

Safety Measures Banks Use

Banks use a combination of training and state-of-the-art technology to keep account holder’s money secure. This includes training bank employees in security best practices and how to respond promptly to fraud alerts. It also includes bank policies, such as $0 fraud liability.

Finally, technology that includes SSL encryption and two-factor authentication can also help to keep your bank account safe during online banking.

12 Safest Banks in the U.S.

The Global Finance “World’s Safest Banks” list highlighted 50 safe banks. Of those, only a handful were based in the U.S. Here are 12 of the safest banks for U.S. customers, based on the Global Finance list.

1. JPMorgan Chase

With a market capitalization of $413.7 billion and a balance sheet total of $3.31 trillion, JPMorgan Chase is the largest bank in the U.S. based on assets, according to InsiderIntelligence.com.

During the financial crisis of 2008, Chase was one of the banks deemed “too big to fail.” Certainly, an account holder can feel secure that their most is protected even if the bank faces financial hardship.

But is Chase also ahead of the curve when it comes to security? Chase uses multiple authentication checks when you try to sign in to your online account.

The bank monitors for unusual activity and may send a text message or email for you to authorize a transaction outside your home state or for an exceptionally high amount.

The bank’s website uses 128-bit data encryption to secure your personal information. Finally, bank employees are trained in fraud prevention, fraud detection, and ethics.

Everyday security features

  • 128-bit encryption
  • Multifactor authentication
  • Guarantee against unauthorized access
  • EMV chip cards
  • Card locking through the app or automated phone system
  • 24/7 fraud protection by phone

2. U.S. Bank

With assets totaling nearly $675 billion, U.S. Bancorp, parent company of U.S. Bank, is the fifth-largest bank in the U.S. The bank website and mobile app offer SSL encryption, one-time card numbers for online purchases, and enhanced security features for commercial banking customers.

The Bank Smartly checking account for consumers allow you to set up account alerts and reminders through the mobile app. You can make contactless payments through the app, which gives you added protection against point-of-sale fraud and debit card skimmers, which can steal your account information if you pay using the magnetic stripe on your card.

U.S. Bank also offers a “Safe Debit Card,” designed for consumers ages 14+ who want the convenience of a checking account and debit card without the ability to write checks. The Safe Debit Card provides free access to the user’s VantageScore 3.0 credit score through TransUnion, a credit score simulator, online bill pay, mobile banking, and no overdraft fees.

Everyday security features

  • $0 liability fraud protection
  • Multifactor authentication
  • Virtual card numbers
  • SSL encryption
  • EMV chip cards

3. TD Bank

TD Bank, or Toronto-Dominion, is not just one of the largest banks in the U.S. with a worldwide presence, it is also one of the safest. Its branches are known for personalized customer service. But the bank is also known for its online presence. TD Bank recently partnered with Amount, a fintech provider, to enhance security with a suite of state-of-the-art fraud detection and account verification services.

The bank has 24/7 fraud monitoring and text alerts for activity. Plus, if you lose your debit card, you can replace it immediately at a nearby branch. TD Bank also offers features that enhance your security, including Bill Pay and Mobile Deposit, which reduces the handling of paper checks that create a risk of theft and fraud.

Everyday security

  • Card locking
  • 24/7 fraud monitoring
  • Personalized service
  • Mobile deposits
  • Enhanced security and fraud detection

4. Citibank

Citigroup, which owns Citibank and other Citi properties, is the third-largest bank in the U.S. right now behind Chase and Bank of America. Like Chase, Citi is considered one of the financial institutions deemed “too big to fail.” The bank’s market cap is $97.06 billion.

Citi is considered one of the safest banks due to its enhanced security features for its bank accounts and credit cards.

Citi was one of the first banks to offer a virtual credit card number. This one-time use card number allows cardholders to shop safely online without having to give out your bank account information or card number.

You can sign on to the Citi mobile using a QR code and Face ID®, Touch ID®, Biometrics or 6-Digit PIN, which is more secure than using a username and password. As with Chase, you will receive text alerts for suspicious or unusual activity.

Do not confuse Citi with CIT Bank. In spite of the similarity in their names, CIT is a division of First Citizens Bank and not affiliated in any way with Citigroup.  

Everyday security features

  • EMV chip cards
  • $0 liability fraud protection
  • Biometric security
  • 256-bit SSL encryption
  • Multifactor authentication
  • Remote debit card locking by phone or through the app

5. Charles Schwab Bank

Charles Schwab Bank is known primarily for its investment divisions. But the bank achieved the highest ratings for customer satisfaction with checking accounts by J.D. Power. Most of the world’s safe banks offer a high level of customer service, which can put a customer’s mind at ease.

Schwab Bank has many of the features high earners look for in a bank, including the ability to easily transfer money from your Schwab One brokerage account to your fee-free checking account.

Schwab’s Mobile app and banking systems use the highest levels of data encryption, as you might expect. Set notifications regarding transactions and fraud alerts through the mobile app. Lock and unlock your debit card at will. You can also set travel notices so that you don’t get a fraud alert in error if you’re making large purchases off your usual beaten path. The bank’s personalized service stands out, with 24/7 service via phone or chat, and branches nationwide.

  • Everyday security
  • Card locking through the app
  • Travel notices
  • Contactless payments
  • EMV chip card
  • Data encryption

6. M&T Bank Corporation

With assets totaling more than $200 billion, M&T Bank may not be as large as Citi or Chase, but its high level of customer service and security puts it on the list of safest banks. M&T Bank has earned multiple awards for small business excellence, along with the highest ratings issued by the Federal Reserve Bank of NY for Community Reinvestment Act performance.

M&T’s mobile app allows you to receive instant alerts about purchases via email, text, or in the app. This way, you can keep track of fraud along with your own spending habits. The app offers fingerprint or facial recognition on supported devices for enhanced security. You can easily report a lost or stolen card in the app or lock your card if you’ve misplaced it.

M&T delivers the same security larger banks offer, with the personalized service of a community bank. With 700 branches across 15 states nationwide plus a network of 1,800 ATMs, M&T Bank might be a convenient and safe choice for your money.  

Everyday security features

  • SSL encryption
  • Debit card locking
  • Multifactor authentication
  • Identity protection services available
  • 24/7 fraud protection

7. Wells Fargo

With $1.71 trillion in assets, Wells Fargo is currently the fourth-largest bank in the U.S. It offers savings and checking accounts, credit cards, loans, and more to personal and business customers.

The bank has more than 4,700 locations plus 12,000 ATMs in its network, making it convenient for customers across the U.S. The Wells Fargo mobile app makes online banking easy and secure, with access to your FICO score, fraud alerts, and multifactor authentication.

The website and app operate with SSL encryption. You can log in via face or fingerprint ID if you prefer. You can set alerts any time someone signs onto your account or whenever a purchase is made.

Furthermore, you can also connect a digital wallet to your account, which may be safer than using debit cards. If you think you lost your card, you can turn it off and turn it on again through the app if you find it.

Wells Fargo makes it easy to report fraud, unauthorized activity, or suspicious activity quickly and easily through the bank’s helpline, even if you are traveling outside the U.S.

Everyday security features

  • $0 fraud liability
  • ·Guarantee against unauthorized activity
  • SSL encryption
  • Low balance alerts
  • Card locking

8. PNC Bank

PNC Financial Services, owner of PNC Bank, has assets of $557 billion as of December 2022, making it one of the largest banks in the U.S. Like the other big banks, PNC is on the cutting edge of security and fraud protection for its customers.

The bank offers a Virtual Wallet that provides three accounts for checking and savings, along with direct deposit capabilities, overdraft protection, and a “Low Cash Mode,” that alerts you when your balance drops below a specific amount.

PNC also offers traditional banking solutions at its 2,629 branches worldwide. Through the bank’s growing number of Solution Centers, as well as mobile branches in underserved communities, PNC combines the security and convenience of an online bank with a traditional bank.

Everyday Security

  • Virtual wallet
  • Debit card blocking
  • SSL encryption
  • Fraud alerts
  • $0 fraud liability

9. Capital One

Capital One sits in the country’s list of top 10 banks and, thanks to enhanced security measures, is considered one of the safest banks in the U.S., too. Capital One holds assets worth $391.81 billion.

Capital One’s credit cards are consistently ranked on top list for rewards credit cards for travelers, and their security measures and easy to use app works for both credit and bank account customers.

You can set alerts by text or email each time you use your card. The app uses multifactor authentication and Capital One has $0 fraud liability for its accounts. You will not be held responsible for unauthorized activity. The bank issues EMV chip cards for added security at point-of-sale transactions.

Everyday Security

  • Card locking through the app or by phone
  • Account monitoring
  • SSL encryption
  • Multifactor authentication
  • Activity alerts
  • Credit monitoring

10. AgriBank

AgriBank made the Global Finance list of world’s safest banks, coming in at number 34. Part of the Farm Credit System, the bank has a net income of $576.1 million and $142.1 billion in total assets.

AgriBank has delivered reliable and consistent service to the agricultural industry for more than 100 years. As an agricultural credit bank, AgriBank is a wholesale only lender to farmers, ranchers, and rural businesses and homeowners. It pays dividends to its members.

It’s important to note that AgriBank services only agricultural customers in 15 states in the southern and Midwest U.S., from Arkansas to Minnesota. AgriBank is not FDIC insured. But, it is backed by the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation to protect its members.

Everyday security features

  • Ethics hotline through EthicsPoint
  • SSL secured website
  • Two-factor authentication
  • Data encryption
  • Backed by the FCSIC

11. CoBank

CoBank is the second FCS member on our list of safest banks. Like AgriBank, it is protected by the FCSIC and offers wholesale loans to rural customers in the agricultural, power, water, and telecommunications industries.

Serving customers in all 50 states, it is one of the largest private providers of credit to the U.S. rural economy, according to its website. Dedicated to preventing fraud, the financial institution has a podcast, Fraud Wise, that provides tips to help its rural customer prevent and detect fraud.

Customers can report fraud easily through phone or email. Because of its size and personalized service, CoBank is rated by Global Finance as one of the safe banks in the U.S.  

Everyday security features

  • Code of ethics
  • Fraud prevention
  • SSL data encryption
  • Guarantee for unauthorized transactions

12. AgFirst

AgFirst Farm Credit Bank is another member of the Farm Credit System that runs as a cooperative, where an account holder is considered a partner. AgFirst takes steps to maintain the safety and security of its members financial data and money. The organization operates in alignment with national cybersecurity standards and applies industry best practices to keep its systems and customers secure.

AgFirst offers loan servicing, loan origination, and many other services to the agricultural community. Headquartered in Columbia, SC, AgFirst has locations across the south and Midwest U.S.

Everyday security features

  • SSL encryption
  • Adheres to national cybersecurity standards
  • Personalized customer service
  • Backed by FCSIC

 Bank vs. Credit Union

In your search for the best bank, you might also consider a credit union. They often offer lower fees, higher interest rates, and more personalized service. The ability to build relationships with employees at your local branch might make them feel like a safer choice.

See also: Best Credit Unions Anyone Can Join

What makes credit unions safe?

The money in a credit union is insured by the National Credit Union Administration. Just as with FDIC insured bank accounts, funds in credit unions are insured for up to $250,000 per person, per account if the credit union fails.

Credit unions often offer local, more personalized service than a national bank, which makes them a desirable financial institution for some people. You may find zero fee checking accounts more frequently at credit unions, higher interest rates, and better loan terms.

The same technology and customer service used in the safest banks also keeps your money safe in a credit union. Look for SSL encryption and two-factor authentication, easy ways to report fraud, and a guarantee against unauthorized access to your account.

What makes the safest banks in the U.S. secure?

A variety of security measures, along with FDIC insurance, keeps the money in your bank secure against fraud and bank failures. Some of the factors that can enhance a bank’s security include its online banking security, the availability of EMV chip cards, $0 fraud liability,

What happens if a bank fails?

Bank failures happened with alarming frequency during the recession of 2008. Experian reports that there were 561 bank failures between 2001 and 2022, when the U.S. faced more than one financial crisis.

Fortunately, these banks were FDIC insured. When a bank fails, the FDIC sells the remainder of the bank’s assets to a more stable bank. Sometimes, the FDIC will cover the bank deposits itself.

Are online banks safe?

Online banks today use the same security measures as a brick-and-mortar financial institution. Often, an online bank offers a fee-free checking account and higher interest rates for an online savings account. If you choose an online bank, make sure it is FDIC insured.

What appears to be an online bank may not be a national FDIC insured bank, but another type of financial institution. If that’s the case, make sure it is backed by an FDIC insured national bank.

Learn more about online bank safety.

