Seattle bar will buy you dinner if you quit Chase!

Seattle bar The Twilight Exit is fed up with Chase and its shenanigans.  On their Twitter feed and Facebook page, they have offered to buy anyone dinner who shows proof that they have quit Chase bank.

New York accuses Chase of dragging its feet with mortgage modifications

Hoping to succeed where Washington has largely failed, New York City’s comptroller, John C. Liu, and six large unions plan to begin a campaign on Wednesday to press the biggest banks to do more to prevent foreclosures in the New York area.

Mr. Liu said the group would send Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo, among others, a letter that criticizes them for dragging their feet on modifying mortgages that are underwater or delinquent, and that urges them to do “everything possible” to avert foreclosures.

Depending on the response the coalition members get, they might move pension funds and bank deposits to other institutions, according to union officials.

Read more …

Chase named in Schwab mortgage-backed security suit

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–Charles Schwab Corp. (SCHW) is suing units of three banks over the sale of mortgage-backed securities to the company’s bank, alleging the firms made false statements or omitted facts about the credit quality of loans that backed the investments.

The banks named in the complaint filed on June 29 include units of Bank of America Corp. (BAC), UBS AG (UBS), and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM). Two units of Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) are also named in documents, though the bank wasn’t one of the securities dealers that sold certificates to Schwab. Rather, Wells Fargo is considered an issuer of the certificate that UBS sold to Schwab.

In a filing with Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco, Schwab said it purchased three certificates in three securitization trusts backed by residential mortgage loans for $130 million.

Schwab alleges that defendants in the suit “made untrue statements, or omitted important information, about such material facts as the loan-to-value ratios of the mortgage loans, the number of borrowers who did not live in the houses that secured the loans and the extent to which the entities that made the loans departed from their standards in doing so.”

The complaint alleges that more mortgage loans other than those listed in the document “were the subject of untrue or misleading statements.”

The complaint says that because the certificates are securities, under two California securities acts, Schwab believes it is entitled to rescind the purchase of the certificates or be paid damages for losses on the certificates.

Read more …

Chase a slumlord?

This story makes sense; Chase forecloses on a multi-tenant building and then owns it, or is responsible for managing it if the mortgage had been sold as a CDO.  For two years Chase does absolutely nothing to keep the property up and it ends up in such poor shape that the city condemns it and kicks all the tenants out.

The story began over 2 years ago when foreclosure proceedings began. This Saturday, July 17th 2010, the residents of 7263 S. Coles will be homeless. JP Morgan Chase has been responsible for maintaining this property since 2008. For two years Chase hasn’t honored its responsibility, and the building deteriorated to such a degree that the City stepped in and ordered residents to vacate the property this coming Saturday (July 17th). The tenants will be put out on the street.

Update: Here is some video of the tenants protesting their eviction.

Don’t change currency at Chase

This story speaks for itself.

Today, I went to chase bank to ask about the exchange rate from dollar to Japanese yen. The guy told me that there’s no charge for the exchange and he then checked the rate at that moment and he told me that it is 1 dollar = 86.00yen. I knew that the last few days the yen dropped. I went ahead and bought $5,000 worth of yen. When I went home I realized that the rate at that moment was 1 dollar=89.56 yen. I went back to chase after half an hour and told them I would like to cancel and want my money back. It was too late because they said they already ordered the yen. Even I don’t have the yen with me, they still would not give my money. I was furious! The more I was furious when the manager told me that to get my money back I have to sell the yen to them(crooks) and now, get back less than what it cost, even though I don’t have the yen in my possession. It would take a couple of days. So now, I lost 20,000 worth of yen. I immediately cancel all my account with chase.
Chase are liars, worst than criminals and definitely CROOKS.

Chase can’t handle bank integration properly

Yet another story of a bank integration gone bad.  A customer had an account with Great Western Bank which was integrated into WaMu.  Great.  Then Chase takes over WaMu and the customers account gets combined with an ex-boyfriends that she hasn’t been with in over 15 years!  Perfectly failing in the small details.

But it wouldn’t be a Chase story if there wasn’t a quite a bit of Chase refusing to see and/or fix the problem which this story has plenty of.

Over 15 years ago I had a Chase money market/credit card account. It was a joint account with my boyfriend at the time. We split up in 1994, at which point I opened my own account at Great Western Bank and took my name off of the joint Chase account. Great Western became Wamu, and my Great Western checking account became a Wamu checking account.

Then in 2009, when Chase took over Wamu, my Wamu checking account became a Chase checking account. In about March of 2010 I started receiving email addressed to my ex-boyfriend at my own email account. In other words, I started receiving email from Chase addressed to a man I hadn’t lived with in over 15 years! I went online and noticed a credit card account that I’d never seen before! I called Chase and they told me it was a credit card in my ex’s name. They told me they couldn’t cancel the credit card because I was not the primary account holder. They would not let me take my name off of the account myself and instead sent me a form that they required my ex to fill out.

My ex contacted them and they told him they’d already closed the credit card account per my request (although they had not told ME they’d closed the account). At about this time I started to received hardcopy mail addressed to my ex at my own house, where my ex had never lived! One letter contained two new Chase credit cards, one with my name on it and one with his name. My online sessions still showed the “canceled” credit card account as one of my active accounts. I also started getting junk mail addressed to my ex — Amex solicitations and such. I called and emailed Chase to tell them that something must have corrupted the data for my account when they took over Wamu, but the Chase reps I talked to said that couldn’t have happened.

