This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-08-281 entitled 'Bank Fees: Federal Banking Regulators Could Better Ensure That Consumers Have Required Disclosure Documents Prior to Opening Checking or Savings Accounts' which was released on March 3, 2008. This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this document to Webmaster@gao.gov. This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this material separately. Report to the Chairwoman, Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, Committee on Financial Services, House of Representatives: January 2008: Bank Fees: Federal Banking Regulators Could Better Ensure That Consumers Have Required Disclosure Documents Prior to Opening Checking or Savings Accounts: GAO-08-281: GAO Highlights: Highlights of GAO-08-281, a report to the Chairwoman, Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, Committee on Financial Services, House of Representatives. Why GAO Did This Study: In 2006, consumers paid over $36 billion in fees associated with checking and savings accounts, raising questions about consumers’ awareness of their accounts’ terms and conditions. GAO was asked to review (1) trends in the types and amounts of checking and deposit account fees since 2000, (2) how federal banking regulators address such fees in their oversight of depository institutions, and (3) the extent that consumers are able to obtain account terms and conditions and disclosures of fees upon request prior to opening an account. GAO analyzed fee data from private data vendors, publicly available financial data, and information from federal regulators; reviewed federal laws and regulations; and used direct observation techniques at depository institutions nationwide. What GAO Found: Data from private vendors indicate that average fees for insufficient funds, overdrafts, returns of deposited items, and stop payment orders have risen by 10 percent or more since 2000, while others, such as monthly account maintenance fees, have declined. During this period, the portion of depository institutions income derived from noninterest sources—including fees on savings and checking accounts—varied but increased overall from 24 percent to 27 percent. Changes in both consumer behavior, such as making more payments electronically, and practices of depository institutions are likely influencing trends in fees, but their exact effects are unknown. Federal banking regulators address fees associated with checking and savings accounts primarily by examining depository institutions’ compliance with requirements, under the Truth in Savings Act (TISA) and its implementing regulations, to disclose fee information so that consumers can compare institutions. They also review customer complaints but do not assess whether fees are reasonable. The regulators received relatively fewer consumer complaints about fees and related disclosures—less than 5 percent of all complaints from 2002 to 2006—than about other bank products. During the same period, they cited 1,674 violations of fee-related disclosure regulations—about 335 annually among the 17,000 institutions they oversee. GAO’s visits to 185 branches of 154 depository institutions suggest that, despite the disclosure requirements, consumers may find it difficult to obtain information about checking and savings account fees. GAO staff posing as customers were unable to obtain detailed fee information and account terms and conditions at over one-fifth of visited branches and also could not find this information on many institutions’ Web sites (see fig.) Federal regulators examine institutions’ written policies, procedures, and documents but do not determine whether consumers actually receive disclosure documents. While consumers may consider factors besides costs when shopping for accounts, an inability to obtain information about terms, conditions, and fees hinders their ability to compare institutions. Figure: Percent of Depository Institution Branches and Web Sites at Which GAO Could Not Obtain Comprehensive Lists of Fees and Terms and Conditions: [See PDF for image] This figure is a horizontal bar graph, depicting the following approximate data: Comprehensive fee information, Institution Web site: 50%; Comprehensive fee information, Branch visit: 22%. Account terms and conditions, Institution Web site: 65%; Account terms and conditions, Branch visit: 33%. Source: GAO. [End of figure] What GAO Recommends: To help ensure that consumers can make meaningful comparisons among depository institutions as intended by TISA, GAO recommends that the federal banking regulators assess the extent to which customers receive disclosures on fees, and account terms and conditions prior to opening an account and incorporate into their oversight, as needed, steps to assure that disclosures continue to be made available. The federal banking regulators agreed with GAO’s recommendation and outlined responsive actions, including working on an interagency basis to revise Regulation DD examination procedures. To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on [hyperlink, http://www.GAO-08-281]. For more information, contact David G. Wood at (202) 512-8678 or woodd@gao.gov. [End of section] Contents: Letter: Results in Brief: Background: Some Fees on Checking and Savings Accounts Increased between 2000 and 2007, and Institutions' Reported Increasing Revenues from Fees: Regulators Focus on Depository Institutions' Compliance with Federal Disclosure Requirements: Despite Federal Regulations and Compliance Examinations, We Experienced Difficulty Obtaining Fee Information: Conclusions: Recommendations for Executive Action: Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: Appendixes: Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: Appendix II: Issues with Providing Consumers Real-Time Account Information at Point-of-Sale Terminals and ATMs When Using a Debit Card: Appendix III: Analyses of Select Bank Fees Data: Appendix IV: Resolution of Complaints Related to Fees and Disclosures Associated with Checking and Savings Accounts: Appendix V: Comments from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: Appendix VI: Comments from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System: Appendix VII: Comments from the National Credit Union Administration: Appendix VIII: Comments from Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: Appendix IX: Comments from the Office of Thrift Supervision: Appendix X: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: Tables: Table 1: Selected Periodic and Special Service Fees Associated with a Checking or Savings Account: Table 2: Number of Regulation DD and E Disclosure-Related Violations Identified by Federal Banking Regulators from 2002-2006: Table 3: Number of Institutions Surveyed by Moebs Services, 2000-2007: Table 4: Definition of Institution Size Categories: Table 5: Number of Institutions for Which Informa Research Services Collected Data, 2000-2006: Table 6: Issues Raised by Options for Warning Consumers That They May Incur an Overdraft When Using a Debit Card at a Point-of-Sale Terminal or ATM: Table 7: Average Fees, All Institutions, 2000-2007: Table 8: Average Fees, All Institutions, 2000-2006: Figures: Figure 1: Possible Outcomes of an Insufficient Funds Transaction: Figure 2: Average Insufficient Funds, Overdraft, Return of Deposited Item, and Stop Payment Order Fees, All Institutions, 2000-2007: Figure 3: Banks', Thrifts', and Credit Unions' Interest Income and Noninterest Income as a Percentage of Total Income and the Federal Funds Rate, 2000-2006: Figure 4: Banks' and Thrifts' SCDA and Credit Unions' Fee Income as a Percentage of Total Income, 2000-2006: Figure 5: Complaints Related to Four Major Products for All Federal Regulators: Figure 6: Percentage of Depository Institution Branches and Web Sites We Visited That Did Not Provide a Comprehensive List of Fees and Terms and Conditions: Figure 7: Path of a Typical PIN-Based Debit Card Transaction: Figure 8: Path of a Typical Signature-Based Debit Card Transaction: Figure 9: Path of a Typical Debit Card Transaction at an ATM: Figure 10: Complaint Resolutions Made by Federal Regulators: Abbreviations: ACH: Automated Clearing House: ATM : automated teller machine: CAESAR: Complaint Analysis Evaluation System and Reports: CCS: Consumer Complaint System: EFT: electronic funds transfer: FDIC: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: NCUA: National Credit Union Administration: OCC: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: OTS: Office of Thrift Supervision: PIN: personal identification number: PIRG: U.S. Public Interest Research Group: SCDA: service charges on deposit accounts: STARS: Specialized Tracking and Reporting System: TFR: Thrift Financial Reports: TISA : Truth in Savings Act: [End of section] United States Government Accountability Office: Washington, D.C. 20548: January 31, 2008: The Honorable Carolyn B. Maloney: Chairwoman: Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit: Committee on Financial Services: House of Representatives: Dear Chairwoman Maloney: In 2006, consumers paid over $36 billion in various fees associated with checking and savings accounts at depository institutions--banks, thrifts, and credit unions.[Footnote 1] Members of Congress, consumer groups, and others have raised a variety of concerns about these fees- -for example, whether depository institutions have increased fees as a source of revenues and if so, the impact of this trend on consumers. Additionally, some have questioned how regulators address fee practices in their oversight of depository institutions and whether consumers, prior to opening a checking or savings account, are able to obtain information on fees and depository institution practices that influence when fees are assessed. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve) has established regulations for checking and savings accounts that require depository institutions to disclose certain information about the fees they charge. Specifically, Regulation DD, which implements the Truth in Savings Act (TISA), requires depository institutions to disclose (among other things) the amount of any fee that may be imposed in connection with an account and the conditions under which such fees are imposed.[Footnote 2] Regulation E--the other primary federal regulation governing checking and savings account fees--implements the Electronic Fund Transfer Act and establishes the basic rights, liabilities, and responsibilities of consumers who use electronic fund transfer services and of financial institutions that offer these services.[Footnote 3] To ensure compliance with these and other relevant laws and regulations, banks, thrifts, and credit unions are subject to oversight at the federal and state level.[Footnote 4] This oversight includes on-site examinations and other steps to ensure compliance with the laws and regulations. In 2005, partly in response to concerns about the marketing, implementation, and fees of overdraft protection programs being offered by depository institutions, the OCC, Federal Reserve, FDIC and NCUA jointly and the OTS separately issued guidance (interagency guidance) outlining "best practices" that address, among other things, communicating the features of these programs to customers.[Footnote 5] You requested that we examine a number of issues related to the fees that consumers pay on their checking and savings accounts. This report discusses (1) the trends in the types and amounts of fees associated with checking and deposit accounts since 2000 and available information on the characteristics of consumers that incur fees; (2) ways that federal and selected state banking regulators address checking and deposit account fees in their oversight of depository institutions; and (3) the extent to which consumers are able to obtain information on account terms and conditions and on fees, including information about specific transactions and bank practices that determine when such fees are assessed, upon request prior to opening an account. In addition, appendix II of the report presents information on issues related to providing real-time account information at point-of-sale terminals and automated teller machines (ATM) that could help consumers avoid certain fees. For the first objective, we engaged the services of a private sector firm--Moebs Services, Inc.