Source: crediful.com

Posted in: Credit 101 Tagged: 2, 2022, About, Administration, All, app, Arkansas, art, assets, Awards, balance, balance sheet, Bank, bank account, bank accounts, bank of america, Banking, banks, Benefits, best, best practices, big, Bill Pay, brick, brokerage, brokerage account, build, business, capital one, chase, Checking Account, Checking Accounts, choice, cit bank, Citi, citibank, Citigroup, columbia, Commercial, Community Bank, company, Consumers, contactless, Convenience, country, Credit, credit card, credit cards, credit monitoring, credit score, credit union, Credit unions, Crisis, curve, customer service, cybersecurity, data, Debit Card, debit cards, decades, deposit, deposit insurance, Deposits, Digit, Digital, Direct Deposit, dividends, Economy, Ethics, event, excellence, experian, farm, FDIC, FDIC insurance, FDIC insured, Features, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Reserve, Fees, fico, fico score, Finance, financial crisis, financial hardship, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Fintech, fraud, fraud alert, fraud prevention, Free, free checking, funds, government, habits, high earners, history, home, homeowners, How To, id, in, Income, industry, Insurance, interest, interest rates, investment, JPMorgan Chase, Learn, liability, list, loan, Loan origination, Loans, Local, low, LOWER, Make, making, market, member, Midwest, mobile, Mobile App, Mobile Banking, money, money market, Money Market Account, More, NCUA, net income, new, ny, offer, offers, Online Banking, Online Bill Pay, online purchases, Online Savings Account, or, organization, Origination, Other, overdraft, overdraft fees, overdraft protection, password, payments, Personal, personal information, PNC, podcast, policies, protect, protection, Purchase, Rates, ratings, Recession, Relationships, rewards, rewards credit cards, right, risk, rural, safe, safety, sale, savings, Savings Account, Savings Accounts, sc, Schwab, search, second, security, Servicing, Small Business, South, Spending, spending habits, stable, states, suite, td bank, Technology, theft, time, tips, Too Big to Fail, top 10, traditional, Transaction, transfer money, TransUnion, Travel, U.S. Bancorp, u.s. bank, VantageScore, virtual, wells fargo, will

Apache is functioning normally

June 3, 2023 by Brett Tams

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) this week announced that it had secured a settlement of more than $3 million from Philadelphia, Penn.-based ESSA Bank & Trust over allegations that the company engaged in redlining majority Black and Hispanic communities from access to credit services around the Philadelphia area.

According to a complaint filed by DOJ in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, ESSA “failed to provide mortgage lending services and did not serve the credit needs of majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in the Philadelphia metropolitan area” from 2017 to 2021.

“For too long, residents of communities of color have been unlawfully denied equal access to credit and shut out of economic opportunities,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the DOJ Civil Rights Division in the DOJ announcement. “When banks engage in redlining, they perpetuate existing patterns of segregation and widen the racial wealth gap in our country. This resolution makes clear our commitment to holding banks and financial institutions accountable for modern-day redlining while ensuring access to fair lending in communities of color.”

Under a consent order still subject to court approval, ESSA has agreed to invest $2.92 million in a designated loan subsidy fund designed to increase access to credit for home mortgage, improvement and refinance loans, as well as home equity loans and lines of credit, in majority-Black and Hispanic neighborhoods within the bank’s lending area.

ESSA has also agreed to spend $125,000 on community partnerships and $250,000 on advertising, outreach, consumer financial education and credit counseling to the impacted communities specified in the complaint and consent order.

“The consent order also requires the bank to hire two new mortgage loan officers to serve its existing branches in West Philadelphia and conduct a research-based market study to help identify the needs for financial services in communities of color,” the DOJ added.

In a statement announcing the settlement, ESSA “categorically denies violating any fair lending laws or engaging in ‘redlining,’” according to a press release.

“ESSA and its Board of Directors believe this is a constructive resolution to a dispute that has lasted several years,” said Gary Olsen, ESSA’s president and CEO. “It is consistent with our guiding principles and longstanding commitment to provide equal lending opportunities to all of the communities we are privileged to serve. We plan on using these loan subsidy funds to expand opportunities for qualified borrowers who can benefit from this assistance. We’re happy and pleased to help families purchase homes. It is simply the right thing to do.”

Olsen added that during the the time period covered by the government’s complaint, “ESSA did not receive a single fair lending complaint from any customer or potential customer.” He also said that the company opened a branch and business center in downtown Allentown, “in a majority minority census tract.”

DOJ opened the investigation into ESSA after being referred by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

“ESSA fully cooperated with the department’s investigation and worked expeditiously to resolve these allegations,” DOJ said.

ESSA’s redlining settlement agreement is the latest in a series of cases brought by the DOJ. In January, Los Angeles-headquartered City National Bank agreed to pay $31 million to settle a case that alleged it avoided providing mortgage services to majority Black and Hispanic neighborhoods between 2017 and 2020.

In July, the DOJ and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced a $24.4 million consent order with Trident Mortgage Co., a subsidiary of Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway.

In September, the DOJ also reached a $12 million-plus settlement with Lakeland Bank over claims the lender engaged in redlining in the Newark, New Jersey metropolitan area.

Source: housingwire.com

Posted in: Mortgage, Refinance Tagged: 2, 2017, 2021, Advertising, All, Announcement, Bank, banks, black, Board of directors, borrowers, business, CEO, city, clear, color, communities of color, company, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, country, court, Credit, Department of Justice, deposit, deposit insurance, education, equity, existing, fair lending, FDIC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Financial Education, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, fund, funds, gap, General, government, Hispanic, home, home equity, Home equity loans, homes, improvement, in, Insurance, Invest, lending, loan, loan officers, Loans, LOS, los angeles, market, modern, More, Mortgage, mortgage lending, mortgage loan, needs, neighborhoods, new, New Jersey, or, Partnerships, patterns, Pennsylvania, plan, president, Press Release, protection, Purchase, Redlining, Refinance, Regulatory, Research, resolution, right, september, Series, settlement, single, time, tract, trust, under, warren, warren buffet, wealth, wealth gap

Apache is functioning normally

June 3, 2023 by Brett Tams

Since its debut in 2013, Chime has become quite popular. This financial technology company partners with Bancorp Bank, N.A. and Stride Bank, N.A. to provide a number of FDIC-insured bank accounts. Just like most online banks, Chime offers higher annual percentage yields than brick-and-mortar banks.

Chime offers a credit builder account7, which acts like a secured credit card to help customers establish credit. However, its flagship products are the Chime® Savings Account and Chime® Checking Account8.

Chime has one of the most robust apps in the world of mobile banking. It also has a phenomenal rating in both the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.

Despite the fact that Chime comes with many benefits, it’s not right for everyone. After all, there are no physical branch locations and its customer service could be improved. Plus, you might be able to find higher APYs elsewhere.

18 Best Chime Alternatives

If you’re looking for alternatives to Chime, you’ve come to the right place. We’ve done the heavy lifting for you to create this comprehensive list of the best Chime alternatives.

1. GO2bank

GO2bank is the digital banking platform backed by Green Dot Corporation, a financial technology company known for its prepaid debit cards. GO2bank is designed to help people better manage their money through its user-friendly mobile app and competitive features.

The mobile banking app allows you to open an FDIC-insured account with no monthly maintenance fees if you have qualifying direct deposits. You also have access to a network of over 19,000 fee-free ATMs across the nation. With the ability to receive direct deposits up to four days early and a high-yield savings account that pays up to 4.50% APY on savings up to $5,000, GO2bank offers a complete banking solution.

GO2bank also provides a secured credit card that can help you build credit over time. With this card, you can establish or improve your credit score by making on-time payments and keeping your balance low. There are no annual fees, no credit checks, and no interest charges if you pay your balance in full every month.

In addition to these features, GO2bank offers various ways to deposit cash, including the option to deposit cash at participating retailers. You can also use the app to pay bills, send money to friends or family, and set up custom savings goals.

Read our full GO2bank review.

2. Current

Current is a neobank that partners with Choice Financial Group and Metropolitan Commercial Bank to offer banking services. It only offers one bank account that serves as an online checking and online savings account.

Current doesn’t charge monthly maintenance fees, monthly account fees, or overdraft fees. In addition, you can reap the benefits of automated savings pods and early direct deposit. Unlimited domestic ATM access is also free as Current is part of the Allpoint ATM network. You also get access to early direct deposits.

If you have kids, you can open a linked Teen Banking Account and help them build healthy financial habits. We can’t forget the Current Visa debit card, which lets you earn cash back on debit card purchases at more than 14,000 participating retailers.

Read our full Current review.

See also: Chime vs. Current: Which Is Better?

3. Axos Bank

Axos Bank is an online only bank that first opened in 2000. Its checking account options include the Essential checking account, Rewards checking account, and Cashback checking account. While Essential is a basic checking account with no fees or minimums, the Rewards checking account earns up to 1.00% interest if you meet certain requirements.

With the Cashback checking account, you can earn up to 1.00% cash back on qualifying debit card purchases. Rest assured there’s also a high yield savings account and money market account with a competitive APY. Like Chime, Axos also offers a highly rated mobile app.

Read our full Axos Bank review.

4. Quontic Bank

Headquartered in New York, Quontic Bank has been around since 2008. It has one brick-and-mortar branch in Astoria, New York but serves customers online in all 50 states.

Quontic’s lineup of products includes checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, and certificate of deposit (CD) accounts. It also offers real estate products.

You can choose from three checking accounts: Cash Rewards Checking, High Interest Checking and Bitcoin Rewards Checking. There’s also a high-yield savings account, which pays an impressive APY.

No matter which accounts you decide on, you’ll be pleased to learn there are is no monthly service fee. Plus, you’ll benefit from an extensive ATM network and mobile app.

Check out our full review of Quontic Bank.

5. Cash App

Created by Square and based in San Francisco, Cash App is a peer-to-peer payment app. Cash App lets you send and receive money, do your banking, and open investment accounts, such as retirement accounts. The banking feature requires you to order a Cash App card and accept that FDIC coverage is not available.

Keep in mind that there is no way to build your credit or save money with Cash App. But you can use it to buy stock and Bitcoin for as little as $1. Plus, Cash App lets you prepare and file your federal and state taxes for free.

Learn more about how Cash App works.

6. Brigit

Brigit is a personal finance app that offers paycheck advances to help you out when you need fast cash. It might be a great option if you can’t wait until payday but want to avoid insufficient fund fees and overdraft fees. Brigit also allows you to keep track of your credit score and protect yourself from identity theft.

Additionally, you can use Brigit to find side gigs or borrow money with a credit builder loan. You will have to pay $9.99 per month to unlock all of these features. The good news, however, is you won’t be charged any interest or tips.

7. Dave

Launched in 2017, the Dave App can give you the chance to advance your paycheck to cover small emergencies. It also offers a spending account, which is essentially a checking account with no low balance or overdraft fees. To take advantage of the Dave app, you’ll be on the hook for a $1 monthly subscription fee as well as an optional express fee and tip.

There’s also a budget feature that tracks your income and spending so you can pay your bill. It will notify you any time you’re at risk of overdrafting. In addition, Dave can help you find a side hustle and earn extra income.

8. Revolut

When it initially launched in 2015, Revolut was a challenger bank with a travel card and cheap exchange rates. Now, it describes itself as a digital banking platform and uses Barclays and Lloyds to store your money. Just keep in mind that since it’s not a bank, it doesn’t offer any deposit protection.

Revolut’s long list of perks include surcharge-free ATMs, travel perks, and spending alerts. Plus you can earn cash back on Revolut card purchases and even open an investment account to invest in popular cryptocurrencies. If you travel abroad often and are looking for benefits you may not be able to find from most banks, Revolut should be on your radar.

Read our full Revolut review.

9. Varo

Varo is a digital bank with impressive technology as well as a lineup of checking and savings accounts with unique features like Chime. Since it prides itself on minimal fees, you won’t have to worry about monthly maintenance fees, transfer fees, or foreign transaction fees.

Furthermore, since it’s part of the Allpoint ATM network, you can enjoy free domestic ATM withdrawals at more than 55,000 ATMs. In addition to a competitive APY for its savings accounts, you can enjoy the Save Your Pay and Save Your Change features.

While Save Your Pay automatically transfers a percentage of your paycheck to your savings. Save Your Change rounds up online checking account transactions and lets you transfer money to your savings. These features are different from what you’d find with other online checking accounts.

Read our full Varo review.

10. Capital One

Capital One is one of the largest banks in the U.S. Its online checking and savings accounts come with no minimum balance fees.

Capital One’s 360 Performance Savings account offers an impressive APY on all account balances. This makes it worth considering regardless of what your savings goals entail. It lets you set savings goals and automatic savings plans so you can transfer funds from your Capital One 360 bank account.

With a Capital One bank account, you may access over 70,000 fee free ATMs. If you prefer in-person banking, you’re in luck because there are more than 300 branch locations in select states. You can also enjoy free overdraft protection and download the Capital One app to send and receive funds through Zelle.

Read our full Capital One review.

11. Discover Bank

When most people think of Discover Bank, credit cards come to mind first. But like Chime, Discover also offers checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, CDs, and even personal loans.

It doesn’t impose minimum monthly balance requirements or charge any monthly fees or overdraft fees. Discover’s savings accounts and CDs are known for impressive APYs and its highly rated mobile app with a Quick View feature makes it a breeze to bank while you’re on the go.