Meanwhile, I’d been using Wamu’s online bill-pay, which of course turned into Chase’s online bill-pay. Yesterday I was contacted by one of my payees, who told me the check he received had my name and a suspicious address printed on it. Guess what? It was my ex’s current house address!!! Apparently, the bill-pay checks that my payees have been receiving since Chase took over Wamu have all had my ex-boyfriend’s address printed on them!

Today I got off the phone with a Chase rep who said they will research my bill-pay payments and send me a list of payees who received checks with invalid addresses. (I could research that myself online, but it would require about 5 clicks per check to see what addressed was printed on them.) Now I am going to have to contact each of those payees to make sure they haven’t updated their records and replaced my house address with my ex’s, and that they haven’t been sending my bills to my ex’s house.

What happens when interest rates rise?

It is a well known fact that banks like Chase are making bank (so to speak) right now because they can borrow money from the Federal Reserve at almost zero percent interest and lend that money for quite a bit higher, or use that money in their own proprietary trading operations.  Life is good, and profits are fat.  But when interest rates fall, what will Chase have to fall back on?  There are some doubts about whether their consumer banking unit (aka Chase Bank) will pass muster as a thriving business.

First, consider Chase’s slash-and-burn tactics with retail baking customers that by our analysis appear to be driving customers away.  But more important is the anecdotal evidence that their customer service just stinks, as evidenced by a customer that has only been with Chase a short while, meaning, a very important type of customer, the new and potential customer:

I’m going to start this post off in a very personal fashion, I do all of my banking with JPMorgan Chase Bank, aka Chase. I’ve been a customer for just a few months and the service is outstanding, well sort of. My business banker is a down to earth, reliable, honest person and knows the various programs in the Chase portfolio. Aside from him, the customer service at the Howard Beach, NY branch is horrific. I go to deposit my payroll check, and the teller gives me an attitude as does the manager (who mind you seems more concerned with Real Housewives of New York City than her 20+ customer in the branch). I work hard for my money, I work hard for my business, and no I don’t take things like Air Conditioning for granted, they apparently do. I’m tired of shitty customer service, whatever happened to the customer being right, or service with a half-ass smile. I guess that went out the window, when they started treating bank customers like flight passangers. Please stand in a straight line, with two forms of ID, your blood type, hair color and a sperm sample please, while we verify this is you and record your every move, so make sure you fill out the deposit slip correctly, because you CAN’t HAVE ANOTHER. Banks Suck, they really do. JPMorgan Chase can’t afford to lose even the smallest of business, because we all know they aren’t making any money anywhere else, and with interest rates the way they are, they need to start being nice or Santa is going to start thinking twice.

How Chase gets customers to pay higher interest rates

Let’s say you are a big thoughtless bank and you some customers you inherited from other banks you stole bought, but those customers have a great deal in a low-interest-for-life loan that other banks offered as a promotion, either for a big purchase, or a balance transfer from another credit card.  Your problem is you want them to be paying a higher interest rate, but these are good customers with good credit scores who are paying on time.  Hmm, what to do.

Wait, I’ve got it!  Let’s increase their minimum payment, either forcing them to default on their loan, which allows us to increase their interest rate to something nearly illegal, or force them to agree to a higher rate in exchange for lower payments.

If you think this way, that might make you Chase bank.  Full story below.

My credit has always been quite excellent, I have never defaulted on any credit or loan. My score is well into the upper 700 range. Chase has tried to screw me several times in the pass by jacking up my interest rate within just one statement period. Worse case. From 8.98% to 29.99% in just one month. I should have learned my lesson back then. But my personal checking was with BANK ONE(now CHASE) just down the street and I know the tellers and branch manger on a personal level.
HOWEVER! The final straw!
My story: Last February or so, I took one of their “Offers” 3.99% for the life of the balance. I needed a new furnace and windows so I used just over $20,000.00. My Credit limit was also raised to around $26,000.00 during this “special offer”. I paid the 3% upfront fee and continued to make not only the min due, but pay as much extra as my monthly budget would allow. Min payment due was around $400.00
NOW HERE is the reason CHASE_SUCKS. I get my September statement. My min payment due went up to almost $1,100.00! I checked my previous statements for any warning or info about this. NONE! I called and was told that I was sent a letter about 45 days ago outlining the reason for this. After explaining to them that I am not able to shit or grow an extra $700.00 every month. I am a single parent trying to raise my daughter with no help from her mother or anyone else for that matter and the two jobs I currently have just doesn’t leave room for much else. I ask what would happen if I cant make the min. due. You guessed it. “Default account! All kinds of Fees and charges. Current rate will rise to the now default rate on 27.9%”. When I asked about our agreement and the 3.99% offer. The manager stated. “it was a business decision on our part to HELP you pay off you account sooner, as well, we are allowed by law to make changes to our offers and account terms by sending you a 45 day notice”. So in other words, Because greedy chase is not making enough money off of me, they use some loop hole to increase my min due to an impossible amount so my perfect credit history gets trashed, so CHASE can rack up my interest rate and RENEGE on THEIR own offer.
I believe CHASE wants us to default and fail, so they cant continue to receive more government money, blame their problems and their own miss management on us the consumers, so as to keep their multi million dollar paychecks and mansions. All I can figure out in this whole mess; Is that the “powers to be” must really want Anarchy.

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