--to obtain data on selected fees associated with checking and savings accounts from 2000 to 2007 and similar data from another private sector firm--Informa Research Services, Inc.--from 2000 to 2006. We interviewed representatives of these two firms to understand their methodology for collecting the data and ensuring its integrity. In addition, we conducted reasonableness checks on the data we received to identify any missing, erroneous, or outlying data and concluded that the data were sufficiently reliable for use in our report. To determine the role that these fees have played in depository institutions' revenues, we also obtained and analyzed quarterly financial data submitted by federally insured banks, thrifts, and credit unions and maintained by FDIC and NCUA. In our past work, we have found the quarterly financial data maintained by FDIC and NCUA to be sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our reports. We also reviewed the literature for studies or information on the characteristics of consumers who might be likely to incur such fees and interviewed representatives of the federal banking regulators about this issue. To determine how federal and selected state banking regulators address fees associated with checking and deposit accounts as part of their oversight of depository institutions, we obtained and reviewed examination manuals and guidance used by the five federal banking regulators and state regulators in six states.[Footnote 6] We obtained and reviewed a sample of 25 reports on examinations conducted during 2006 to identify how these regulators carried out examinations for compliance with Regulations DD and E.[Footnote 7] In addition, we obtained data from each of the federal banking regulators on violations they cited for institutions' noncompliance with Regulation DD and Regulation E disclosure-related provisions, as well as enforcement actions that each regulator took against institutions from 2002 to 2006. We also obtained annual data on consumer complaints concerning checking and savings accounts at depository institutions--particularly complaints related to fees and disclosures--as well as complaints for other major products (credit cards and mortgage loans) referred to these regulators from 2002 to 2006. To assess the reliability of data from the five federal banking regulators, we reviewed relevant documentation and interviewed agency officials. Finally, we interviewed officials from each of the federal banking regulators and from six state banking regulators about these issues. To assess the extent to which consumers are able to obtain account terms and conditions and disclosures of fees, we used direct observation techniques and reviewed studies and reports by government agencies, consumer groups, and other researchers. We also reviewed relevant federal laws, regulations, and guidance issued by the federal banking regulators. For direct observation, GAO employees posed as consumers shopping for checking and savings accounts and visited 185 branches of 154 banks, thrifts, and credit unions throughout the nation to request documents on the fees associated with basic checking and savings accounts.[Footnote 8] We selected these institutions to ensure a mix of institution type (bank, thrift, and credit union) and size; however, the results cannot be generalized to all institutions. These employees also reviewed information from the institutions' Web sites. To obtain information on issues related to providing consumers with real-time account information during debit card transactions at point- of-sale terminals and automated teller machines, we reviewed available literature from the Federal Reserve and other sources and met with officials from depository institutions, card associations, third-party processors, and trade organizations. We conducted this performance audit from January 2007 to January 2008, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. Appendix I explains our objectives, scope, and methodology in greater detail. Results in Brief: According to data from private vendors, average fees for some checking and savings account features--such as overdrafts, insufficient funds (instances in which an institution denies a transaction that would result in an overdraft but charges a fee), returns of deposited items, and stop payment orders--have generally risen since 2000, while others- -for example, monthly account maintenance fees--have generally declined. For example, the average overdraft fee increased by about 11 percent (after inflation adjustment) between 2000 and 2007 among institutions surveyed by Moebs Services. The data also indicate some variation in fees by type and size of institution, with banks and thrifts charging higher fees on average than credit unions, and larger institutions charging more on average than midsize and smaller institutions. During this same period, the portion of income that depository institutions derived from noninterest sources--including, but not limited to, fees on savings and checking accounts--varied, but generally increased from about 24 percent to 27 percent of income from all sources. Changes in both consumer behavior and the practices of depository institutions are likely influencing these trends in fees. For example, consumers are increasingly using electronic forms of payment that result in rapid or even immediate debits--a development that may mean an increasing number of charges for insufficient funds or overdrafts. Additionally, many depository institutions have automated overdraft protection programs that have been increasingly marketed to customers. However, we were not able to analyze the demographic characteristics of customers that incur bank fees because doing so would require transaction-level data for all account holders--data that are not publicly available. FDIC is currently reviewing the overdraft programs of some of the banks it supervises, including reviewing transaction-level data to help determine the characteristics of consumers who incur fees related to overdrafts, but its study will not be completed until late 2008. Federal banking regulators address fees associated with checking and savings accounts primarily by examining depository institutions' compliance with statutory and regulatory disclosure requirements and reviewing customer complaints. However, regulators generally do not address the reasonableness of fees assessed. The examination procedures for financial institutions' compliance with Regulations DD and E, which are similar across the five federal banking regulators, consist largely of a review of an institution's written policies and procedures and a sample of disclosure documents. Since 2005, NCUA has included examination procedures specifically addressing institutions' adherence to the 2005 interagency guidance concerning overdraft protection products and, in September 2007, all of the regulators revised their Regulation DD examination procedures to include reviews of the disclosures associated with such products offered by institutions that advertise them. While regulators received a large number of checking account complaints, they received relatively fewer complaints specifically concerning fees and related disclosures--less than 5 percent of all complaints received from 2002 to 2006. Further, the regulators reported a total of 1,674 instances in which they cited an institution for violation of the fee-related disclosure sections of Regulations DD and E from 2002 to 2006 (an average of about 335 annually among the nearly 17,000 institutions these regulators supervise). According to the regulators, the regulators took only two formal enforcement actions during this period related to these violations because most institutions took corrective actions during the course of the examination or shortly thereafter. The six selected state regulators we spoke with told us that their primary focus is on safety and soundness issues and compliance with state laws and regulations. Four of the six state regulators told us that they assess compliance with federal regulations such as Regulations DD and E. Like the federal regulators, the states reported receiving relatively few consumer complaints associated with checking and savings account fees and disclosures. Our visits to 185 branches of depository institutions nationwide suggest that consumers shopping for accounts may find it difficult to obtain account terms and conditions and disclosures of fees upon request prior to opening an account. Similarly, our review of the Web sites of the banks, thrifts, and credit unions we visited suggests that this information may also not be readily available on the Internet. We were unable to obtain, upon request, a comprehensive list of all checking and savings account fees at 40 of the branches (22 percent) that we visited. Similarly, we were unable to obtain the account terms and conditions, including information on when deposited funds became available and how overdrafts were handled, for checking and savings accounts at 61 of the branches (33 percent). The results are consistent with those reported by a consumer group that conducted a similar exercise in 2001.[Footnote 9] While the revised Regulation DD examination procedures call specifically for reviewing disclosures associated with overdraft protection products, the federal banking regulators do not have procedures to assess whether potential customers actually receive these or other disclosures. Consumers may consider convenience or other factors besides costs when shopping for checking or savings accounts, but this inability to obtain information about fees and the conditions under which fees are assessed upon request prior to opening a checking and savings account hinders their ability to make meaningful comparisons among institutions. This report contains recommendations to the five federal banking regulators to incorporate into their supervision of financial institutions a means of ensuring that fee and other disclosure documents are made available to consumers upon request before opening an account, as intended by TISA and Regulation DD. We requested and received written comments on a draft of this report from FDIC, the Federal Reserve, NCUA, OCC, and OTS that are presented in appendixes V through IX. In their written responses, all five banking regulators indicated agreement with our report and stated that they will be taking action in response to our recommendation. For example, OCC stated that it would incorporate steps, as needed, into its oversight of institutions' compliance with TISA to assure that disclosures continue to be made available. The Federal Reserve and NCUA specifically mentioned the need to revise, improve, or strengthen the current interagency Regulation DD examination procedures. All five agencies indicated that they plan to address this issue on an interagency basis. We also received technical comments from FDIC and the Federal Reserve, which we have incorporated in this report as appropriate. Background: Depository institutions--banks, thrifts, and credit unions--have attained a unique and central role in U.S. financial markets through their deposit-taking, lending, and other activities. Individuals have traditionally placed a substantial amount of their savings in federally insured depository institutions. In addition, the ability to accept deposits transferable by checks and other means has allowed depository institutions to become principal agents or middlemen in many financial transactions and in the nation's payment system. Depository institutions typically offer a variety of savings and checking accounts, such as ordinary savings, certificates of deposits, interest- bearing checking, and noninterest-bearing checking accounts. Also, the same institutions may offer credit cards, home equity lines of credit, real estate mortgage loans, mutual funds, and other financial products. In the United States, regulation of depository institutions depends on the type of charter the institution chooses.