Additionally, Discover offers more than 60,000 fee-free ATMs and you can earn 1% cash back on up to $3,000 in debit card purchases each month. If you need assistance, you can always reach out to its 24/7 U.S. customer service representatives.

12. Ally Bank

Headquartered in Utah and a division of Ally Financial, Inc. Ally is a full service online bank with an extensive product line up. Its deposit accounts, like checking accounts and savings accounts as well as CDs, come with competitive interest rates.

In addition to 24/7 customer service, Ally offers a robust mobile app you can use to check balances, transfer funds, deposit checks, pay bills, and send money via Zelle.

With Ally, there are no minimum balance requirements or fees for account maintenance, overdrafts, ACH payments, incoming wire transfers, or cashier’s checks. Aside from bank accounts, Ally also services customers with a wide range of mortgages, loans, and investing products. The main drawback is that you can’t deposit cash. Despite this, Ally is considered one of the best online banks.

Read our full Ally Bank review.

13. One Finance

One Finance is an online bank that lets you do all your banking from one bank account. With One, you can open one account that acts as a savings and interest checking account with no fees and the chances to earn a high APY. Your account will feature pockets that let you manage your money in numerous ways so you can budget and set savings goals.

You can think of a spend pocket as a checking account that doesn’t pay interest but helps you visualize the money you can spend each month. If you budget for various categories, like rent, groceries, and entertainment, it makes sense to have multiple spend pockets to keep track of your spending money. If you prefer, however, you can stick to one and have all your spending come from the same place.

14. Aspiration

Aspiration offers a Spend and Save account that offers checking and savings features. You can choose a basic account with a “pay what is fair” monthly fee, which can be $0 or an Aspiration Plus account, with a monthly fee but additional benefits like a higher APY on savings. If you pay annually, you can enjoy a lower fee.

Aspiration supports the environment through features like cash back if you spend at socially conscious businesses. You also have the chance to plant a tree every time you use your debit card. Additionally, your personal impact score tells you the environmental and social effects of your shopping habits. It also promises that your cash deposits won’t pay for the exploration or production of fossil fuels.

Read our full Aspiration review.

15. Bank5 Connect

Based in Massachusetts, BankFive has been around since 1855. With Bank5 Connect, the online division of BankFive, you can open a checking account, a savings account, or a CD with a low minimum balance requirements. Its accounts are available to everyone in the U.S., except those in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

As a Bank5 Connect customer, you can enjoy access to thousands of surcharge free ATMs. You may get reimbursed up to $15 per statement cycle for any fees that are charged by out-of-network ATMs. There’s also a mobile app with features like mobile deposit, bill pay, money transfer, and an ATM locator.

16. MoneyLion

Founded in 2013, MoneyLion is a financial services company that works to help customers improve their finances. RoarMoney is its FDIC-insured checking account that comes with no account fees and several unique perks.

As long as you enroll in automatic monthly direct deposits, you can receive each paycheck up to two days early. Price Match will also refund you the difference if you find something you purchased at a lower price. Plus you may use RoarMoney to design a budget and track your spending. In addition to RoarMoney, MoneyLion offers Instcash in which you can get cash advances of up to $250 through the app.

17. Juno

Formerly OnJuno, Juno is an FDIC-backed online banking platform known for its high-yield checking account with zero monthly maintenance fees or minimum opening deposit. You can also earn cash back if you make crypto purchases or cash purchases at certain companies.

It’s ideal if you’re an immigrant or international professional because all you need to open an account is a passport and Social Security number. With Juno, you get free atm withdrawals at more than 85,000 Allpoint or MoneyPoint ATMs.

18. Wise

Headquartered in London, Wise is a financial technology company that prides itself on innovation. You can open a Wise personal account for free and won’t have to meet a minimum balance requirement or pay a monthly fee. Wise is unique in that you can hold 54 currencies and send international transfers to over 80 countries.

There are also international business accounts, which can be helpful if you send, spend, or withdraw money while you travel abroad for business purposes. While you can sign up for a Wise debit card, it does come with fees and may only be used in select countries.

What to Look for When Choosing a Bank

When you shop around Chime alternatives, you’ll notice there are no shortage of options. Here are some things to consider as you look for the ideal solution.

Fees

Fees can add up quickly. Ideally, you’d go with a bank that charges low fees or basically no fees. Fortunately, most online banks are known for their fee-free bank accounts.

With many of these checking accounts, you won’t be charged monthly maintenance fees, ATM fees, wire transfer fees, and early account closing fees. Just be on the lookout for hidden fees.

High Interest and Rewards

The higher the interest rate, the more money you’ll be able to save with minimal effort. Sometimes, you can even earn rewards like cash-back and travel points for making transactions on your debit cards.

Large ATM Network

If you’re an avid cash user, you don’t want to pay an arm and a leg every time you use an ATM. For this reason, it’s important to choose a bank with a fee-free ATM network or one that reimburses you when you use an out-of-network ATM.

Customer Service

You want to ensure that you can easily receive answers to your questions or address your concerns. For this reason, choose a bank or company that has positive customer service reviews.

Bottom Line

While Chime offers many perks, it’s not perfect. If you’re willing to do some research and compare your options, you can find several online banks like Chime. Before you make a decision, look at the banking services provided. Then, weigh the pros and cons. Don’t be afraid to test a Chime alternative for a few months or so to make sure it’s a good fit.

Chime is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services and debit card provided by The Bancorp Bank N.A. or Stride Bank, N.A.; Members FDIC. Credit Builder card issued by Stride Bank, N.A.

7. To apply for Credit Builder, you must have received a single qualifying direct deposit of $200 or more to your Checking Account. The qualifying direct deposit must be from your employer, payroll provider, gig economy payer, or benefits payer by Automated Clearing House (ACH) deposit OR Original Credit Transaction (OCT). Bank ACH transfers, Pay Anyone transfers, verification or trial deposits from financial institutions, peer to peer transfers from services such as PayPal, Cash App, or Venmo, mobile check deposits, cash loads or deposits, one-time direct deposits, such as tax refunds and other similar transactions, and any deposit to which Chime deems to not be a qualifying direct deposit are not qualifying direct deposits.

8. A Chime Checking Account is required to be eligible for a Savings Account.

Source: crediful.com

Posted in: Credit 101 Tagged: 2, 2015, 2017, 360 Performance Savings, About, ACH, All, AllY, Ally Financial, Alternatives, app, apple, Apps, ARM, at risk, ATM, Automated Clearing House, balance, Bank, bank account, bank accounts, Banking, banks, barclays, basic, before, Benefits, best, Bill Pay, bills, bitcoin, Borrow, brick, Budget, build, build credit, builder, business, Buy, capital one, cash back, categories, CD, CDs, certificate of deposit, chance, Checking Account, Checking Accounts, Chime, choice, closing, Commercial, companies, company, cons, Credit, credit card, credit cards, credit score, crypto, cryptocurrencies, custom, customer service, Debit Card, debit cards, decision, deposit, Deposits, design, Digital, Direct Deposit, discover, Economy, employer, Entertainment, environment, environmental, estate, Extra Income, Family, FDIC, Features, Fees, Finance, finance app, finances, financial habits, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Free, friendly, fund, funds, gig, gig economy, goals, good, Google, great, green, groceries, habits, healthy, helpful, high yield, high yield savings, high yield savings account, hold, house, identity theft, impact, in, Income, interest, interest rate, interest rates, international, Invest, Investing, investment, kids, Learn, list, loan, Loans, low, LOWER, luck, Main, maintenance, Make, making, manage, market, Massachusetts, minimal, mobile, Mobile App, Mobile Banking, money, money market, Money Market Account, money market accounts, Money Transfer, More, more money, Mortgages, neobank, new, new york, News, offer, offers, Online Banking, Online Checking Account, Online Savings Account, or, Original, Other, overdraft, overdraft fees, overdraft protection, pay bills, paycheck, payments, paypal, Personal, personal finance, Personal Loans, place, plans, play, points, Popular, prepaid debit cards, price, price match, products, pros, Pros and Cons, protect, protection, questions, rate, Rates, reach, Real Estate, Refund, Rent, Research, retirement, retirement accounts, Review, Reviews, rewards, rewards checking, Rewards Checking Account, right, risk, san francisco, save, Save Money, savings, Savings Account, Savings Accounts, Savings Goals, secured credit card, security, shopping, shortage, Side, Side Gigs, Side Hustle, single, social, social security, Spending, square, state taxes, states, stock, tax, tax refunds, taxes, Technology, theft, time, tips, Transaction, transaction fees, transfer money, Travel, travel card, unique, Utah, venmo, visa, will, wire transfers

Apache is functioning normally

June 2, 2023 by Brett Tams

Some of the largest banks call America home. These banks are backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and offer a variety of products and services. If you prefer a big bank over regional banks or a smaller, community bank, you’ve come to the right place.

large banks

Below we’ve compiled a list of the largest banks in the U.S. Once you read through it and perform some of your own research, you should be able to choose a bank or two that meets your needs.

How to Measure Bank Size

First, let’s discuss how to measure the size of a bank. We can do so by looking at the number of customers, number of branches, and number of employees.

But perhaps the best way to measure bank size is by focusing on the total assets under management. This figure shows the actual size of a bank, regardless of how many employees, branches, or ATMs it has.

In our list of the largest banks in the U.S. below, you’ll find that we include each bank’s total assets so you can get a better idea of just how large it is.

Bank Services

We also thought it would be a great idea to briefly discuss how banks work and what they can do for you as a customer. Banks have been around since at least the 14th century. They offer a safe place for individuals and business owners to park their cash and work on various financial goals.

While every bank has their own unique lineup of services, most of them provide checking accounts, savings accounts, and loan services. Some go the extra mile with credit cards, wealth management services, and other conveniences.

Types of Banks

In addition, it’s wise to go over the types of banks at your disposal. The most common types of banks you’ll find include:

  • Retail banks: Retail banks serve the public and typically have branches and main offices. They provide a wide range of services, like checking and savings accounts, mortgage and loan services, auto financing, CDs, and individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Retail banks may be regional banks operating in various states.
  • Commercial banks: Also known as corporate banks, commercial banks gear their offerings to small business owners and larger corporate entities. In addition to the usual banking services, they may offer cash management, employer services, and commercial real estate services.
  • Investment banks: Investment banks are designed for corporate clients with complex needs, like mergers and acquisitions. These clients are large corporations, governments, and hedge funds.
  • Central banks: Central banks are not available to the public. Instead, they’re an independent institution that oversees the money supply and monetary policy in the country. The Federal Reserve Bank is the central bank in the U.S.

Banks vs. Credit Unions

While banks are quite popular, some customers use credit unions instead. While credit unions also offer banking services, like checking and savings accounts, they’re not for profit institutions that are managed by their customers or members.

Compared to banks, credit unions tend to deliver more personalized service. But they also provide fewer services and have fewer branches and ATMs. A credit union can make sense, depending on your unique goals.

20 Biggest Banks In The U.S.

Here’s an overview of the largest banks in the U.S.

1.  JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Total Assets: $3.381 Trillion

Headquarters: New York City, New York

If you focus on consolidated assets, JPMorgan Chase earns the spot as the largest bank in the U.S. This investment bank is also a holding company for subsidiaries, including Chase Bank. Chase, which is J.P. Morgan’s consumer banking division, has more than 4,700 branches in the U.S. plus more than 30 branch locations abroad.

According to Chase, almost half of the households in the U.S. are Chase customers. It attracts digital savvy customers that value online banking and products with artificial intelligence (AI). In addition to consumer banking, JPMorgan Chase is a combined bank that offers commercial banking, asset and wealth management, and investment banking.

Chase offers some of the most popular cash back and travel credit cards that can earn you valuable rewards through their program, Chase Ultimate Rewards. Using these credit cards for everyday purchases can earn you travel points, cash back, and other benefits.

2. Bank of America Corp.

Total Assets: $2.440 Trillion

Headquarters: Charlotte, North Carolina

Bank of America is a multinational bank with nearly 66 million customers and small business clients across the globe. It has a few divisions, including Merrill, Bank of America Securities, and Bank of America Private Bank.

As a Bank of America customer, you can enjoy access to a wide variety of products and services as well as access to more than 4,000 branches and more than 17,000 ATMs.

Just like most big banks, Bank of America prides itself on a robust mobile app, the Zelle payment solution, and other intuitive digital tools. Its various service lines include consumer banking, corporate banking, credit cards, insurance, investment banking services, institutional banking, mortgage loans, private banking, private equity, and wealth management.

3. Citigroup

Total Assets: $1.720 Trillion

Headquarters: New York City, New York

Citigroup, which is widely known as Citi, is an investment bank and financial services firm. When Citigroup merged with Travelers Group in 1998, it became a major player in the financial space. Citibank, Citigroup’s retail banking division has more than 700 branches in the U.S. and over 1,800 branches outside the U.S.

Most of the U.S. bank branches are in Florida, California, New York, and Washington DC. Citibank manages over 138 million bank accounts and has 65,000 fee-free ATMs across the country. Over the years, it has earned high rankings for its digital money management tools, including one that shows customers a financial wellness score.

