Banks should cap unarranged overdraft fees and warn customers before they go overdrawn, the competition watchdog has said.
The Competition and Markets Authority says this and other measures could save bank customers £1bn over five years.
of the 18-month study into personal and business banking suggest competition is weak in the industry.
But consumer group Which? said the report was a missed opportunity.
Many banks already cap overdraft fees, but the CMA said some do not.
At one end of the scale, Barclays charges a maximum of £35 a month. At the other end, Halifax charges a maximum of £100.
The
average unauthorised overdraft fee - when the bank has not agreed to a
customer going overdrawn - is £57.50 a month, according to Moneyfacts.
At
that average fee, if someone were to go overdrawn every month they
could end up paying £690 a year. Interest is charged daily on top of
that, at an average annual rate of 12.85%.
The CMA said that UK banks made £1.2bn from such charges in 2014.
'Weak' competition
Overall,
60% of customers have stayed with the same bank for more than 10 years,
and 90% of business customers get their loans from banks where they
have their own current account.
To stimulate more competition the CMA also suggested:
- Customers should be automatically signed up for text alerts, warning they are about to go overdrawn, giving them time to pay money in
- Banks should prompt customers regularly to check they are getting good value - if interest rates change, for example
- Customers should be able to use a simple app to help them compare accounts, and switch
- The price of loans should be more transparent, to help business customers.
The CMA said that if customers switched accounts, they could on
average save £116 a year. Those who use unauthorised overdrafts could
save £153.
The competition body confirmed its earlier finding that
the biggest banks should not be broken up, as that would not
"significantly improve" the market.
Market 'not working'
Alasdair
Smith, chair of the CMA's Retail Banking Investigation, said: "For too
long, banks have been able to sit back and not work hard enough for
their personal and small business customers."
Mr Smith told BBC
Radio 4's Today programme: "The banking market is not working well for
customers or for small businesses at the moment, primarily because it's
very hard for customers to work out what their bank really costs them."
He
said that the best bank for someone depended on how they used their
bank account, so technology would put together information about an
individual's bank usage and charges and point people in the right
direction of better offers.
'Missed chance'
However, consumer group Which? criticised the findings of the inquiry.
Alex
Neill, Which? director of policy and campaigns, said: "After 18 months,
this inquiry achieved little more than to propose basic information
measures that the big banks should have introduced years ago.
"Steps
to stimulate switching are welcome but the chance to deliver better
banking for all consumers has been missed," she added.
She said
the Financial Conduct Authority should "tackle the unfair, punitive
charges faced by unauthorised overdraft users, some of whom are hit with
fees far in excess of payday loans."
However, the British Bankers' Association (BBA) welcomed the report.
"Capping
monthly overdraft fees will help customers better manage their finances
and raising awareness of the current account switching service will
help more people realise they can switch accounts easily and quickly,"
said Anthony Browne, chief executive of the BBA.
The CMA is expected to deliver its final recommendations by August this year.
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