[Footnote 10] The various types of charters can be obtained at the state or national level and cover: (1) commercial banks, which originally focused on the banking needs of businesses but over time broadened their services; (2) thrifts, which include savings banks, savings associations, and savings and loans and which were originally created to serve the needs-- particularly the mortgage needs--of those not served by commercial banks; and (3) credit unions, which are member-owned cooperatives run by member-elected boards with a historic emphasis on serving people of modest means. All depository institutions have a primary federal regulator if their deposits are federally insured. State regulators participate in the regulation of institutions with state charters. Specifically, the five federal banking regulators charter and oversee the following types of depository institutions: * OCC charters and supervises national banks. As of December 30, 2006, there were 1,715 commercial banks with national bank charters. These banks held the dominant share of bank assets, about $6.8 trillion. * The Federal Reserve serves as the regulator for state-chartered banks that opt to be members of the Federal Reserve System and the primary federal regulator of bank holding companies, including financial holding companies.[Footnote 11] As of December 30, 2006, the Federal Reserve supervised 902 state member banks with total assets of $1.4 trillion. * FDIC supervises all other state-chartered commercial banks with federally insured deposits, as well as federally insured state savings banks. As of December 30, 2006, there were 4,785 state-chartered banks and 435 state-chartered savings banks with $1.8 trillion and $306 billion in total assets, respectively. In addition, FDIC has backup examination authority for federally insured banks and savings institutions of which it is not the primary regulator. * OTS charters and supervises federally chartered savings associations and serves as the primary federal regulator for state-chartered savings associations and their holding companies. As of December 30, 2006, OTS supervised 761 federally chartered and 84 state chartered thrifts with combined assets of $1.4 trillion. * NCUA charters, supervises, and insures federally chartered credit unions and is the primary federal regulator for federally insured state chartered credit unions. As of December 30, 2006, NCUA supervised 5,189 federally chartered and insured 3,173 state chartered credit unions with combined assets of $710 billion. These federal regulators conduct on-site examinations and off-site monitoring to assess institutions' financial condition and compliance with federal banking and consumer laws. Additionally, as part of their oversight the regulators issue regulations, take enforcement actions, and close failed institutions. Regulation DD, which implements TISA, became effective with mandatory compliance in June 1993. The purpose of the act and its implementing regulations is to enable consumers to make informed decisions about their accounts at depository institutions through the use of uniform disclosure documents. These disclosure documents are intended to help consumers "comparison shop" by providing information about fees, annual percentage yields, interest rates, and other terms for deposit accounts. The regulation is supplemented by "staff commentary," which contains official Federal Reserve staff interpretations of Regulation DD. Since the initial implementation date for Regulation DD, several amendments have been made to the regulation and the corresponding staff commentary. For example, the Federal Reserve made changes to Regulation DD, effective July 1, 2006, to address concerns about the uniformity and adequacy of information provided to consumers when they overdraw their deposit accounts.[Footnote 12] Credit unions are governed by a substantially similar regulation issued by NCUA.[Footnote 13] Regulation E, which implements the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, became effective in May 1980. The primary objective of the act and Regulation E is the protection of individual consumers engaging in electronic funds transfers (EFT). Regulation E provides a basic framework that establishes the rights, liabilities, and responsibilities of participants in electronic fund transfer systems such as ATM transfers, telephone bill-payment services, point-of-sale terminal transfers in stores, and preauthorized transfers from or to consumer's bank accounts (such as direct deposit and Social Security payments). The term "electronic fund transfer" generally refers to a transaction initiated through an electronic terminal, telephone, computer, or magnetic tape that instructs a financial institution either to credit or to debit a consumer's asset account. Regulation E requires financial institutions to provide consumers with initial disclosures of the terms and conditions of EFT services. The regulation allows financial institutions to combine the disclosure information required by the regulation with that required by other laws such as TISA as long as the information is clear and understandable and is available in a written form that consumers can keep. Paying or honoring customers' occasional or inadvertent overdrafts of their demand deposit accounts has long been an established practice at depository institutions. As shown in figure 1, depository institutions have four options when a customer attempts to withdraw or access funds from an account that does not have enough money in it to cover the transaction, and fees can be assessed for each of these options. The institution can (1) cover the amount of the overdraft by tapping a linked account (savings, money market, or credit card) established by the customer; (2) charge the overdraft to a linked line of credit; (3) approve the transaction (if electronic) or honor the customer's check by providing an ad hoc or "courtesy" overdraft; or (4) deny the transaction or decline to honor the customer's check. The first two options require that customers have created and linked to the primary checking account one or more other accounts or a line of credit in order to avoid overdrafts. The depository institution typically waives fees or may charge a small fee for transferring money into the primary account (a transfer fee). Depository institutions typically charge the same amount for a courtesy overdraft (an overdraft fee) as they do for denying a transaction for insufficient funds (an insufficient funds fee). Figure 1: Possible Outcomes of an Insufficient Funds Transaction: [See PDF for image] This figure is a chart that depicts the following information: Institutions' options: Overdraft to a linked account: Institution pays overdraft by transferring funds from customer’s linked account through an automated process (overdrawn account received funds from linked savings account, money market account, or credit card); Customer actively signs up for option: [Check]; Type of fee: A per-transaction overdraft transfer fee[A]. Institutions' options: Overdraft to a line of credit: Institution pays overdraft by charging customer’s linked line of credit through an automated process (overdrawn account receives funds from line of credit; credit charged for amount of overdraft); Customer actively signs up for option: [Check]; Type of fee: A per-transaction overdraft transfer fee[B]. Institutions' options: Ad hoc overdraft: Institution’s decision is discretionary and may be manual or automated, but an overdraft program is not publicized to the institution’s customers (overdrawn account receives funds from the bank); Customer actively signs up for option: [Empty]; Type of fee: A per-transaction overdraft fee. Institutions' options: “Courtesy” overdraft: Institution's decision is discretionary and may be manual or automated, but the institution publicizes or promotes an overdraft program to its customers. The institution also typically discloses the dollar limit for covering overdrafts (overdrawn account receives funds from the bank); Customer actively signs up for option: [Empty]; Type of fee: A per-transaction overdraft fee. Institutions' options: Transaction denied[C]: Institution does not honor transaction, usually a check. Customer actively signs up for option: [Empty]; Type of fee: A per-transaction insufficient funds fee. Source: GAO. [A] Some banks may charge only one transfer fee per day. Also, if consumers link overdrafts to credit cards, then they may be subject to finance charges in addition to a transfer fee. [B] The consumer may be subject to finance charges in addition to a transfer fee. [C] If an electronic transaction is denied at the point of sale because of insufficient funds, the consumer typically is not charged an insufficient funds fee because the transaction is not completed. For payments involving checks, merchants may also charge a returned check fee in addition to what is charged by the bank. [End of figure] In addition to fees associated with insufficient funds transactions, institutions may charge a number of other fees for checking and savings account services and transactions. As shown in table 1, these fees include periodic service charges associated with these accounts and special service fees assessed on a per-transaction basis. Table 1: Selected Periodic and Special Service Fees Associated with a Checking or Savings Account: Fee: Account maintenance; Applicability: Assessed typically on a monthly basis for maintaining a checking or savings account. Depository institutions frequently waive routine service fees for customers who maintain a monthly minimum balance or meet other requirements, such as for direct deposits of paychecks. Fee: Electronic banking or bill payment services; Applicability: Assessed typically on a monthly basis for customers who opt for electronic banking or bill payment services. Fee: ATM surcharge; Applicability: Assessed by a depository institution for a nonaccount holder's use of its ATM. Fee: Foreign ATM; Applicability: Assessed on a transaction basis by a depository intuition for an account-holder's use of another depository institution's ATM. Fee: Returns of deposited items; Applicability: Assessed on a transaction basis by a depository institution when its account holder deposits a check that is then returned unpaid to the originating institution (for example, because of insufficient funds). Fee: Stop payment order; Applicability: Assessed by a depository institution for processing an account holder's order to withhold payment on a check already written. Source: GAO. [End of table] Some Fees on Checking and Savings Accounts Increased between 2000 and 2007, and Institutions' Reported Increasing Revenues from Fees: Our analysis of data from private vendors showed that a number of bank fees--notably charges for insufficient funds and overdraft transactions--have generally increased since 2000, while others have decreased.[Footnote 14] In general, banks and thrifts charged higher fees than credit unions for checking and savings account services, and larger institutions charged more than smaller institutions. During this same period, the portion of depository institutions revenues derived from noninterest sources--including, but not limited to, fees on savings and checking accounts--increased somewhat. Changes in both consumer behavior and practices of depository institutions are likely influencing trends in fees, but limited data exist to demonstrate the effect of specific factors. FDIC is currently conducting a special study of the overdraft programs that should provide important insights on how these programs operate, as well as information on characteristics of customers who pay overdraft bank fees. Since 2000, Checking and Savings Account Fees Have Increased for Some Transactions and Services and Declined for Others: Data we obtained from vendors--based on annual surveys of hundreds of banks, thrifts, and credit unions on selected banking fees indicated that some checking and savings account fee amounts generally increased between 2000 and 2007, while a few fell, notably monthly maintenance fees.