4. U.S. Bancorp

Total Assets: $582.25 Billion

Headquarters: Minneapolis, Minnesota

The parent company of U.S. Bank, Bancorp’s locations are mainly in the Midwest. It offers personal and business banking with more than 3,000 branches and 5,000 ATMs. Over the years, Bancorp has worked to become a responsible financial provider and earn a spot on the Ethisphere Institute’s World’s Most Ethical Companies list.

As a Bancorp customer, you can access information about your accounts through Google Home and Amazon Alexa. You may also download the handy mobile app to make mobile deposits and perform other services, like transactions via Zelle.

5. PNC Financial Services Group

Total Assets: $534.35 Billion

Headquarters: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

PNC is short for Pittsburgh National Corporation. PNC Financial Services is the bank holding company of PNC Bank, which has more than 2,000 branches across 21 states. It stands out among other large banks for its unique customer perks and products for individuals and business owners. The Virtual Wallet tool, for example, lets you manage your money online or on your mobile device.

You can keep your checking and savings accounts together or just stick to one type of account, depending on your particular needs. In addition to traditional banking services, PNC offers mortgages, home equity lines of credit, auto loans, personal loans and personal lines of credit, student loans, and student loan refinancing.

6. Wells Fargo

Total Assets: $1.71 Trillion

Headquarters: San Francisco, California

Wells Fargo made its debut in 1852 when it was first opened by investing partners, Henry Wells and William Fargo. It was initially designed as a bank and express delivery service for gold. Eventually, Wells Fargo expanded as a consumer bank to serve all types of customers with various banking needs. It is admired for its long list of offerings and the Wells Fargo mobile app that helps customers track their spending and simplify their bills.

While Wells Fargo has focused on consolidating and prioritizing digital banking services in recent years, it still has about 4,700 locations and more than 12,000 ATMs around the U.S.

In addition to personal and small business banking, Wells Fargo supports commercial banking, investing and wealth management, and investment banking.

7. Truist Financial Corporation

Total Assets: $532.08 Billion

Headquarters: Charlotte, North Carolina

Compared to the other large commercial banks on this list, Truist is fairly new. It was formed in 2019 as the result of one of the largest bank merger between BB&T and SunTrust.

Truist is made up of three major divisions, including Truist Bank, Truist Securities, and Truist Insurance Holdings. These divisions employ over 37,000 people that work in consumer and commercial banking, investment banking, mortgages, and insurance.

It offers a variety of noteworthy perks, such as no overdraft fees, a $100 negative balance buffer, and automatic upgrades. The bank also places a lot of emphasis on community involvement and giving back.

8. Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

Total Assets: $501.91 Billion

Headquarters: New York City, New York

Goldman Sachs was founded in 1869 by Marcus Goldman, a German American shopkeeper. Its original purpose was to help merchants and small businesses with short-term funding. Eventually, Samuel Sachs joined Goldman in 1882. Today, Goldman Sachs has a reputation as a leading global investment banking, management, and securities firm.

In the fall of 2016, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, its online banking division made its debut and began to offer numerous financial products, like savings accounts, certificates of deposit, credit cards, and loans.

In addition to these offerings, Goldman Sachs provides asset management services, mutual funds, investment banking and management, prime brokerage, commodities, and commercial banking.

9. Charles Schwab Corporation

Total Assets: $407.90 Billion

Headquarters: San Francisco, California

Charles Schwab is a multinational financial services firm with a focus on investment accounts, such as individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and brokerage accounts.

You’ll find an extensive selection of funds with low expense ratios as well as commission-free stock and ETF trades. While there are over 360 Charles Schwab branches with financial consultants, you can take advantage of its services online.

Schwab also offers a high-yield checking account. Whether you’re new to investing or consider yourself a veteran, you can benefit from Charles Schwab.

10. TD Group U.S. Holdings

Total Assets: $405.22 Billion

Headquarters: Wilmington, Delaware

While TD Bank has roots in Canada, it’s been in the U.S. market since 2007 when it acquired Commerce Bancorp. There are more than 1,100 branches and 700 ATMs across fifteen U.S. states and Washington D.C.

TD Bank offers the typical lineup of banking products and services but is known for its branch convenience. Most branches have long hours, are open on the weekends, and provide curbside pickup for new debit cards.

If you prefer in-person banking, TD Bank is certainly worth exploring. Many of its accounts come with generous sign up bonuses and access to comprehensive online banking features, such as online bill pay, Zelle, and remote check deposit.

11. Capital One Financial

Total Assets: $388.44 Billion

Headquarters: McLean, Virginia

Since it was established in 1988, Capital One bank is one of the newer large banks on our list. In only a few decades, the bank has grown significantly, thanks to its credit card offerings in the early 90s.

Once 2016 came around, Capital One was named the third-largest credit card issuer in the U.S. These days, Capital One continues to offer credit cards as well as digital services through Capital One 360.

Capital One 360 stands out for its Capital One’s 360 Performance Savings account, which comes with no minimum opening deposit and no minimum balance requirements.

It also has a mobile banking app with mobile check deposit, customized alerts and notifications, Zelle, free credit score monitoring via CreditWise, and more. There are about 775 branches, 2,000 ATMs, and nearly 30 Capital One cafes.

12. Bank of New York Mellon

Total Assets: $365.10 Billion

Headquarters: New York City, New York

Bank of New York Mellon came about after a 2006 merger between Mellon Financial Corporation and The Bank of New York. The Bank of New York was originally founded in 1784 by Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury of the U.S. Bank of New York Mellon is now one of the largest securities firms in the word.

It specializes in a number of solutions and services for corporations, insurance companies, banks, brokers, dealers, and other reputable clients in the financial industry. In addition, the bank offers private investment and wealth management services for wealthy clients.

13.  State Street Corporation

Total Assets: $296.43 Billion

Headquarters: Boston, Massachusetts

State Street Corporation was founded in 1792 as a financial services and asset management company. It has more than 40,000 employees and a global presence in over 100 markets.

Its offerings include investment research and trading, investment management, and securities lending for clients, such as insurance companies, pension funds, and asset owners.

14. Citizens Financial Group

Total Assets: $226.53 Billion

Headquarters: Providence, Rhode Island

Citizens Financial Group, Inc. has been around since 1828. It owns Citizens Bank, its retail division and offers credit cards, deposit accounts, personal loans, student loans, refinancing, and a number of other financial services. Citizen Bank mainly operates in the Northeast and Midwest.

In addition to more than 2,700 ATMs, there are over 1,100 branches in New England states as well as Delaware, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey. The bank provides extended call center hours, a streamlined online experience, and a highly rated mobile app.

15. Silicon Valley Bank

Total Assets: $211.82 Billion

Headquarters: Santa Clara, California

Silicon Valley Bank made its debut in 1983. Today, it serves as a full-service commercial bank for technology and life sciences companies. Aside from traditional banking services, Silicon Valley Bank offers foreign exchange, venture capital, and treasury management services.

It has supported innovation for several well-known tech companies, including Google and Facebook. Many people give it credit for establishing Silicon Valley.

16. Fifth Third Bank

Total Assets: $205.55 Billion

Headquarters: Cincinnati, Ohio

Fifth Third Bank is a subsidiary of Fifth Third Bancorp and known as one of the largest banks in the Midwest. It has approximately 1,100 branches that span across Ohio, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia.

As a customer, you can enjoy access to more than 50,000 ATMs across the country and no opening deposit requirements for checking and savings accounts.

In addition to deposit accounts, Fifth Third Bank financial institutions offer mortgages, auto financing, personal loans, insurance, and investing products. Products and services are available to business customers as well.

17. First Republic Bank

Total Assets: $197.91 Billion

Headquarters: San Francisco, California

First Republic Bank is a premier private bank with more than 80 branches across the country. Its vast lineup of products and services includes checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, IRAs, CDs, and wealth management.

Business customers can take advantage of business loans, business lines of credit, commercial real estate loans, and small business loans. The bank focuses on philanthropy and constantly supports programs related to art and education.

18. Morgan Stanley

Total Assets: $191.35 Billion

Headquarters: New York City, New York

Morgan Stanley’s roots date back to 1935. Today, the bank is a reputable, multinational investment management and financial services company. It has over 700 locations in every state as well as Washington D.C.

Its investing division includes three portfolios, including the impact portfolio, market-tracking portfolio, and performance-seeking portfolio. Whether you’re a beginner investor or wealthy client, Morgan Stanley may be a solid pick.

19. KeyBank

Total Assets: $184.67 Billion

Headquarters: Cleveland, Ohio

KeyBank was founded in 1825 and is now considered a community bank with a presence in 15 states. It has more than 40,000 ATMs in its network and 1,000 full-service branches. The bank also partners with the AllPoint Network of over 40,000 ATMs nationwide.

Its standard services include checking accounts, savings accounts, home loans and mortgages, lines of credit, credit cards, investing, insurance, and debt consolidation. In 2021, KeyBank acquired several digital businesses including digital platform XUP Payments and GradFin, a student loan counseling fintech.

20. Ally Bank

Total Assets: $182.2 Billion

Headquarters: Sandy, UT

While it’s based in Utah, Ally Bank is an online only bank with a long list of digital banking solutions. Its deposit accounts come with no monthly maintenance fees or minimum balance requirements.

The bank also pays high yields on CDs and savings accounts than traditional banks with brick-and-mortar banks. As a customer, you can enjoy 24/7 customer services and access to more than 43,000 ATMs through the Allpoint network.

Bottom Line

As you can see, there are many large banks in the United States. Each one has its own unique perks and priorities. To choose the right bank, consider your location, needs, and preferences.

If you’re looking for personal banking services and prefer a digital platform, Goldman Sachs and its Marcus division may be the way to go. But if private wealth management is your top priority, you may be better off with Bank of New York Mellon. Best of luck in your search for the perfect large bank.

Largest Banks in the U.S. FAQs

What is a bank?

Put simply, a bank is a financial institution that can legally accept checking and savings deposits and distribute loans. Some banks also offer additional services like certificates of deposit (CDs), individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and wealth management.

What is the largest bank in the world?

The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China is the largest bank in the world. The bank’s assets add up to $4.324 Trillion.

What are the ten largest banks in the U.S.?

Ranked in total asset value, the ten largest banks in the U.S. include JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, U.S. Bancorp, PNC, Truist Bank, Goldman Sachs, Charles Schwab, and TD Group.

How do I choose a bank?

To choose the right bank, focus on what you’re looking for. For more personalized service, you might want to explore a community bank. But if you prefer branch locations across the country and a long list of offerings, one of the large banks on this list might be a better fit.

Is my money safe in a bank?

Your money is safe as long as the bank is insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). An FDIC-insured bank typically insures up to $250,000 per depositor. Note that you don’t have to purchase FDIC insurance. As long as you’re a customer at a bank that offers it, you’ll receive it automatically.

How does a commercial bank differ from a retail bank?

A commercial bank offers a variety of products and services to both individuals and businesses. Retail banks, on the other hand, focus their offerings to individual customers. If you own a business, you’d be better off with a commercial bank that can serve the financial needs of your organization.

Do online banks exist?

Absolutely! In today’s day and age, online banking is more popular than ever before, among larger banks and smaller banks. While some banks offer in-person and online services, other banks, like Ally Bank, solely operate online with no branch locations.

What are some other large banks not on this list?

Other big banks you might want to consider include First National Bank, Huntington Bank, Provident National Corporation, America Bank, and HSBC Bank USA.

