Bank of America to offer overdrafts by text

Bank of America to offer overdrafts by text

Bank of America is to offer customers instant overdrafts by sending them a text message when a debit card transaction takes them into the red.

The US bank, which currently rejects debit card transactions that would take customers over their limit, says the programme will give consumers more control over their financial affairs. The text will offer customers the option to over-ride the rejection in return for accepting an overdraft fee.

Speaking at the RBC Capital Markets financial institutions conference in Boston, Laurie Readhead, BofA's retail segments executive, said the pilot will run in the first quarter of next year.

"We think this is a much better approach, to let the customer choose," Readhead told assembled analysts.

She also elaborated on the bank's ongoing branch closure programme, saying more locations would be downsized or cut from the bank's 5900-strong retail franchise and that some stand-alone operations would be replaced with video ATMs.

In July 2009, the bank announced plans to close around 10% of its branches in response to shrinking customer demand as people turn to online and mobile banking. It has also begun pilot trials of video conferencing in Los Angeles and Washington, with customers talking to Merrill associates in New Jersey, Florida and Arizona.

Comments: (1)

Ketharaman Swaminathan
Ketharaman Swaminathan - GTM360 Marketing Solutions - Pune 10 May, 2011, 12:08Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Most implementations of overdraft protection in the US have thus far swung between two extremes: Grant overdraft against a hefty fee even when the customer hasn't asked for it, or decline overdraft even if the customer is willing to foot the bill. Props to BofA for striking the middle ground and implementing a solution at the level of the individual transaction. This also marks a victory for consumer rights protection groups who were equally critical of both the pre- and post-RegE regimes last year and have been campaigning for consumer choice at exactly this granularity since then. 

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