[Footnote 15] For example, as shown in figure 2, average insufficient funds and overdraft fees have increased by about 11 percent, stop payment order fees by 17 percent, and return deposited item fees by 49 percent since 2000.[Footnote 16] Figure 2: Average Insufficient Funds, Overdraft, Return of Deposited Item, and Stop Payment Order Fees, All Institutions, 2000-2007: [See PDF for image] This figure is a multiple horizontal line graph. The vertical axis of the graph represents dollars, adjusted for inflation, from 0 to 25. The vertical axis of the graph represents tears from 2000 to 2007. Lines depict the following four types of fees: Insufficient funds; Overdraft; Stop payment order; Returns of deposited items. All fees show a slight increase from 2000 to 2007, with the following values approximated from the graph: Insufficient funds: 2000: approximately $22; 2007: approximately $24. Overdraft: 2000: approximately $21; 2007: approximately $23. Stop payment order: 2000: approximately $17; 2007: approximately $19. Returns of deposited items: 2000: approximately $9; 2007: approximately $11. Source: GAO analysis of Moebs Services data. [End of figure] Across all institutions, average insufficient funds and overdraft fees were the highest dollar amounts, on average, of the fees reported. For example, the average insufficient funds fee among the institutions surveyed by Moebs Services in 2006 was $24.02, while among the institutions surveyed by Informa Research Services it was $26.07. Data from Informa Research Services also indicated that since 2004 a small number of institutions (mainly large banks) have been applying tiered fees to certain transactions, such as overdrafts. For example, an institution may charge one amount for the first three overdrafts in a year (tier 1), a higher rate for overdrafts four to six of that year (tier 2), and an even higher rate for overdrafts seven and beyond in a single year (tier 3). Of the institutions that applied tiered fees in 2006, the average overdraft fees were $26.74, $32.53, and $34.74 for tiers 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The data from these vendors also indicate that fee amounts for some transactions or services varied or generally declined during this period. For example: * The average ATM surcharge fee (assessed by a depository institution when its ATM is used by a nonaccount holder) among institutions surveyed by Moebs Services was $0.95 in 2000, rising to $1.41 in 2003, and declining to $1.34 in 2006. This variability was also evident in the fees charged by institutions surveyed by Informa Research Services. * The average foreign ATM fee (assessed by a depository institution when its account holders use another institution's ATM) generally declined, from $0.92 in 2000 to $0.61 in 2006 among institutions surveyed by Moebs Services and from $1.83 to $1.14 over the same period among institutions surveyed by Informa Research Services. * The average monthly maintenance fees on standard noninterest bearing checking accounts decreased from $6.81 in 2000 to $5.41 in 2006 among institutions surveyed by Informa Research Services (Moebs Services did not provide data on this fee). Additionally, an increasing number of the surveyed institutions offered free checking accounts (with a minimum balance required to open the account) over this period. For example, in 2001 almost 30 percent of the institutions offered free checking accounts, while in 2006 the number grew to about 60 percent of institutions. Finally, some fees declined in amount, as well as in terms of their prevalence. For example, Moebs Services reported that the institutions it surveyed charged annual ATM fees, generally for issuing a card to customers for their use strictly at ATMs, ranging from an average of $1.37 in 2000 to $1.14 in 2003. However, Moebs Services stopped collecting data on this fee because, according to a Moeb's official, fewer and fewer institutions reported charging the fee. Similarly, Moebs Services reported that the institutions it surveyed charged an annual debit card fee, generally for issuing a card to customers for their use at ATMs, averaging from $0.94 in 2000 to $1.00 in 2003; but, it stopped collecting this data as well. (Informa Research Services reported data on these fees through 2006, when they averaged $0.44 and $0.74, respectively.) Appendix III contains further details on the data reported by Moebs Services and Informa Research Services, in both nominal and real dollars. A number of factors may explain why some fees increased while others decreased. For example, greater use of automation and lower cost of technology may explain why certain ATM fees have decreased or been eliminated altogether. Additionally, competition among depository institutions for customers likely has contributed to the decrease in monthly maintenance fees and the increased prevalence of "free checking" accounts. Factors that may be influencing trends in fees overall are discussed subsequently in this report. Fees Generally Varied by Type and Size of Institution: Using data supplied by the two vendors, we compared the fees for checking and savings accounts by type of institution and found that, on average, banks and thrifts charged more than credit unions for almost all of them (the exception was the fee for returns of deposited items).[Footnote 17] For example, banks and thrifts charged on average roughly three dollars more than credit unions for insufficient funds and overdraft fees throughout the period. However, on average credit unions charged almost $6.00 more than banks and thrifts on returns of deposited items. The amounts institutions charged for certain transactions also varied by the institution's size, as measured by assets. Large institutions-- those with more than $1 billion in assets--on average charged more for the majority of fees than midsized or small institutions--those with assets of $100 million to $1 billion and less than $100 million, respectively. Large institutions on average charged between $4.00 and $5.00 more for insufficient funds and overdraft fees than smaller institutions. Further, on average, large banks and thrifts consistently charged the highest insufficient funds and overdraft fees, while small credit unions consistently charged the lowest. Specifically, in 2007 large banks and thrifts charged an average fee of about $28.00 for insufficient funds and overdraft fees, while small credit unions charged an average fee of around $22.00. While large institutions in general had higher fees than other sized institutions, smaller institutions charged considerably more for returns of deposited items. The results of our analysis are consistent with the Federal Reserve's 2003 report on bank fees, which showed that large institutions charged more than medium-and small-sized institutions (banks and thrifts combined) for most fees.[Footnote 18] Our analysis of Informa Research Services data also showed that, controlling for both institution type and size, institutions in some regions of the country, on average, charged more for some fees, such as insufficient funds and overdraft fees, than others. For example, in 2006 the average overdraft fee in the southern region was $28.18, compared with a national average of $26.74 and a western region average of $24.94. Financial Institutions' Income from Noninterest Sources, Including Fees, Has Increased since 2000: Between 2000 and 2006, the portion of depository institutions' income from noninterest sources, including income generated from bank fees, varied but generally increased. As shown in figure 3, banks' and thrifts' noninterest income rose from 24 to 27 percent of total income between 2000 and 2006 (peaking at 33 percent in 2004) and credit unions' noninterest income rose from 11 to 14 percent (peaking at 20 percent in 2004). The percent of noninterest income appeared to have an inverse relationship to changes in the federal funds rate--the interest rate at which depository institutions lend balances at the Federal Reserve to other depository institutions--which is an indicator of interest rate changes during the period. Low interest rates combined with increased competition from other lenders can make it difficult for banking institutions to generate revenues from interest rate "spreads," or differences between the interest rates that can be charged for loans and the rates paid to depositors and other sources of funds. Figure 3: Banks', Thrifts', and Credit Unions' Interest Income and Noninterest Income as a Percentage of Total Income and the Federal Funds Rate, 2000-2006: [See PDF for image] This figure contains two graphs (Banks and thrifts and Credit Unions) that are a combination of line and stacked bar data. Both graphs are formatted as follows: The left vertical axis represents percentage of interest and noninteres income from 0 to 100. The right vertical axis represents Federal fund rate from 0 to 8. The horizontal axis represents calendar years from 2000 to 2006. In each graph, a stacked bar depicts interest income and noninterest income. A line depicts annual federal funds rate. In general, as the annual federal rate drops, interest income drops slightly and noninterest income rises slightly, and as the federal rate rises, interest income rises slightly, and noninterest income drops slightly. Source: GAO analysis of FDIC's Statistics on Depository Institutions, NCUA's Financial Performance Report data, and the Federal Reserve's federal funds rate data. [End of figure] However, noninterest income includes revenue derived from a number of fee-based banking services, not all of them associated with checking and savings accounts. For example, fees from credit cards, as well as fees from mutual funds sales commissions, are included in noninterest income. Thus, noninterest income cannot be used to specifically identify either the extent of fee revenue being generated, or the portion that is attributable to any specific fee. Among other financial information, banks and thrifts are required to report data on service charges on deposit accounts (SCDA), which includes most of the fees associated with checking and deposit accounts.[Footnote 19] Specifically, SCDA includes, among other things, account maintenance fees, charges for failing to maintain a minimum balance, some ATM fees, insufficient funds fees, and charges for stop payment orders. As figure 4 shows, banks' and thrifts' SCDA, and to a somewhat greater extent credit union's fee income as a percentage of total income, increased overall during the period, with a slight decline in recent years. However, it should be noted that credit union fee income includes income generated from both deposit accounts and other products that credit unions offer, such as fees for credit cards and noncustomer use of proprietary ATMs; thus, the percentage of fee income they report is not directly comparable to the service charges reported by banks and thrifts.[Footnote 20] Figure 4: Banks' and Thrifts' SCDA and Credit Unions' Fee Income as a Percentage of Total Income, 2000-2006: [See PDF for image] This figure contains two line graphs: one for banks and thrifts; one for credit unions. Both graphs have a vertical axis that represents percentage of total income from 0 to 16, and a horizontal axis that represents years from 2000 to 2006. Depicted on the graphs are the following approximated fee incomes: Commercial banks: Fee income is approximated at between 4% and 6% for the entire time period. Thrifts: Fee income is approximated at between 0.5% and 1% for the entire time period. Credit unions: Fee income is approximated at between 8% and 14% for the entire time period. Source: GAO analysis of FDIC's Statistics on Depository Institutions and NCUA's Financial Performance Report data. [End of figure] Because institutions do not have to report SCDA by line item, it is difficult to estimate the extent to which specific fees on checking and deposit accounts contributed to institutions' revenues or how these contributions have changed over the years. Further, some fees that banking customers incur may not be covered by SCDA. For example, institutions report monthly account maintenance fee income as SCDA, but not income earned from fees charged to a noncustomer, such as fees for the use of its proprietary ATMs. Similarly, credit unions' reported fee income cannot be used to identify fee revenues from specific checking and savings account fees. Changes in Consumer Behavior and Depository Institution Practices May Affect Trends in Bank Fees: Since the mid-1990s, consumers have increasingly used electronic forms of payment such as debit cards for many transactions, from retail purchases to bill payment. By 2006 more than two-thirds of all U.S. noncash payments were made by electronic payments (including credit cards, debit cards, automated clearing house, and electronic benefit transfers), while the number of paper payments (e.g., checks) has decreased due to the rapid growth in the use of debit cards.