Source: crediful.com

Posted in: Credit 101 Tagged: 2, 2016, 2021, 360 Performance Savings, About, acquisitions, actual, age, AI, All, AllY, Amazon, app, art, artificial intelligence, asset, assets, Auto, Auto Loans, balance, Bank, bank accounts, bank of america, Banking, banks, before, beginner, Benefits, best, Best of, big, Bill Pay, bills, bonuses, boston, brick, brokerage, brokers, business, business loans, california, capital one, cash back, CDs, certificates of deposit, charlotte, chase, chase offers, chase ultimate rewards, Checking Account, Checking Accounts, Citi, citibank, Citigroup, city, Commercial, Commercial Real Estate, commission, commodities, Community Bank, companies, company, Consumer banking, Convenience, country, Credit, credit card, credit card issuer, credit cards, credit score, credit union, Credit unions, debit cards, Debt, debt consolidation, decades, Delaware, deposit, deposit insurance, Deposits, Digital, discover, education, employer, equity, estate, expense, experience, facebook, Fall, FDIC, FDIC insurance, Features, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Reserve, Fees, Financial Goals, Financial Services, Financial Wellness, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, financing, Fintech, Florida, foreign exchange, Free, free credit score, funds, Georgia, Giving, goals, gold, Goldman Sachs, Google, great, home, home equity, home loans, hours, How To, HSBC, Illinois, impact, in, indiana, individual retirement accounts, industrial, industry, Insurance, Investing, investment, Investor, IRAs, JPMorgan Chase, KeyBank, Learn, lending, Life, list, loan, Loans, low, luck, Main, maintenance, Make, manage, Marcus, market, markets, Massachusetts, measure, Mergers and acquisitions, merrill, Michigan, Midwest, minneapolis, mobile, Mobile App, Mobile Banking, Mobile Check Deposit, Monetary policy, money, Money Management, money market, money market accounts, More, Morgan Stanley, Mortgage, mortgage loans, Mortgages, most popular, mutual funds, needs, new, New Jersey, new york, new york city, north carolina, offer, offers, Offices, Online Banking, Online Bill Pay, or, organization, Original, Other, overdraft, overdraft fees, park, payments, Pennsylvania, pension, Personal, personal banking, Personal Loans, philanthropy, pittsburgh, place, PNC, points, Popular, portfolio, portfolios, priorities, products, programs, Purchase, Real Estate, refinancing, Research, retirement, retirement accounts, rewards, right, safe, san francisco, savings, Savings Account, Savings Accounts, Schwab, search, securities, short, Silicon Valley, silicon valley bank, Small Business, small business loans, space, Spending, states, stock, student, student loan, Student Loans, td bank, Tech, Technology, Tennessee, tools, tracking, trading, traditional, traditional banks, Travel, Travel Credit Cards, Treasury, U.S. Bancorp, u.s. bank, under, unique, united, united states, upgrades, Utah, value, Venture Capital, virginia, virtual, washington, Washington DC, wealth, wealth management, wellness, wells fargo, work

Apache is functioning normally

June 2, 2023 by Brett Tams

.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-content-wrappadding:23px 23px 23px 23px;background-color:#f9fafa;border-color:#cacaca;border-width:1px 1px 1px 1px;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-contents-titlefont-size:14px;line-height:18px;letter-spacing:0.06px;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif, “Apple Color Emoji”, “Segoe UI Emoji”, “Segoe UI Symbol”;font-weight:700;text-transform:uppercase;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-content-wrap .kb-table-of-content-listcolor:#001c29;font-size:14px;line-height:21px;letter-spacing:0.01px;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif, “Apple Color Emoji”, “Segoe UI Emoji”, “Segoe UI Symbol”;font-weight:inherit;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-content-wrap .kb-table-of-content-list .kb-table-of-contents__entry:hovercolor:#16928d;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-content-list limargin-bottom:7px;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-table-of-content-list li .kb-table-of-contents-list-submargin-top:7px;.kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-basiccircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:after, .kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-basiccircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:before, .kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-arrowcircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:after, .kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-arrowcircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:before, .kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-xclosecircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:after, .kb-table-of-content-nav.kb-table-of-content-id_88a319-9a .kb-toggle-icon-style-xclosecircle .kb-table-of-contents-icon-trigger:beforebackground-color:#f9fafa;

Countries as diverse as Japan, Germany, and the United Kingdom have postal banks. Their citizens can pick up mail, send packages, and order postage at the post office. Plus,  they can perform a whole range of basic financial tasks Americans can do only at a bank branch or ATM.

Americans today, that is. For more than 50 years in the 20th century, the United States had a limited postal banking system that accepted savings deposits and paid interest. The United States Postal Savings System was a lifeline for rural and low-income workers with limited access to the traditional banking system. At its peak in 1947, it held more than $3 billion in assets, or about $45 billion in today’s dollars — enough to crack the top 50 biggest banks in the United States.

The Postal Savings System stopped accepting deposits in 1967 and liquidated a few years later. Few nonhistorians remember it today. But as account fees rise and bank failures call the private banking system’s stability into question, public interest in postal banking is growing once more. Maybe its time has come again — or maybe its inherent limitations are too much for modern consumers.


What Is Postal Banking?

Postal banking means that the national postal service provides financial services through its existing network of post offices. Post offices effectively serve as bank branches that accept deposits, cash checks, change currency, and perform other basic financial transactions.

Postal banking is common throughout the world. It’s also quite popular. Some countries’ postal banks rank among their biggest homegrown financial institutions. Japan Post Bank and the Postal Savings Bank of China are among the 20 largest banks in the world.

Although their business models and service menus vary from place to place, postal banks generally focus on retail financial services rather than investment banking or high finance. But many nonetheless offer an expansive range of services. For example, Deutsche Postbank, Germany’s postal bank, is one of Germany’s biggest housing lenders.

Postal banks aren’t limited to providing banking services through post offices only. Like most private banks and credit unions, modern postal banks generally offer online and mobile banking. This helps them compete with private banks for customers who increasingly expect to be able to bank from anywhere with an Internet connection.

Postal banks can be wholly government-owned, partially government-owned, or wholly owned by private shareholders. Most are part-owned by the national government and part-owned by private shareholders. 

Deutsche Postbank is a notable example of a postal bank where the national government has no ownership stake at all. However, its parent bank (Deutsche Bank) is a systemically important private bank that the German government considers too big to fail and has bailed out in the past.  


History of Postal Banking in the United States

The United States never had a dominant postal bank like Japan and China do today. And since it only ever provided limited financial services that relied heavily on existing private banks, some argue that the United States Postal Savings System wasn’t a true postal bank.

What’s not up for debate is that between 1911 and 1967, most Americans could walk into their local post office branch and deposit or withdraw cash — with interest.

Origins of the United States Postal Savings System

For the first 140 years of American history, deposits in U.S. banks were protected only by the faith and credit of the banks themselves. Banking customers could (and often did) lose their life savings in bank failures, which is why bank runs were so common back then.

After a spate of bank failures now known as the Panic of 1907, political momentum built for a durable solution. Some advocated for a national deposit insurance system, while others argued for a national bank that leveraged the existing post office system. The debate largely broke down along partisan lines, and pro-postal bank Republicans’ victory in the 1908 election settled the question.

Congress authorized the U.S. Postal Savings System in 1910. The first branches opened the following year. From the start, those most likely to be impacted by bank failures or underserved by traditional banks — rural folks, low-income workers, and immigrants everywhere — were most likely to use the system.

Services & Limitations

Policymakers envisioned the U.S. Postal Savings System as a sort of safety net bank that wouldn’t have an unfair advantage over private banks, which were already a powerful political force. They set it up with some important limitations:

  • Limits on banking services. The U.S. Postal Savings System took deposits from the public but didn’t hold onto them and didn’t use them to fund loans. Instead, postal bank branches redeposited customers’ funds into private banks in the same state. This provided those private banks with critical liquidity but ensured the Postal Savings System would never be a full-service financial institution.
  • Limits on interest payments. By law, the Postal Savings System paid 2% interest on deposits. This was intentionally lower than the going rate for private banks (around 3.5%) in the early 1910s. A lower interest rate ensured the Postal Savings System wouldn’t undercut private banks. It also encouraged in-state private banks to take Postal Savings System deposits by allowing those banks to pay below-market rates on them. This seemed like a win-win at the time, but it caused problems later on.
  • Limits on deposits. Congress initially set the deposit limit at $500 per account, or about $14,000 in today’s dollars. The deposit limit increased to $2,500 per account in 1918 (about $48,000 today). That’s a lot of money, but not quite enough to make the post office a one-stop bank for wealthier people.

The system had some other, more technical limitations as well. One that turned out to be important later on was a ban on redepositing funds with savings and loan banks (S&Ls). At the time, S&Ls made most of the country’s mortgage loans, so this restriction prevented Postal Savings System deposits from flowing back into the housing market.

Growth During the Great Depression

Through the 1910s and 20s, the Postal Savings System remained a relatively small player in the U.S. financial system. As its creators envisioned, it was mostly a safety net bank for lower-income industrial workers, farmers, and immigrants with limited access to traditional financial institutions. 

This changed during the Great Depression. Hundreds of S&Ls and many more small, independent banks failed between 1929 and 1934. Interest rates crashed as well. Seeking safe haven (and a now-competitive yield) for their money, many more Americans opened Postal Savings System accounts. Total system deposits swelled past $1 billion in 1930 dollars.

However, even as it grew, the Postal Savings System’s weaknesses began to show. 

Once an incentive for participating private banks to take system deposits, the interest rate cap became a liability as interest rates crashed. Private banks began to refuse postal deposits. 

But more money than ever was flowing into the system in search of higher yields. So its administrators began buying public bonds, which paid higher interest rates. Ironically, this starved struggling banks of the capital they needed to make loans and may have worsened the depression.

Decline & Closure

In 1933, Congress authorized the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the United States’ first national deposit insurance system. The FDIC guaranteed private bank deposits up to $2,500, then $5,000. Safety-wise, this put private banks on the same footing as the Postal Savings System and reduced the pressure on both systems.

Money continued to flow into the system amid lingering fears around bank safety and above-market interest rates on deposits. Total deposits didn’t peak until 1947. But by then, the seeds of the Postal Savings System’s decline were already sown:

  • Consumers eventually got comfortable with the FDIC, which prevented millions in banking losses during the 1930s and 40s
  • The federal government vastly expanded bond sales in the 1940s to fund the World War II effort, creating a safe alternative to high-yield savings accounts at the post office  
  • Private banks stepped up lobbying efforts against the system in the 1940s and 50s
  • Private banks expanded coverage and services, strengthening their appeal relative to the Postal Savings System’s more limited menu
  • Privacy concerns grew around the system’s practice of fingerprinting depositors, despite assurances that it wouldn’t share fingerprint records with law enforcement

Deposits declined through the 1950s and 60s. By 1967, when it officially stopped taking deposits, the total system balance was just $50 million.


Recent Developments in U.S. Postal Banking 

Even after the Postal Savings System shuttered, the United States Postal Service continued to issue and cash money orders. The USPS put out reports in 2014 and 2015 that envisioned how it might layer other financial services atop this foundation:

  • Payroll check cashing
  • Domestic and international money transfers
  • Bill payment services
  • Surcharge-free ATMs

The idea was to reduce low-income America’s reliance on predatory financial services providers, such as payday lenders and check-cashing shops, while reducing incidental banking and money transfer fees for everyone else.

The American Postal Workers Union strongly advocated for more post office-based financial services and got USPS management to agree to a small check-cashing pilot at a few locations in the eastern United States. But the poorly publicized pilot was a bust, and more substantive action would require an act of Congress.

In 2022, Congress took the first tentative step toward expanded postal financial services, if not quite a second U.S. postal bank. After removing a federal budget line item that would have expanded the USPS pilot, three Democratic senators introduced a standalone bill that went beyond the USPS’s recommendations. In addition to check-cashing, money transfer, bill payment, and ATM services, it authorized post offices to offer:

The bill didn’t even get a vote. Republican lawmakers were unified in opposition, and USPS management was lukewarm at best. Advocates can and probably will try again in the future, but it’s not clear the political will exists to make a modern U.S. postal banking system anytime soon.


Arguments for Postal Banking in the United States

Arguments in favor of establishing a new postal banking system in the United States focus on its potential to reduce the chronically underbanked population while providing a low-cost alternative to private banks for everyone else. 

  • Straightforward, low-cost banking services. A U.S. postal bank would focus on providing basic banking services at low or no cost. Think free checking and savings accounts, fee-free ATMs, and maybe low-interest loans or lines of credit. 
  • Real-world convenience. The USPS has nearly 20,000 post offices around the country. Many rural communities without physical bank branches (or much else in the way of physical retail) have their own post offices.
  • Alternative to predatory financial services providers. Payday lenders and check-cashing shops charge triple-digit interest rates for their services. But many users don’t realize this because they deal in relatively small amounts of money over short periods of time. A U.S. postal bank could reduce or eliminate low-income folks’ reliance on these predatory companies.
  • Builds on an existing foundation. It’s not like the USPS has no recent experience in financial services. Millions of people already use its money order services for transactions where cash, personal checks, or credit cards won’t do. Postal banking isn’t as radical a shift as you might think.

Arguments Against Postal Banking in the United States

Opponents of a U.S. postal banking system argue that it would cost billions to set up and scale a system that could have an unfair advantage over private banks and credit unions.

  • Could take years and cost a lot to set up. It might not be a radical change in direction for the USPS, but a modern U.S. postal bank would still take years to set up and cost hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars upfront. There’s also no guarantee it would ever turn a profit, especially if it focused on keeping account costs and loan interest rates low.
  • No modern history of U.S. postal banking. At this point, the USPS has no institutional memory of postal banking. Everyone who worked for the United States Postal Savings System is retired or dead. So the modern version would essentially start from scratch — not that it couldn’t poach employees from the private sector.
  • Could undercut private banking. This is certainly private banks’ big fear of postal banking: that it would be successful enough to take significant market share from them. Depending on your perspective, that could be a good thing, but private banks do have powerful friends in Washington.
  • Financial access is increasing without postal banking. Public access to basic financial services has increased in recent years thanks to rapid growth in online banking and mobile finance apps. Millions of American adults remain underbanked, but the problem is less dire than 15 years ago. 

Final Word

For more than 50 years in the 20th century, the United States Postal Savings System provided ordinary Americans with a limited range of financial services. Though it never grew into a dominant bank or threatened the private banking system, it had billions in deposits at its peak and probably helped some customers avoid financial ruin in the days before deposit insurance.

