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March 8, 2009

ATM disloyalty fees abandoned

The Daily Telegraph has reported that Westpac (together with St George and Bank SA) has dropped its ATM "disloyalty fee" and that NAB is likely to follow, as a result of customer feedback.

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Posted 8th March 2009 by David Jacobson in Legal

See you at AMI in Canberra

Next week I'll be in Canberra for the AMI National Conference . If you're going, please introduce yourself. Or, if you want to organise a time to meet, email me at djacobson@langes.com.au.

I'll be arriving on Sunday and leaving on Tuesday.

I'll try and post some comments.

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Posted 8th March 2009 by David Jacobson in Mutuals

Date claimer: credit union and mutuals mergers seminar

Langes will be holding a forum on credit union mergers in Sydney on Thursday 30 April.

This forum will examine the strategic, practical and regulatory issues which arise in mergers between mutual financial institutions. Those attending will learn what is involved in the planning and execution of a merger and how to deal with many of the major issues which typically arise along the way. They will be better equipped to consider all of the alternatives; make the best choices; and minimise or avoid unnecessary problems, risks and cost.

If you want more information contact Levina Chim (T: 02 8234 4777 02 8234 4777 E: lchim@langes.com.au) for a brochure.

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Posted 8th March 2009 by David Jacobson in Credit unions, Legal, Mutuals

March 4, 2009

ATM fees

ATM Fees Australia is a useful site which has a table listing ATM fees and disloyalty fees.


There is clearly much consumer interest in this topic.

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Posted 4th March 2009 by David Jacobson in Legal

March 2, 2009

Unfair contracts law: an economist’s view

One of the concerns about the proposed unfair contracts law is whether it will prevent unilateral variation of interest rates by lenders (assuming it is a variable rate contract) and fees and charges.

Stephen King, Dean of the Faculty of Business and Economics at Monash University in Melbourne and a former Member of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) argues here that there is no evidence that the suggested changes work or benefit consumers or the economy.

He says the most obvious exception to an unfair contracts law is:

…variable interest rates on home loans. Will allowing banks to unilaterally vary these interest rates be illegal, and if so what are the consequences? Will banks have to individually negotiate with borrowers when the RBA changes interest rates before these changes can flow through to borrowers? Will it spell the end of the variable rate mortgages favoured by the vast number of Australian home-buyers and force them onto fixed rate mortgages?

It may be argued that this is just ‘one exception’, but there are many situations where suppliers face input costs that vary over time.  Currently these may be passed onto consumers or absorbed by the seller.  Will the new laws force sellers to bear all the risk of input price changes if they use standard form contracts? If so, will consumers be happy to pay the price rise associated with the ‘insurance against price changes’ that the seller is forced to supply? It is far from clear that concentrating the economic risk of input price changes on to a few sellers rather than allowing it to be dispersed among many buyers is economically desirable or in the consumers’ interest.

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Posted 2nd March 2009 by David Jacobson in Legal
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