[Footnote 21] Generally, these electronic payments are processed more quickly than traditional paper checks. For example, debit card transactions result in funds leaving customer's checking accounts during or shortly after the transaction, as opposed to checks, which may not be debited from a customer's account for a few days (although depository institutions have also begun to process checks faster, in part, as a result of the Check Clearing for the 21ST Century Act (Check 21 Act) and implementing regulations, which became effective in late 2004).[Footnote 22] Despite this overall shortening of time or "float" between the payment transaction and the debiting of funds from a consumer's account, depository institutions can hold certain nonlocal checks deposited by a consumer for up to 11 days.[Footnote 23] According to consumer groups and bank representatives, this creates the potential for increased incidences of overdrafts if funds are debited from a consumers account faster than deposits are made available for withdrawal. The shift in consumer payment preferences has occurred rather quickly, and we identified little research on the extent to which the increased use of electronic payments, such as debit cards, has affected the prevalence of specific deposit account fees, such as overdraft or insufficient fund fees.[Footnote 24] Additionally, some institutions have internal policies for posting deposits to and withdrawals from customer accounts that can affect the incidence of fees. For example, consumer group representatives, bank representatives, and federal regulatory officials told us that many institutions process the largest (highest dollar amount) debit transaction before the smallest one regardless of the order in which the customers initiated the transactions. This practice can affect the number of overdraft fees charged to a customer. For example, if a customer had only $600 available in their account, processing a payment for $590 first before three transactions of $25 each would result in three instances of overdrafts, whereas reversing the order of processing payments from smallest to largest would result in one instance of overdraft. Banking officials said that this processing of largest to smallest transactions first ensures that consumers' larger, and presumably more important payments, such as mortgage payments, are made. One of the federal banking regulators--OTS--issued guidance in 2005 stating that institutions it regulates should not manipulate transaction clearing steps (including check clearing and batch debit processing) to inflate fees. We were unable to identify comprehensive information regarding the extent to which institutions were using this or other methods (chronological, smallest-to-largest, etc.) of processing payments. Further, some depository institutions have automated the process used to approve overdrafts and have increasingly marketed the availability of overdraft protection programs to their customers. Historically, depository institutions have used their discretion to pay overdrafts for consumers, usually imposing a fee. Over the years, to reduce the costs of reviewing individual items, some institutions have established policies and automated the process for deciding whether to honor overdrafts, but generally institutions are not required to inform customers about internal policies for determining whether an item will be honored or denied. In addition, third-party vendors have developed and sold automated programs to institutions, particularly to smaller institutions, to handle overdrafts. According to the Federal Reserve, what distinguishes the vendor programs from in-house automated processes is the addition of marketing plans that appear designed to (1) promote the generation of fee income by disclosing to account holders the dollar amount that the consumer typically will be allowed to overdraw their account and (2) encourage consumers to use the service to meet short-term borrowing needs.[Footnote 25] An FDIC official noted that some vendor contracts tied the vendor's compensation to an increase in the depository institution's fee revenues. We were unable to identify information on the extent to which institutions were using automated overdraft programs developed and sold by third-party vendors or the criteria that these programs used. Representatives from a few large depository institutions told us that they are using software programs developed in-house to determine which account holders would have overdrafts approved. According to consumer groups and federal banking regulators, software vendors appear to be primarily marketing automated overdraft programs to small and midsized institutions. The 2005 interagency guidance on overdraft protection programs encouraged depository institutions to disclose to consumers how transactions would be processed and how fees would be assessed. An FDIC official noted that, while no empirical data are available, institutions' advertising of overdraft protection programs appears to have diminished since publication of the interagency guidance. No Public Data Currently Exist on Characteristics of Consumers That Incur Bank Fees, but FDIC May be Able to Provide Some Information in the Future: Because fees for overdrafts and instances of insufficient funds may be more likely to occur in accounts with lower balances, there is some concern that they may be more likely among consumers who traditionally have the least financial means, such as young adults and low-and moderate-income households. We were not able to analyze the demographic characteristics of customers that incur bank fees because doing so would require transaction-level data for all account holders--data that are not publicly available. We identified only two studies--one by an academic researcher and one by a consumer group--that discussed the characteristics of consumers who pay bank fees. Neither study obtained a sample of customers who overdraw that was representative of the U.S. population. According to the academic researcher's study, which used transaction level account data for one small Midwest bank, overdrafts were not significantly correlated with consumers' income levels, although younger consumers were more likely to have overdrafts than consumers of other ages.[Footnote 26] However, the results of this study cannot be generalized to the larger population because the small institution used was not statistically representative of all depository institutions. The consumer group study, which relied on a survey in which individuals with bank accounts were interviewed, found that those bank customers who had had two or more overdrafts in the 6 months before the date of the interview were more often low income, single, and nonwhite.[Footnote 27] However, this study also had limitations, including the inherent difficulty in contacting and obtaining cooperation from a representative sample of U.S. households with a telephone survey and because it relied on consumers' recall of and willingness to accurately report past events rather than on actual reviews of their transactions. While we cannot fully assess the quality of results from these two studies, we note them here to illustrate the lack of definitive research in this area. Partly in response to consumer concerns raised by overdraft protection products, FDIC is currently conducting a two-part study on overdraft protection products offered by the institutions it supervises. The results of this study may provide information on the types of consumers who pay bank fees. For both parts, FDIC is collecting data that are not currently available in the call reports or other standard regulatory reports. During the first phase of its study, FDIC collected data from 500 state-chartered nonmember banks about their overdraft products and policies. Data from the first phase will reveal how many FDIC-regulated banks offer overdraft protection programs and the details of these programs, such as how many of them are automated. FDIC expects to complete the data collection effort at the end of 2007. The second phase involves collecting transaction-level data on the depositors who use the overdraft products for 100 of the 500 institutions for a year. As part of this phase, FDIC plans to use income information by U.S. Census Bureau tract data as a proxy for account holder's income to try and determine the characteristics of consumers who incur overdraft fees. FDIC expects to complete the analysis at the end of 2008. Regulators Focus on Depository Institutions' Compliance with Federal Disclosure Requirements: Federal regulators assess depository institution's compliance with the disclosure requirements of Regulations DD and E during examinations by reviewing an institution's written policies and procedures, including a sample of disclosure documents. In general, regulators do not review the reasonableness of such fees unless there are safety and soundness concerns. Since 2005, NCUA has included examination procedures specifically addressing institutions' adherence to the 2005 interagency guidance concerning overdraft protection products and, in September 2007, all of the regulators revised their Regulation DD examination procedures to include reviews of the disclosures associated with such products offered by institutions that advertise them. In general, examinations are risk-based--that is, targeted to address factors that pose risks to the institution--and to help focus their examinations of individual institutions, the regulators review consumer complaints. Our analysis of complaint data from each of the federal regulators showed that while they receive a large number of checking account complaints, a small percentage of these complaints concerned the fees and disclosures associated with either checking or savings accounts. The federal regulators reported identifying a number of violations of the disclosure sections of Regulations DD and E during their examinations but collectively identified only two related formal enforcement actions from 2002 through 2006. Finally, officials from the six state regulators told us that, while they may look at compliance with Regulations DD and E, their primary focus is on safety and soundness issues and compliance with state laws and regulations, and they reported receiving few consumer complaints associated with checking and savings account fees and disclosure issues. Federal Regulators Primarily Review Policies, Procedures, and Disclosure Documents: Our review of the examination handbooks and examination reports indicated that the five federal regulators used similar procedures to assess compliance with Regulations DD and E (as discussed below, NCUA also includes steps to assess credit unions' adherence to the 2005 interagency guidance on overdraft protection products, but that is distinct from assessing compliance with regulatory requirements). [Footnote 28] In general, the Regulation DD and E compliance examination procedures for each of the five federal banking regulators called for examiners to: * verify that the institution had policies or procedures in place to ensure compliance with all provisions of the regulations; * review a sample of account disclosure documents and notices required by the regulation to determine whether contents were accurate and complete; and: * review a sample of the institution's advertisements to (1) determine if the advertisements were misleading, inaccurate, or misrepresented the deposit contract and (2) ensure that the advertisements included all required disclosures. Federal regulators' examination procedures for Regulations DD and E do not require examiners to evaluate the reasonableness of fees associated with checking and savings accounts. According to the Federal Reserve, the statutes administered by the regulators do not specifically address the reasonableness of fees assessed. Additionally, officials of the federal regulators explained that there were no objective industry-wide standards to assess the "reasonableness" of fees.