But it’s fair to say that the Postal Savings System never lived up to its potential. The reasons are complex, but the system’s built-in limitations and weaknesses likely prevented the sort of success postal banks have seen in places like Japan and China.

Looking ahead, it’s unlikely we’ll see a new U.S. postal bank anytime soon. If and when we do, let’s hope its founders learn from their predecessors’ mistakes.

@media (max-width: 1200px)

body .ns-buttons.ns-inline .ns-button-icon width: 100%; .ns-inline .ns-button –ns-button-color: #000000;

Brian Martucci writes about credit cards, banking, insurance, travel, and more. When he’s not investigating time- and money-saving strategies for Money Crashers readers, you can find him exploring his favorite trails or sampling a new cuisine. Reach him on Twitter @Brian_Martucci.

Source: moneycrashers.com

Posted in: House Architecture Tagged: 2, 2015, 2022, About, action, All, Apps, assets, ATM, balance, Bank, Banking, banks, basic, before, best, big, bond, bonds, Budget, Built, business, Buying, clear, companies, Congress, Consumers, Convenience, cost, country, Credit, credit cards, Credit unions, currency, debate, deposit, deposit insurance, depositors, Deposits, depression, Digit, Enforcement, existing, experience, faith, FDIC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Fees, Finance, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, foundation, Free, free checking, fund, funds, future, good, government, great, growth, history, hold, Housing, Housing market, in, Income, industrial, Insurance, interest, interest rate, interest rates, international, internet, investment, Law, Learn, lenders, liability, Life, liquidity, loan, loan interest, Loans, Local, low, low-income, LOWER, Make, market, Mistakes, mobile, Mobile Banking, modern, money, money order, Money Transfer, More, more money, Mortgage, mortgage loans, new, offer, office, Offices, Online Banking, or, Other, ownership, panic, payments, Personal, pilot, place, policymakers, Popular, pressure, public bonds, rate, Rates, reach, rich, rise, rural, safe, safety, sales, Saving, saving strategies, savings, Savings Accounts, search, second, sector, seeds, short, stake, states, Strategies, time, Too Big to Fail, Top 50, traditional, traditional banks, Travel, Twitter, united, united states, war, washington, will, workers

Apache is functioning normally

June 2, 2023 by Brett Tams

If you reside in the Pacific Northwest, you might wonder who the top mortgage lenders in Washington State are.

Yes, I’m referring to the state of Washington, not the nation’s capital, the District of Columbia.

Last year, the Evergreen State accounted for about 4% of all home loans, per HMDA data for 2021.

This made it one of the more active of the 50 states, only bettered by the likes of California, Florida, New York, Texas.

As to which company did the most home loan lending in the state, it was none other than nonbank Caliber Home Loans.

Top Mortgage Lenders in Washington State (Overall)

Ranking Company Name 2021 Loan Volume
1. Caliber Home Loans $12.2 billion
2. Rocket Mortgage $11.8 billion
3. Wells Fargo $8.3 billion
4. Chase $8.0 billion
5. Fairway Independent $7.1 billion
6. loanDepot $6.8 billion
7. UWM $6.3 billion
8. BECU $5.2 billion
9. Guild Mortgage $4.9 billion
10. KeyBank $4.9 billion

Caliber Home Loans seems like an unlikely candidate, but still managed to beat out of the rest of competition, even Rocket Mortgage.

The Texas-based mortgage lender funded $12.2 billion in the state of Washington last year, according to HMDA data from Richey May.

This was enough to take out the nation’s number one mortgage lender, Rocket Mortgage, which managed only $11.8 billion.

Coming in third place was San Francisco-based depository Wells Fargo with $8.3 billion in home loan volume.

JP Morgan Chase came in fourth with $8.0, while nonbank Fairway Independent Mortgage grabbed the fifth spot with $7.1 billion.

Others that landed in the top-10 included loanDepot, United Wholesale Mortgage, Boeing Employees Credit Union, Guild Mortgage, and KeyBank.

So just one of the top 10 lenders in Washington is actually based in the state, none other than Boeing Employees Credit Union, or BECU for short.

Bellevue-based Evergreen Home Loans managed to land in the top-20, while Umpqua Bank nearly cracked the top-10 list.

Top Mortgage Lenders in Washington State (for Home Purchases)

Ranking Company Name 2021 Loan Volume
1. Caliber Home Loans $6.1 billion
2. Fairway Independent $4.0 billion
3. Wells Fargo $3.9 billion
4. Chase $3.3 billion
5. KeyBank $2.5 billion
6. Guild Mortgage $2.2 billion
7. UWM $2.2 billion
8. Rocket Mortgage $2.0 billion
9. U.S. Bank $1.9 billion
10. Homebridge $1.9 billion

Now let’s fine-tune the list to only consider home purchase loans, as opposed to both purchase loans and refinances.

This list focuses on mortgages for home buyers instead of existing homeowners. As such, it looks quite a bit different.

Caliber Home Loans still led the way with a strong $6.1 billion in loan origination volume, but Rocket Mortgage fell to 8th place.

In second was Fairway Independent Mortgage with $4.0 billion in home purchase loans, followed by Wells Fargo with $3.9 billion.

Chase and KeyBank took the fourth and fifth spots with $3.3 billion and $2.5 billion, respectively.

The rest of best included Guild Mortgage, UWM, U.S. Bank, Homebridge Financial Services.

Top Refinance Lenders in Washington State (for Existing Homeowners)

Ranking Company Name 2021 Loan Volume
1. Rocket Mortgage $9.7 billion
2. Caliber Home Loans $6.1 billion
3. loanDepot $5.1 billion
4. Chase $4.6 billion
5. Wells Fargo $4.2 billion
6. UWM $4.1 billion
7. BECU $3.5 billion
8. Pennymac $3.4 billion
9. Freedom Mortgage $3.4 billion
10. Fairway Independent $3.1 billion

We discussed who the top home purchase lenders were, now let’s look at the refinance leaders.

These companies had a strong focus on existing homeowners, helping them snag a lower interest rate via a rate and term refinance.

Or pull equity out of their properties via a cash out refinance.

This is where Rocket Mortgage tends to shine, taking the top spot easily with $9.7 billion in refinance volume in the state.

Caliber Home Loans trailed the company by a wide margin with $6.1 billion in refis, followed by loanDepot with $5.1 billion.

Chase and Wells Fargo once again made the list, in the fourth and fifth positions with $4.6 and $4.2 billion, respectively.

The bottom half of the top-10 included UWM, BECU, Pennymac, Freedom Mortgage, and Fairway Independent Mortgage.

No big surprises here as the list consisted of many of the same names from above.

The only newcomer other than Freedom was Pennymac, which is typically acts a correspondent lender as opposed to a retail, consumer-facing one.

Top Mortgage Lenders in Seattle

Ranking Company Name 2021 Loan Volume
1. Caliber Home Loans $7.5 billion
2. Rocket Mortgage $6.0 billion
3. Chase $5.7 billion
4. Wells Fargo $5.5 billion
5. loanDepot $4.8 billion
6. KeyBank $3.9 billion
7. BECU $3.6 billion
8. Fairway Independent $3.6 billion
9. UWM $3.2 billion
10. Bank of America $2.9 billion

Top Mortgage Lenders in Spokane

Ranking Company Name 2021 Loan Volume
1. Spokane Teachers CU $722 million
2. Rocket Mortgage $700 million
3. UWM $399 million
4. Numerica CU $377 million
5. Washington Trust Bank $333 million
6. Wells Fargo $317 million
7. Caliber Home Loans $265 million
8. Freedom Mortgage $254 million
9. Pennymac $231 million
10. U.S. Bank $223 million

Should You Use One of the Largest Mortgage Lenders in Washington State?

The answer to this question will depend on your personality type. Are you only comfortable working with a big, household name?

Or do you prefer the more boutique-feel of a local credit union or mortgage broker?

It also may depend whether your transaction is a home purchase or a mortgage refinance.

Either way, put in the time to do your due diligence and investigate the company you plan to work with.

Ensure they offer quality service, are competent (can actually fund your loan), and have competitive pricing when it comes to closing costs and mortgage rates.

And even if you’re set on one lender, take the time to gather one or two more quotes to see how they stack up.

The mortgage will likely stay with you for some time, so getting the pricing piece right should be paramount.

(photo: Eric Frommer)

Source: thetruthaboutmortgage.com

Posted in: Mortgage Tips, Refinance, Renting Tagged: 2, 2021, About, active, All, Bank, bank of america, best, big, Broker, buyers, Caliber Home Loans, california, chase, closing, closing costs, columbia, companies, company, Competition, correspondent, Correspondent lender, Credit, credit union, data, due diligence, equity, evergreen, existing, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Florida, freedom, fund, Guild, Guild Mortgage, HMDA, HMDA data, home, home buyers, home loan, home loans, home purchase, home purchases, HomeBridge, homeowners, household, in, interest, interest rate, JP Morgan, KeyBank, Land, Leaders, lenders, lending, list, loan, Loan origination, loanDepot, Loans, Local, LOWER, More, Mortgage, Mortgage Broker, mortgage lender, mortgage lenders, Mortgage Rates, mortgage refinance, Mortgage Tips, Mortgages, new, new york, offer, or, Origination, Other, PennyMac, personality, place, plan, Purchase, Purchase loans, quality, Quotes, rate, Rates, Refinance, right, san francisco, second, short, states, teachers, texas, time, top 10, Transaction, trust, u.s. bank, united, United Wholesale Mortgage, UWM, volume, washington, wells fargo, will, work, working

Apache is functioning normally

June 2, 2023 by Brett Tams

Current is a digital banking app designed to simplify banking in the modern world. It also includes features for teens and young adults that can help them learn to manage money.

So, how does Current work and what does it cost? We’ll answer all of these questions and more in the Current review below.

What is Current?

Current is not a bank. It’s different from other financial institutions in that it’s a financial technology with a mission to help people make smart decisions about money.

It comes with several perks, like faster paycheck access, savings pods, spending insights, and cash back rewards. Best of all, there are no minimum balance requirements or overdraft fees.

Founded in June 2015 by Stuart Sopp, Current has raised over $400M and landed big name partners and investors, including Mr. Beast, the well-known YouTube star.

Its banking services are provided by Choice Financial Group and Metropolitan Commercial Bank, Members FDIC. In addition, the Current Visa Debit Card is issued by Choice Financial Group and Metropolitan Commercial Bank.

To date, there are about 4 million Current users. Current accounts are currently mobile only as there is no desktop account access or in-person branch network. You can download the Current app on your Android or iOS advice.

Current Features

Current offers several account features that you might find useful, including:

Faster Paycheck Access

Sometimes, you can’t wait until payday and need your hard earned money sooner. That’s where Current’s paycheck access comes in. It will deposit the funds from your paycheck up to two days faster than the typical direct deposit.

Current is unique in that it disregards the date your employer intends to release your paycheck funds. Instead, it works like a prepaid debit card and credits your account immediately after receiving it.

Gas Hold Feature

There’s no denying that the price of gas has skyrocketed. As a result, many gas stations have begun placing holds on the cards of customers. For example, a gas station might place a $100 hold on your card, even if you only purchase $50 worth of gas.

This will ensure you’ll have enough funds to cover the total cost. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a few days for the gas station to release the hold. Current will remove the hold right away so that the funds are readily available to you and you don’t have to wait.

Teen Banking

Current offers a teen account that enables parental supervision and strives to educate teens about proper money management. Its parental features include cashless convenience, instant transfers to teen cards, purchase notifications, and the ability to block specific merchants.

Parents can also use Current’s teen account to set spending limits and chores as well as automate allowance payments. In addition, multiple family members may add funds as they wish.

Savings Pods

With Current’s savings pods, you can meet various saving goals. Here’s how it works: You name a savings pod and deposit money into it from your account or qualifying direct deposit.

You can also add money through the round up feature where you round up to the nearest dollar from any debit card purchases you make.

 At the time this article was written, Current offers 4% APY on $6,000. To take advantage of the interest feature, transfer money from your spending balance to your savings pods.

Note that the type of membership you have will determine how many savings pods you can open. If you’re a basic customer, you’re limited to one pod whereas premium customers get up to three pods.

Cash Back Rewards

Current members can reap the benefits of a generous rewards program. As a member, you can earn up to 15x points on purchases you make at over 14,000 retailers. These retailers include Rite Aid, Cold Stone Creamery, Rite Aid, Subway, Forever 21, Burger King, and others that are listed in the Points tab in the Current app.

You may redeem these points for cash back in your Current account. You’ll receive the points right after you make a qualifying purchase and can redeem 100 points per dollar.

According to Current, its members have the potential to earn $165 cash back per year by simply using their card at participating gas stations. Keep in mind that Premium customers have the potential to earn more points and cash back than Basic customers.

Instant Cash Deposit

Current lets you easily deposit cash into your account. You may instantly add cash at over 60,000 at convenient places like local grocery and convenience stores, including Walmart and CVS. This is a huge selling point.