[Footnote 29] OCC officials told us that an industry-wide standard would not work because, among other things, fees vary among banks that operate in different geographical areas and that competitive conditions in local markets determine fees. According to the federal regulatory officials, each depository institution is responsible for setting the fee for a particular product and service, and regulators look at rates or pricing issues only if there is a safety and soundness concern. For example, NCUA officials told us that an examiner's finding that fee income was excessive could create safety and soundness issues, depending on the way the fees were generated and how the resulting revenues were spent. The regulators stated that while they did not evaluate the reasonableness of fees, the disclosure requirements of Regulations DD and E were intended to provide consumers with information that allow them to compare fees across institutions. Additionally, they told us that market forces should inhibit excessive fees since the financial institution would likely lose business if it decided to charge a fee that was significantly higher than its competitors. Recent Revisions to Regulation DD Examination Procedures Require Further Review of Disclosures for Institutions Advertising Overdraft Protections: On September 13, 2007, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council's Task Force on Consumer Compliance--a formal interagency body composed of representatives of the Federal Reserve, FDIC, NCUA, OCC, and OTS--approved revised interagency compliance examination procedures for Regulation DD. Officials of each of the federal regulators told us that their agencies either had begun or were in the process of implementing the updated examination procedures. Among other changes, the revised examination procedures address the Regulation DD disclosure requirements for institutions that advertise the payment of overdrafts. Specifically, the revised examination procedures ask the examiners to determine whether the institution clearly and conspicuously discloses in its advertisements (1) the fee for the payment of each overdraft, (2) the categories of transactions for which a fee may be imposed for paying an overdraft, (3) the time period by which a consumer must repay or cover any overdraft, and (4) the circumstances under which the institution will not pay an overdraft. These items are among those that were identified as "best practices" by the 2005 interagency guidance. According to the guidance, clear disclosures and explanations to consumers about the operation, costs, and limitations of an overdraft protection program are fundamental to using such protection responsibly. Furthermore, the guidance states that clear disclosures and appropriate management oversight can minimize potential customer confusion and complaints, as well as foster good customer relations. The interagency guidance identifies best practices currently observed in or recommended by the industry on marketing, communications with consumers, and program features and operations. For example, the best practices include marketing the program in a way that does not encourage routine overdrafts, clearly explaining the discretionary nature of the program, and providing the opportunity for consumers to opt out of the program. Prior to the revised Regulation DD examination procedures, NCUA had adopted procedures to assess the extent to which institutions it examines followed the interagency guidance. In December 2005, NCUA adopted "bounce protection" (that is, overdraft protection) examination procedures as part of the agency's risk-focused examination program. The examination procedures were developed to coincide with the issuance of the 2005 interagency guidance on overdraft protection programs, according to an NCUA official.[Footnote 30] In an NCUA letter to credit unions, the agency stated that "credit unions should be aware the best practices are minimum expectations for the operation of bounce protection programs."[Footnote 31] NCUA's examination procedures included a review of several key best practices. For example, the examination procedures assess whether credit unions provided customers with the opportunity to elect overdraft protection services or, if enrollment in such a program was automatic, to opt out. In addition to other areas of review, the examination procedures include a review of whether the credit union distinguished overdraft protection from "free" account features, and if the credit union clearly disclosed the fees of its overdraft protection program. To a more limited extent, OTS had overdraft protection examination procedures in place that address its guidance, but these were limited to a review of compliance-related employee training and the materials used to market or educate customers about the institution's overdraft protection programs. Officials from the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC reported that, beyond the recent revisions to Regulation DD examination procedures, their agencies did not have specific examination procedures related to the 2005 interagency guidance because the best practices are not enforceable by law. These officials told us that, while not following a best practice from the interagency guidance did not constitute a violation of related laws or regulations, they encourage institutions to follow the best practices. An FDIC official noted that a deviation from the guidance could serve as a "red flag" for an examiner to look more closely for potential violations. While Federal Regulators Received a Large Number of Checking Account Complaints, a Small Percentage Were Related to Fees and Disclosures: Officials of the federal banking regulators explained that examiners use complaint data to help focus examinations that they are planning or to alter examinations already in progress. For example, according to one regulator, if consumers file complaints because they have not received a disclosure document prior to opening an account, this could signify a violation of Regulation DD, which the examiners would review as part of the examination for this regulation. The officials noted that consumer complaints could be filed and were often resolved at the financial institution involved, in which case the consumer would not be likely to contact a federal banking regulator.[Footnote 32] However, if the consumer is not satisfied with the financial institution's response, a consumer would then likely file a complaint with the federal banking regulator. Consumers may also file a complaint directly with federal regulators without contacting the financial institution about a problem. In either case, regulators are required to monitor the situation until the complaint is resolved.[Footnote 33] According to the regulators' complaint data, most of the complaints received from 2002 to 2006 involved credit cards, although a significant number of complaints were related to checking accounts and a somewhat smaller number involved savings accounts (fig. 5). In analyzing complaints specifically about checking and savings accounts from 2002 through 2006, we found that, on average, about 10 percent were related to fees, and 3 percent were related to disclosures. (For information on how the Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, and OTS resolved complaints, see app. IV.) Collectively fee and disclosure complaints represented less than 5 percent of all complaints received during this period. Officials of the banking regulators told us that the overwhelming bulk of complaints they received on checking and saving accounts concerned a variety of other issues, including problems opening or closing an account, false advertising, and discrimination. Figure 5: Complaints Related to Four Major Products for All Federal Regulators: [See PDF for image] This figure is a multiple line graph depicting complaints related to four major products for all federal regulators. The vertical axis of the graph represents number of complaints in thousands from 0 to 35. The horizontal axis of the graph represents years from 2002 to 2006. Lines depicting the number of complaints are illustrated for the following categories: Credit card complaints; Checking account complaints; Mortgage complaints; Savings account complaints; Total complaints. Source: GAO analysis of OCC, OTS, NCUA, and Federal Reserve data. Note: For the combined period of 2002 to 2006, over 70 percent of the complaints were filed against national banks, which are supervised by OCC. [End of figure] Among the regulators, OCC included in its complaint data the specific part of the regulation that was the subject of the complaint. Of the consumer complaints about fees that OCC received from 2002 through 2006, 39 percent were for "unfair" fees (concerning the conditions under which fees were applied), 2 percent were for new fees, 6 percent were for "high" fees (the amount of the fees), and 53 percent concerned fees in general. The majority of disclosure-related complaints that OCC received during this period were for the Regulation DD provision that, in part, requires that depository institutions provide account disclosures to a consumer before an account is opened or a service is provided, whichever is earlier, or upon request. OCC's analysis of these complaints serves to identify potential problems--at a particular bank or in a particular segment of the industry--that may warrant further investigation by examination teams, supervisory guidance to address emerging problems, or enforcement action. Federal Regulators Identified a Number of Violations of Fee-Related Disclosure Provisions during Their Examinations but Took Few Related Enforcement Actions: The federal banking regulators' examination data for the most recent 5 calendar years (2002 through 2006) showed a total of 1,674 instances in which the regulators cited depository institutions for noncompliance with the fee-related disclosure requirements of Regulations DD (1,206 cases) or E (468 cases). On average, this is about 335 instances annually among the nearly 17,000 depository institutions that these regulators oversee. As shown in table 2, most of the disclosure-related violations were reported by FDIC--83 percent of the Regulation DD disclosure-related violations (998 of 1,206) and 74 percent of the Regulation E disclosure-related violations (348 of 468). According to FDIC officials, one reason for the larger number of fee-related violations identified by FDIC is the large number of institutions for which it is the primary federal regulator (5,220 depository institutions as of December 31, 2006). Also, differences among the regulators may appear due to the fact that they do not count the numbers of violations in exactly the same way. Table 2: Number of Regulation DD and E Disclosure-Related Violations Identified by Federal Banking Regulators from 2002-2006: Regulator: FDIC; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 998; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 348; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 9,876; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 5,220. Regulator: Federal Reserve; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 67; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 99; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 1,526; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 902. Regulator: NCUA; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 102; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 10; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 35,757[B]; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 8,362. Regulator: OCC; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 26; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 8; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 6,566; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 1,715. Regulator: OTS; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 11; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 3; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 3,203; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 761. Regulator: Total; Number of Regulation DD disclosure-related violations: 1,206; Number of Regulation E disclosure-related violations: 468; Number of compliance examinations between 2000-2006[A]: 43,282; Number of institutions regulated in 2006: 16,960. Sources: GAO analysis of FDIC, Federal Reserve, NCUA, OCC, and OTS data. Note: The fee-related disclosure violations represent cited instances of noncompliance with sections 230.3(a), 230.3(b), 230.4(a) and 230.4(b)(4) of Regulation DD and sections 205.4(a)(1), 205.7(a), and 205.7(b)(5) of Regulation E. [A] Examinations are risk focused, and not all examinations assess compliance with Regulations DD and E. [B] This number represents the number of federally chartered and state- chartered institutions examined. [End of table] According to our analysis of the regulators' data, the most frequent violation associated with the initial disclosure requirements of Regulation DD was noncompliance with the requirement that disclosure documents be written in a clear and conspicuous manner, in a form that customers can keep, and reflect the terms of the legal obligation of the account agreement between the consumer and the depository institution (1,053 cases). Examiners reported violations of two other disclosure provisions of Regulation DD. First, they found violations of the requirement that depository institutions provide account disclosure documents to a consumer before an account is opened or a service is provided, whichever is earlier, or upon request (124 cases). Second, they reported violations of the requirement that disclosure documents state the amount of any fee that may be imposed in connection with the account or an explanation of how the fee will be determined and the conditions under which it may be imposed (29 cases). The most frequent violation associated with the initial disclosure requirements of Regulation E was of the requirement that financial institutions make the disclosure documents available at the time a consumer contracts for an EFT or before the first EFT is made involving the consumer's account (321 cases). Other disclosure provisions from Regulation E for which examiners cited violations included those that required disclosure statements to be in writing, clear and readily understandable, and in a form that customers can keep (5 cases) and to list any fees imposed by the financial institution for EFTs or for the right to make transfers (142 cases). According to officials of the federal banking regulators, examiners are typically successful in getting the financial institutions to take corrective action on violations either during the course of the examination or shortly thereafter, negating the need to take formal enforcement action. FDIC, NCUA, OCC, and Federal Reserve officials reported that from 2002 to 2006 they had not taken any formal enforcement actions solely related to violations of the disclosure requirements from Regulations DD and E, while OTS reported taking two such actions during the period.[Footnote 34] State Regulators Relied on and Worked with Federal Regulators to Review Regulations DD and E and Reported Few Consumer Complaints about Fees and Disclosures: Officials of all six of the state banking regulators that we contacted told us that the primary focus of their examinations is on safety and soundness issues and compliance with state laws and regulations. Officials of four of the six state banking regulators we contacted told us their examiners also assess compliance with Regulation DD, and three of these four indicated that they assess compliance with Regulation E as well. Representatives of the four state banking regulators also told us that if they identify a violation and no federal regulator is present, they cite the institution and forward this information to the appropriate federal banking regulator. The other two state banking regulators said that they review compliance with federal regulations, including Regulations DD and E, only if the federal banking regulators have identified noncompliance with federal regulations during the prior examination. Officials in four states said that their state laws and regulations contained additional fee and disclosure requirements beyond those contained in Regulations DD and E. For example, according to Massachusetts state banking officials, Massachusetts bank examiners review state-chartered institutions for compliance with a state requirement that caps the fees on returns of deposited items. In another example, an Illinois law restricts institutions from charging an ATM fee on debit transactions made with an electronic benefits card (a card that beneficiaries used to access federal or state benefits, such as food stamp payments), according to Illinois state banking officials. Additionally, these state officials told us that Illinois state law requires all state-chartered institutions to annually disclose their fee schedules for consumer deposit accounts. According to an official at the New York state banking department, their state has a number of statutes and regulations concerning bank fees and their disclosure to consumers and their state examiners review institutions' compliance with these requirements. The laws and regulations cover, among other things, permissible fees, required disclosure documents, and maximum insufficient fund fees, according to the New York state officials. Two of the states reported that, in conducting examinations jointly with the federal regulators, they had found violations of the Regulation DD and E disclosure provisions from 2002 to 2006 (one state reported 1 violation of Regulation DD, and one state reported 16 violations of Regulation DD and 10 violations of Regulation E). Four of the states did not report any violations (in one case, the state agency reported that they did not collect data on violations). Three states also reported that they had not taken any formal enforcement actions against institutions for violations of Regulation DD or E disclosure provisions; two states reported that they did not collect data on enforcement actions for violations of these regulations; one state did not report any data to us on enforcement actions. Regarding consumer complaints, officials in two states said that they did not maintain complaint data concerning fees and disclosures associated with checking and savings accounts, and the other four states reported relatively few complaints associated with fees and disclosures. For example, Massachusetts reported a total of 89 complaints related to fees and disclosures during the period, in comparison to 4,022 total complaints over the period. Despite Federal Regulations and Compliance Examinations, We Experienced Difficulty Obtaining Fee Information: The results of our requests for information on fees or account terms and conditions at depository institutions we visited, as well as our visits to institutions' Web sites, suggest that consumers may find it difficult to obtain such information upon request prior to opening a checking or savings account. A number of factors could explain the difficulties we encountered in obtaining comprehensive information on fees and account terms and conditions, including branch staff potentially not being knowledgeable about federal disclosure requirements or their institution's available disclosure documents. Further, federal banking regulators' examination processes do not assess whether potential customers can easily obtain information that institutions are required to disclose. Potential customers unable to obtain such information upon request prior to opening an account will not be in a position to make meaningful comparisons among institutions, including the amounts of fees they may face or the conditions under which fees would be charged. Federal Laws and Regulations Require Disclosures so That Consumers Can Make Meaningful Comparisons among Institutions: As we have seen, TISA requires, among other things, that depository institutions provide consumers with clear and uniform disclosures of the fees that can be assessed against all deposit accounts, including checking and savings accounts, so that consumers may make a meaningful comparison between different institutions. Depository institutions must provide these disclosures to consumers before they open accounts or receive a service from the institution or upon a consumer's request. Regulation DD and the accompanying staff commentary specify the types of information that should be contained in these disclosures, including: * minimum balance required to open an account; * monthly maintenance fees and the balance required to avoid them; * fees charged when a consumer opens or closes an account; * fees related to deposits or withdrawals, such as charges for using the institution's ATMs; and: * fees for special services--for example, insufficient funds or charges for overdrafts and stop payment order fees on checks that have been written but not cashed. Regulation DD also requires depository institutions to disclose generally the conditions under which a fee may be imposed--that is, account terms and conditions. For example, institutions must specify the categories of transactions for which an overdraft fee may be imposed but do not have to provide an exhaustive list of such transactions. While depository institutions are required to provide consumers with clear and uniform disclosures of fees to enable meaningful comparisons among institutions, consumers may consider other factors when shopping among institutions. For example, federal banking regulators and one consumer group told us that convenience factors, such as locations of branches or ATMs, are typically the factors that consumers consider the most besides costs, when choosing where to open a checking and savings account. We Encountered Difficulties in Obtaining a Comprehensive List of Fees or Terms and Conditions during Our Visits to Depository Institution Branches and Web Sites: Our visits to branches of depository institutions nationwide suggested that some consumers may be unable to obtain, upon request, meaningful information with which to compare an institution's fees and how they are assessed before opening a checking or savings account. We also found that the institutions' Web sites generally did not provide comprehensive information on fees or account terms and conditions. Further, the documents that we did obtain during our visits did not always describe some key features of the institutions' internal policies and procedures that could affect the incidence or amount of overdraft fees assessed by the institution. Information Was Not Always Available during Visits to Depository Institution Branches: To assess the ease or difficulty in obtaining a comprehensive list of fees and account terms and conditions associated with checking and savings accounts, GAO staff from 12 cities across the United States visited 185 branches of banks, thrifts, and credit unions.[Footnote 35] Collectively, these branches represented 154 different depository institutions. Posing as potential customers, we specifically requested a comprehensive list of fees and terms and conditions for checking and savings accounts that would allow us to compare such information across depository institutions.