To deposit cash with Current, find a nearby cash deposit location, tap “view barcode” from the map, show the barcode to a cashier, and give them the funds. You can add up to $500 per transaction or up to $1,000 per day and $10,000 per month. The money will show up in your Current bank account immediately.

Overdraft Protection

The app does more than eliminate overdraft fees. If you overdraft your account by accident, you’ll get a free pass. The Overdrive feature offers a fee-free overdraft of up to $200 on in-store and online purchases.

To qualify for it, you must be 18 years or older and receive $500 or more in eligible direct deposits each 30-day period. A qualifying deposit can be an ACH transfer from your employer, payroll company, or Social Security. Unfortunately, mobile check deposits and peer-to-peer transfers don’t count.

Cryptocurrency

With Current, you can buy and sell cryptocurrency from the same app. Fortunately, you don’t have to worry about any trading fees or wait days for your trade to settle. You can purchase 27 popular coins, like Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, and Shiba Inu. Once you sell a coin, you’ll notice the cash in your Current account immediately.

Money Management

Current’s money management tools can come in handy if you’re looking for a way to take control of your personal finance and make the most out of your money. The Spending Insights feature, for example, is available on your home screen.

It lists your recent purchases and assigns them a spending category so you can easily see where your cash is going. You may also sign up for real-time notifications that will appear any time you make a debit card purchase.

While the Spending Insights feature is designed to help you track your spending, the Budgets tool if your goal is to prevent overspending. You can create budgets for various categories. As you approach your budget or spending limit on an account ownership category, you can receive updates and make changes accordingly.

Current Pay

Current Pay works a lot like Apple Pay, Venmo, Zelle, and PayPal. If you know others that use the app, you can pay and request money from them instantly. Best of all, the process is easy and doesn’t involve any fees.

Does Current Have Transaction Limits?

Despite all of Current’s handy features, the app does impose transaction limits you should be aware of. These include a $500 daily maximum in ATM withdrawals, $2,000 daily maximum in card purchases, and $5,000 maximum transaction amount for peer-to-peer payments through Current Pay.

Are There Any Fees?

Now it’s time to discuss Current review fees. You may be surprised to learn that Current doesn’t charge monthly maintenance fees or have any minimum balance requirement requirements.

Additionally, there are no overdraft fees, or money transfer fees for money transfers from an internal bank account or external bank account or ATM fees at 40,000+ Allpoint ATMs. This is great news if you’d like to try it out with no strings attached.

But keep in mind that you may face out-of-network or third-party fees. For example, if you use Current at an out-of-network ATM, you’ll get charged $2.50. International withdrawals cost $3 each.

In addition, if you’d like, you can upgrade from the Basic membership plan to the Premium account or membership plan. While this will come with an additional monthly fee of $4.99, you’ll get access to more features, like additional savings pods and the chance to earn more cash back.

Who is Current best for?

Current might be worth exploring if you don’t mind mobile banking. It can help you meet smaller savings goals with a high interest rate. It’s also ideal if you use your credit card frequently and hope to earn generous cashback rewards.

In addition, you may benefit from Current if you’re a parent or guardian that wants an account for your teen and wishes to instill healthy money habits. We also recommend Current if you’re unable to qualify for a traditional banking account and are looking for a viable, cost-effective alternative.

Current Pros and Cons

Just like any digital banking app or online bank, Current comes with several benefits and drawbacks, including:

Pros

  • No monthly fees: You can use Current without committing to monthly usage fees.
  • Generous APY: Current offers 4% APY on up to $6,000 in savings to help you expedite your savings goals.
  • Cash back: Unlike most debit cards, Current rewards you with cash back every time you make a purchase at 14,000+ participating retailers.
  • Early paycheck access: You may access the money from your paycheck up to two days sooner.
  • Instant gas hold removals: If a gas station places a hold on your account, Current will remove it immediately.
  • Teen features: Current comes with plenty of features you can use to help your teen become responsible with money.

Cons

  • No online or in-person banking: You can only use Current on your iOS or Android device as Current’s mobile app currently doesn’t support online or in-person banking at a local branch.
  • No checks: The Current app doesn’t offer checks so you’ll have to find an alternative payment solution.
  • Email-based support: If you have a question or concern, Current will only be able to help you via email support is not available.
  • Mobile check deposit feature is slow: It can take up to 5 business days for a check deposit to clear.

How to Use Current

If you’d like to sign up for Current, follow these easy steps.

  • Download the app on the Google Play Store or Apple App Store. You can also enter your phone number on Current’s website and receive a download link.
  • Share basic personal information including your name, phone number, email address, residential address, and Social Security number.
  • If you’d like, connect Current to a debit card or bank account to fund your account.

Once you sign up, you’ll receive a Current debit card by mail. It should arrive via USPS within 7 to 10 business days but you can use Current before then. Current will give you a virtual card you can add to your digital phone wallet while you wait for your physical card.

Current Reviews

Before you go ahead and sign up for the Current app, you might be wondering what other Current account holders have to say about it. Here’s an overview of the various reviews we found online.

TrustPilot

On TrustPilot, Current earned 3.8 out of 5 stars. Most reviewers praise the app but there are several complaints about Current customer support and challenges with disputes.

Apple App Store

Current users gave it a 4.7 out of 5 stars on the Apple App Store. There are over 84K reviews and any of the negative ones relate to customer service.

Google Play

When it comes to the Google Play Store, Current ranked well as well with 4.8 out of 5 stars from over 89K reviews. Again, the negative reviews are about customer service and resolving disputes.

It’s no surprise that customer service is Current’s most noteworthy downfall as it’s only available via email and in-app chat that sometimes doesn’t work. If you have an urgent question while using the app, you won’t be able to make a phone call and receive a quick response. Depending on when you send the email, you may have to wait a few business days or even longer to hear back.

Speaking of customer service, you might want to know how to go about it. You can use the in-app chat feature or fill out an email form and wait for an email response. As stated, there’s no way to call the Current team for faster support.

The good news is the app is fairly intuitive and you shouldn’t come across too many issues while using it, especially if you consider yourself tech savvy. Plus you can check out Current’s frequently asked questions on its website for answers to simple, less urgent questions.

Current Alternatives

While Current is a solid online banking app for many adults, teens, and young adults, it’s not for everyone. If you find that Current isn’t right for you or are wondering about alternative options, here are a few to consider.

Chime®

Just like Current, Chime is a financial technology company or fintech company with modern features you may not find at a traditional bank, credit union, or brick-and-mortar financial services company. It offers early direct deposit2, savings roundups, and no-fee overdrafts5.

Compared to Current, it’s more like a high yield savings account8 in that it lets you earn a better APY on your savings on your entire balance, rather than just up to $6,000.

In addition, there’s a Credit Builder7 account you can use to boost your credit without a credit check. Just keep in mind that Chime doesn’t offer a teen account like the Current teen account.

Read our in-depth Chime review here.

See also: Chime vs. Current: Which Is Better?

Greenlight

While Current is intended for teens and their parents, Greenlight’s online banking services are geared toward younger children in elementary school. Both apps come with parental controls and features such as spending limits, chore rewards, transaction monitoring, and the chance to blacklist set retailers. Greenlight also lets you invest in the stock market.

Bottom Line

Current offers a long list of features that make it a smart choice if you want a digital banking platform with no monthly fees or hidden fees. You can enjoy early paycheck deposit, no overdraft fees, teen savings accounts, cash back rewards, savings pods, and more.

As long as you’re okay with limited customer service and don’t mind using the app on your mobile device, it’s certainly worth exploring.

Current FAQs

Here are a few of the most common questions that many people ask about the Current digital banking app.

Is Current safe?

It’s a risk to use any type of mobile or online banking platform. But Current checking accounts and teen accounts are backed by FDIC insurance of $250,000 in the event of a bank failure. Plus just like many reputable online banks, the app uses bank-level data security measures and you can sign up to receive push notifications any time current detects account fraud.

Does Current have any physical branches?

At this time, Current does not have any physical branches. This means you won’t be able to receive in-person service. The good news, however, is it does offer fee-free cash withdrawals at over 40,000 Allpoint ATMs throughout the country.

Can you deposit cash into your Current account?

Yes, Current lets you deposit cash. However, cash deposits aren’t free and you will have to pay $3.50 for every cash deposit transaction.

What happens if you overdraft your Current account?

Thanks to the Overdrive feature, it’s no big deal if you overdraft your account.  You can enjoy a fee-free overdrive of up to $200 on any purchase you make in-store and online.

Can you earn rewards or bonuses with Current?

Absolutely! As long as you use the Current Visa debit card at participating retailers, you can earn cash back. Plus you can earn $1 every time you refer a friend who signs up for a Current account.

Is Current worth it?

If you’re looking for a free checking account with plenty of bells and whistles or a teen banking account, the Current mobile app should be on your radar. But if you prefer a more traditional banking experience, you might be better off with an account at a local bank or credit union.

Chime is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services and debit card provided by The Bancorp Bank N.A. or Stride Bank, N.A.; Members FDIC. Credit Builder card issued by Stride Bank, N.A.

2. Early access to direct deposit funds depends on the timing of the submission of the payment file from the payer. Chime generally make these funds available on the day the payment file is received, which may be up to 2 days earlier than the scheduled payment date.

5. Chime SpotMe is an optional, no fee service that requires a single deposit of $200 or more in qualifying direct deposits to the Chime Checking Account each at least once every 34 days. All qualifying members will be allowed to overdraw their account up to $20 on debit card purchases and cash withdrawals initially, but may be later eligible for a higher limit of up to $200 or more based on member’s Chime Account history, direct deposit frequency and amount, spending activity and other risk-based factors. Your limit will be displayed to you within the Chime mobile app. You will receive notice of any changes to your limit. Your limit may change at any time, at Chime’s discretion. Although there are no overdraft fees, there may be out-of-network or third party fees associated with ATM transactions. SpotMe won’t cover non-debit card transactions, including ACH transfers, Pay Anyone transfers, or Chime Checkbook transactions. See Terms and Conditions.

7. To apply for Credit Builder, you must have received a single qualifying direct deposit of $200 or more to your Checking Account. The qualifying direct deposit must be from your employer, payroll provider, gig economy payer, or benefits payer by Automated Clearing House (ACH) deposit OR Original Credit Transaction (OCT). Bank ACH transfers, Pay Anyone transfers, verification or trial deposits from financial institutions, peer to peer transfers from services such as PayPal, Cash App, or Venmo, mobile check deposits, cash loads or deposits, one-time direct deposits, such as tax refunds and other similar transactions, and any deposit to which Chime deems to not be a qualifying direct deposit are not qualifying direct deposits.

8. A Chime Checking Account is required to be eligible for a Savings Account.

Source: crediful.com

Posted in: Credit 101 Tagged: 2, 2015, 2023, About, ACH, advice, aid, All, allowance, Alternatives, android, app, apple, apple pay, Apps, ask, ATM, Automate, Automated Clearing House, balance, Bank, bank account, Banking, banks, basic, before, Benefits, best, Best of, big, bitcoin, bonuses, brick, Budget, budgets, builder, business, Buy, cash back, Cash Back Rewards, categories, chance, Checking Account, Checking Accounts, Children, Chime, choice, clear, Commercial, company, cons, Convenience, cost, country, Credit, credit card, credit check, credit union, credits, cryptocurrency, customer service, data, data security, Debit Card, debit cards, decision, decisions, deposit, Deposits, Digital, Direct Deposit, dogecoin, Economy, employer, ethereum, event, experience, Family, FDIC, FDIC insurance, Features, Fees, Finance, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Fintech, fraud, Free, free checking, fund, funds, gas, gas stations, gig, gig economy, goal, goals, good, Google, great, greenlight, grocery, guardian, habits, healthy, high yield, high yield savings, history, hold, home, hours, house, How To, in, Insights, Insurance, interest, interest rate, international, Invest, investors, iOS, Learn, list, lists, Local, maintenance, Make, manage, Manage Money, market, member, mobile, Mobile App, Mobile Banking, Mobile Check Deposit, modern, money, Money habits, Money Management, Money Transfer, More, News, no fee, offer, offers, Online Banking, online purchases, or, Original, Other, overdraft, overdraft fees, overdraft protection, ownership, parents, party, paycheck, payments, paypal, Personal, personal finance, personal information, place, plan, play, points, Popular, premium, prepaid debit card, price, pros, Pros and Cons, protection, Purchase, questions, rate, refer a friend, Residential, Review, Reviews, rewards, right, risk, safe, Saving, savings, Savings Account, Savings Accounts, Savings Goals, School, security, Sell, selling, simple, single, smart, social, social security, Spending, stock, stock market, tax, tax refunds, Tech, Technology, The Stock Market, time, timing, tools, trading, traditional, Transaction, transfer money, unique, updates, upgrade, venmo, virtual, visa, walmart, wants, will, work, young, young adults, youtube

Apache is functioning normally

June 2, 2023 by Brett Tams

David Walker is well aware that large language models such as ChatGPT, which was trained on the entire internet, can hallucinate. They can even make up historical events that never happened.

“They can tell lies, they can make up information,” said Walker, who is chief technology officer of Westpac, in an interview. “They’re incredibly powerful.”

The bank, which is based in Sydney and has more than 12 million customers, can’t afford to let a public version of ChatGPT make up or hallucinate answers for customers or employees who use a virtual assistant. GPT (generative pre-trained transformer) models are artificial neural networks that are pre-trained on large data sets of unlabelled text, and able to generate humanlike content.

But Walker does want to give employees and customers the ChatGPT experience of humanlike answers to their questions — if it can be done safely, with assurance the answers are accurate. 

The bank is working with Kasisto to test its Kai-GPT, a large language model trained only on conversations and data in the banking industry. 

“Hallucination in public AI models is unavoidable and can get pretty bad,” said Zor Gorelov, CEO of Kasisto, in an interview. This is why banking GPTs need accuracy, transparency, trust and customizability, he said. 

This is also why banks like Westpac will focus on internal use cases for generative AI — giving it to front-line bankers, contact center agents and mortgage workers, Gorelov said. Westpac will train Kai-GPT on its proprietary content, and thereby dramatically reduce the risk that the system will hallucinate, Gorelov said. 

Walker hopes to provide more complete and more conversational help to customers and staff, for instance, in the mortgage lending process. 

“When people apply for a home loan, they have to fill in lots of forms,” Walker said. “We need to know who you are, we need to know all kinds of things about you. This is going to aid us in checking the quality of information coming in, so it’s going to stop us having to go backwards and forwards to our customers. It’s going to streamline the process. It’s going to help our customers, it’s going to help our lending staff, and it’s going to make things much more straight through and seamless.”

Other banks are likely to do similar experimentation over the next two years, according to Peter Wannemacher, principal analyst, digital banking at Forrester.

“Specialist tools built on top of a large language model will be launched by vendors, traditional financial institutions and fintechs,” Wannemacher said. “Most traditional financial institutions will start by focusing on employee-facing generative tools, rather than exposing a chatbot built on top of a large language model directly to the end user.” 

But he also thinks banks will proceed with caution. 

“Large language models have suddenly become both better and widely utilized, but they still fail spectacularly and can even generate totally wrong, even fraudulent outputs,” Wannemacher said. “Money is a highly sensitive area of people’s lives, and traditional banks will rightly resist launching anything customer-facing until they have a much better sense of what can go wrong and how to address it.” 

To prevent Kai-GPT from answering a question based on information from another bank that doesn’t pertain to Westpac, Walker is using what he calls layering. One layer of the model is trained on data and conversations from many banks. Another layer is trained on information specific to Westpac, such as its policy documents, forms and websites and recordings of conversations in the bank’s contact centers. 

“As it formulates an answer, to work out the intent of the question, it will draw on that industry layer,” Walker said. “It’s got the knowledge of all those conversations from all those banks and it’ll be smarter because of that. But it’ll draw even deeper down into the Westpac-specific model when you’re talking about terms of a home loan or a deposit interest rate. Those layers work together to formulate these really rich, wonderful answers, but in an accurate and concise way.” 

Using as much data as possible gives a richness and precision to answers, Walker said: “It’s still a matter of identifying what you want to train on and what knowledge you need the GPT engine to understand.” 

The bank is moving slowly for now to ensure the new technology fits within its responsible AI policy and “how we think ethically about protecting our staff and our customers,” Walker said. “We want to make sure that we don’t run ahead too fast and throw something out there that could do harm. We have the principle ‘do no harm.’ It’s sort of fundamental.”

The first go-live of Kai-GPT at Westpac will be in mortgage operations. Over the next few months, the bank will workshop the use of the technology in the loan application process to help borrowers know what forms they should use and what information the bank needs to receive, which should help speed up the process for the bank.

Once Walker’s team feels confident about Kai-GPT’s ability to help employees and customers and do no harm, he thinks he’ll be able to quickly deploy it to other areas of the bank.

The key advantage of a large language model over earlier generations of chatbots in use at Westpac is the richness of the answers it can provide, Walker said.

“It provides an answer in a way that’s more like a human talking to a human, so customers or employees feel like they’re getting the information they need rather than just sharp one-liners,” he said. “We think this is quite a game changer when it comes to this next generation of working with artificial intelligence.” 

Westpac already uses Kasisto’s Kai software as an orchestrator of other chatbots the bank uses in areas like service management, human resources and risk management. If an employee can’t remember which bot to go to for information, he or she can go to the orchestrator and get routed to the right chatbot.

“We thought that that was a very powerful way to handle conversation and we’ve found that really useful,” Walker said. “It’s a one-stop-shop entry point.”

Kai-GPT was trained on Kasisto’s own data, data from other banks Kasisto works with and information gleaned from financial websites, SEC filings and other sources. 

“Our goal is to create the best large language model in the world designed for banking and financial services and achieve what we call artificial financial intelligence,” Gorelov said. “We feel that our job is to help our customers of all sizes to have the highest performing large language model that is designed and built for banking that provides accurate responses and knows more about banking than most bankers do.”

Kai-GPT is transparent, Gorelov said, in terms of the data and methodology used for its training.

“It is trusted, because we’ve worked with banks over the past 10 years,” he said. “We know how precise they are, how demanding they are when it comes to personally identifiable information and proprietary content.”

The program is also customizable, so banks can inject their own content and make it work better on their own data sets.

The bigger the data set and the more questions a large language model is capable of answering, the more important and difficult to enforce guardrails become. 

“The world went from prescriptive AI, where every intent, every response needed to be designed manually to generative AI, where you no longer need to anticipate every user’s question and retrain the model when something new comes up,” Gorelov said. “It’s a different world we live in and we’re quite excited about it. But guardrails and the AI protection, transparency, visibility of sources, those issues become more and more important.”

Source: nationalmortgagenews.com

Posted in: Refinance, Renting Tagged: About, agents, AI, aid, All, artificial intelligence, Bank, Banking, banks, best, borrowers, Built, CEO, chatgpt, data, deposit, Digital, entry, events, experience, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, front, Giving, goal, gpt, historical, home, home loan, How To, human resources, in, industry, interest, interest rate, internet, interview, job, language, lending, Live, loan, Make, model, money, More, Mortgage, mortgage lending, Moving, needs, new, new technology, Operations, or, Other, pretty, principal, protection, quality, questions, rate, rich, right, risk, Risk management, SEC, Software, Technology, tools, traditional, traditional banks, trust, virtual, virtual assistant, Websites, will, work, work out, workers, working, wrong

Apache is functioning normally

May 31, 2023 by Brett Tams

It has never been easier to open a bank account, especially with the spread of online services, but there has also never been so much choice about where to put your money. If you’re overwhelmed by your banking options, think about your ability to shape social change with your money. Now is a great time to consider becoming a customer at a socially responsible bank.

What is a socially responsible bank?

Corporate social responsibility is the self-regulation that businesses do to help promote a positive impact on environmental or social issues, such as racial equity.

In the banking industry, social responsibility refers to the ways banks can reduce harm or create opportunities for good. For an eco-conscious bank or credit union, that might mean it doesn’t invest in oil pipelines, deforestation or fossil fuels, or it might invest in alternative energy, plant trees or buy carbon offsets. Other banks or credit unions might be committed to equity goals by providing financial literacy programs to their communities or by giving more loans to minority-owned small businesses.

Why does it matter where I put my money?

It’s easy to imagine that the money you keep in your savings account, checking account or certificate of deposit is just waiting for you to use it. But your bank or credit union is using your money behind the scenes to lend to or invest in businesses or other customers. So even if you aren’t directly giving money to an oil refinery or company that’s clearing the Amazon rainforest, your money could still be supporting those initiatives.

There has been a long history of discrimination in the U.S. banking system against people of color, and you can put your money with a bank or credit union that’s working to support these marginalized groups. Elizabeth Vivirito, a financial services consultant who specializes in diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, research, says she has observed more robust changes in the banking industry around racial equity since the murder of Black man George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020.

“We see more people caring about where their money goes and what it’s funding,” Vivirito says.

How do I know what my bank is investing in?

It can be hard to know what a bank is doing with your money, but there are some ways to tell.

First, look at the bank’s website. Does it make any statements about its DEI goals? Does it explicitly say whether it invests in certain industries? Has the bank gone through any third-party certification processes, such as becoming a certified B Corp or joining 1% for the Planet or the Global Alliance for Banking on Values? These certifications and memberships each have goals and member requirements around sustainability and equity.

Once you’ve looked at the bank’s website, do a web search of the bank plus any keywords that you’d like to investigate, such as “social impact” or “community.” This should help you find specific statements or reports from the bank as well as any news or accountability reports from other sources that are keeping tabs on the bank’s efforts.

Note, too, that some banks are changing; they might be divesting from certain industries or adding programs to help people who have been historically shut out of banking services.

How can I find a socially responsible bank?

First, decide what social responsibility means to you. Do you want a bank committed to fighting climate change? In that case, you may want to choose a bank or credit union that is Fossil Free Certified, a certification from Bank Green. Do you want to combat financial racism and put your money into businesses that promote equity? Vivirito recommends looking into the history of your bank or credit union to see whom it was created to serve and what its mission is.

“The leadership, strategy and language of the institution should represent their community,” Vivirito says.

If you haven’t made any moves to open a new account and you’re looking for a simple way to be more socially conscious with your banking, Kara Pérez, founder of financial education company Bravely Go, says one of the easiest things you can do is move your money from a large national bank to a local credit union, which will use your money to support other local people, programs and businesses.

“Thinking about your money in a bigger picture way can help you make better decisions with it,” Pérez says. “Every dollar has power to shape our world.”

This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by The Associated Press.

Source: nerdwallet.com

Posted in: Banking, Moving Guide Tagged: About, Amazon, Bank, bank account, Banking, Banking Basics, banks, black, Buy, certificate of deposit, Checking Account, choice, climate, color, company, consultant, Credit, credit union, Credit unions, decisions, deposit, discrimination, diversity, eco, education, energy, environmental, equity, Financial Education, Financial Literacy, Financial Services, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Free, Giving, goals, good, great, green, history, How To, impact, in, industry, Invest, Investing, keywords, language, leadership, Learn, Loans, Local, Make, man, member, minneapolis, money, More, Move, nerdwallet, new, News, Oil, or, Other, party, programs, racial equity, Racism, Regulation, Research, savings, Savings Account, search, simple, social, sustainability, time, will, working
1 2 … 15 Next »

Archives

  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • October 2020

Categories

  • Account Management
  • Airlines
  • Apartment Communities
  • Apartment Decorating
  • Apartment Hunting
  • Apartment Life
  • Apartment Safety
  • Auto
  • Auto Insurance
  • Auto Loans
  • Bank Accounts
  • Banking
  • Borrowing Money
  • Breaking News
  • Budgeting
  • Building Credit
  • Building Wealth
  • Business
  • Car Insurance
  • Car Loans
  • Careers
  • Cash Back
  • Celebrity Homes
  • Checking Account
  • Cleaning And Maintenance
  • College
  • Commercial Real Estate
  • Credit 101
  • Credit Card Guide
  • Credit Card News
  • Credit Cards
  • Credit Repair
  • Debt
  • DIY
  • Early Career
  • Education
  • Estate Planning
  • Extra Income
  • Family Finance
  • FHA Loans
  • Financial Advisor
  • Financial Clarity
  • Financial Freedom
  • Financial Planning
  • Financing A Home
  • Find An Apartment
  • Finishing Your Degree
  • First Time Home Buyers
  • Fix And Flip
  • Flood Insurance
  • Food Budgets
  • Frugal Living
  • Growing Wealth
  • Health Insurance
  • Home
  • Home Buying
  • Home Buying Tips
  • Home Decor
  • Home Design
  • Home Improvement
  • Home Loans
  • Home Loans Guide
  • Home Ownership
  • Home Repair
  • House Architecture
  • Identity Theft
  • Insurance
  • Investing
  • Investment Properties
  • Liefstyle
  • Life Hacks
  • Life Insurance
  • Loans
  • Luxury Homes
  • Making Money
  • Managing Debts
  • Market News
  • Minimalist LIfestyle
  • Money
  • Money Basics
  • Money Etiquette
  • Money Management
  • Money Tips
  • Mortgage
  • Mortgage News
  • Mortgage Rates
  • Mortgage Refinance
  • Mortgage Tips
  • Moving Guide
  • Paying Off Debts
  • Personal Finance
  • Personal Loans
  • Pets
  • Podcasts
  • Quick Cash
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate News
  • Refinance
  • Renting
  • Retirement
  • Roommate Tips
  • Saving And Spending
  • Saving Energy
  • Savings Account
  • Side Gigs
  • Small Business
  • Spending Money Wisely
  • Starting A Business
  • Starting A Family
  • Student Finances
  • Student Loans
  • Taxes
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Unemployment
  • Unique Homes
  • VA Loans
  • Work From Home
hanovermortgages.com
Home | Contact | Site Map

Copyright © 2023 Hanover Mortgages.

Omega WordPress Theme by ThemeHall