[Footnote 36] The results are summarized here. * Comprehensive list of fees. We were unable to obtain a comprehensive list of fees for checking and savings accounts from 40 (22 percent) of the branches (representing 36 institutions). Instead, we obtained brochures describing only the features of different types of checking and savings accounts. Some of these brochures contained information on monthly maintenance fees and the minimum balance needed to avoid them. But these brochures did not contain information on other fees, such as overdraft or insufficient fund fees. While our success in obtaining a comprehensive list of fees varied slightly among institutions of different sizes, we did note greater variations among banks, credit unions, and thrifts. For example, we were unable to obtain a comprehensive list of fees at 18 percent of the 103 bank branches and 20 percent of the 46 credit union branches we visited (representing 14 banks and 9 credit unions, respectively), while among the 36 thrift branches visited (representing 13 thrift institutions) it was 36 percent.[Footnote 37] * Account terms and conditions. We were unable to obtain the terms and conditions associated with checking and savings accounts from 61 of the 185 branches (representing 54 depository institutions) that we visited (33 percent). Instead, as described earlier, we were provided with brochures on the different types of checking and savings accounts offered by the institution. We also observed little differences in our ability to obtain account terms and conditions information from institutions of different sizes but again found differences by types of institutions. For example, we were unable to obtain this information at 32 percent of the small or midsized institutions (34 of 108), compared with 35 percent of the large institutions (27 of 77). With respect to the type of depository institution, we were unable to obtain these documents at 30 percent of the bank branches (31 of 103 branches, representing 25 banks), 35 percent of the credit union branches (16 of 46 branches, representing 16 credit unions), and 39 percent of the thrift branches (14 of 36 branches, representing 13 thrift institutions). For both the comprehensive list of fees and descriptions of account terms and conditions, we observed some differences among branches of a single depository institution. For example, we visited multiple branches of 23 depository institutions (that is, more than one branch of each of the 23). For four of these institutions, we were able to obtain all of the documents we requested from all of the branches. For the other 19 institutions, we encountered inconsistencies among the different branches in our ability to obtain the full set of information we requested. The results of our direct observations are generally consistent with those reported by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG). In 2001, PIRG had its staff pose as consumers and visit banks to request fee brochures and reported that, in many cases, its staff members were unable to obtain this information despite repeated requests.[Footnote 38] Further, our results seem to be in accord with the violations data provided by the regulators; as noted previously, the most frequent violation of the fee-related disclosure provisions of Regulation DD cited by the regulators between 2002 and 2006 was noncompliance with the requirement that disclosure documents be written in a clear and conspicuous manner and in a form that customers can keep. Information Was Not Available on Many Institutions' Web Sites: While depository institutions are not required to have the comprehensive list of fees and account terms and conditions on Web sites if these sites are merely advertising and do not allow consumers to open an account online, we visited these Web sites as part of our effort to simulate a consumer trying to obtain information to compare checking and savings accounts across institutions. In visiting the Web sites of all the institutions that we visited in person, we were unable to obtain information on fees and account terms and conditions at more than half of them. For example, we were unable to obtain a comprehensive list of fees from 103 of the 202 Web sites (51 percent). In addition, we were unable to obtain the terms and conditions from 134 of the 202 (66 percent). Figure 6 compares the results of our visits to branches and Web sites of depository institutions. Figure 6: Percentage of Depository Institution Branches and Web Sites We Visited That Did Not Provide a Comprehensive List of Fees and Terms and Conditions: [See PDF for image] This figure is a vertical bar graph depicting the following information: Comprehensive fee information, Institution Web site: 50%; Comprehensive fee information, Branch visit: 22%. Account terms and conditions, Institution Web site: 65%; Account terms and conditions, Branch visit: 33%. Source: GAO. [End of figure] Some of the depository institutions' Web sites nevertheless contained information on certain fees associated with checking and savings accounts. For example, most of the Web sites had information on monthly maintenance fees and ATM fees associated with checking accounts. Smaller percentages had information on fees for overdrafts and insufficient fund fees. For example, * 87 percent provided information on monthly maintenance fees, * 62 percent had information on ATM withdrawal fees, * 41 percent contained information on overdraft fees, and: * 37 percent provided information on insufficient fund fees. Several Factors Could Explain Why We Had Difficulty Obtaining Information Concerning Fees: Among branches at which we were unable to obtain a comprehensive list of fees, branch staff offered explanations suggesting that they may not be knowledgeable about federal disclosure requirements. As previously noted, depository institutions are required to provide consumers, upon request, with clear and uniform disclosures of the fees that can be assessed against checking and savings accounts so that consumers may make a meaningful comparison between different institutions. However, during our visits to branches of depository institutions, * representatives at 14 branches we visited told us that we had all the information on fees we needed to comparison shop--even though we determined that the documents they provided did not include a comprehensive list of fees that consumers opening accounts there might have to pay, * representatives at seven branches told us that no comprehensive fee schedules were available, and: * representatives at four branches told us that we had to provide personal information or open an account in order to obtain a comprehensive list of fees. In addition, we observed differences in our ability to obtain the comprehensive list of fees and account terms and conditions among branches of 19 of the 23 depository institutions we visited that had multiple branches. This variation among branches of the same institution suggests that staff knowledge of the institution's available disclosure documents may have varied. Further, the examination procedures that federal banking regulators use to assess compliance with Regulation DD do not require examiners to verify whether new or potential customers are actually able to obtain the required disclosure documents before opening an account. (Rather, the examination procedures call for the examiner to review written policies and procedures and disclosure documents to ensure that they contain information required under the regulation.) As a result, examination results would not provide officials of depository institutions with information showing whether potential customers were experiencing difficulty obtaining information at particular branches. Because the results of our visits cannot be generalized to other institutions, and because the federal banking regulators do not assess the extent to which consumers are actually able to obtain disclosure documents, neither we nor the regulators know how widespread this problem may be, nor--to the extent that it does exist among institutions--the reasons for it. However, regardless of the cause, if consumers are unable to obtain key information upon request prior to opening an account, they will be unable to make meaningful distinctions regarding charges and terms of checking and savings accounts. Conclusions: The amounts of some fees associated with checking and savings accounts have grown over the past few years, while others have varied or declined. During the same time period, the portion of depository institutions' incomes derived from noninterest sources, including fees, has varied somewhat but has risen overall. Changes in both consumer behavior, such as increased use of electronic forms of payment, and in the terms and conditions of accounts offered by depository institutions may be influencing these trends in fees, but available data do not permit determining their exact effects. Similarly, we could find little information on the characteristics of consumers who are most likely to incur fees. However, the general upward trend in fees puts a premium on the effective disclosure of account terms and conditions, including the amounts of individual fees and the conditions under which they will be assessed, to consumers who are shopping for savings and deposit accounts. While consumers may consider convenience or other factors, as well as costs, when choosing a depository institution, Regulation DD, as well as guidance issued by the federal banking regulators, is intended to ensure that consumers receive information needed to make meaningful comparisons among institutions regarding the savings and deposit accounts they offer. While the federal regulators take consumer complaints into account when determining the scope of their examinations of specific institutions, their examinations of compliance with Regulations DD and E consist of reviewing institutions' written policies, procedures, and disclosure documents. On this basis, the regulators have cited numbers of institutions for violating the disclosure requirements. Further, the regulators are in the process of implementing revised examination procedures for Regulation DD compliance that will include assessing the extent to which depository institutions follow requirements governing the advertisement of overdraft protection programs. This will be particularly important given that fees associated with overdrafts were among the highest of the types of fees for which we obtained data. However, even under the revised procedures, the regulators' examinations do not determine whether consumers actually receive required disclosure documents before opening an account. While the results of our visits to 185 branches of depository institutions cannot be generalized to all institutions, they raise some concern that consumers may find it difficult to obtain upon request, important disclosure documents prior to opening an account. We were unable to obtain detailed information about fees and account terms and conditions at over one-fifth of the branches we visited and, in many cases, we found inconsistencies among branches of the same depository institution. Because the federal banking regulators, in their compliance examinations, do not assess the extent to which consumers actually receive required disclosure documents before opening an account, they are not in a position to know how widespread this problem may be among the institutions they supervise, or the reasons for it. Incorporating into their oversight a means of assessing the extent to which consumers can actually obtain information to make meaningful comparisons among institutions, and taking any needed steps to assure the continued availability of such information, would further this goal of TISA. Recommendations for Executive Action: To help ensure that consumers can make meaningful comparisons between depository institutions--we recommend that the Chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; Chairman, National Credit Union Administration; Comptroller of the Currency, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency; and Director, Office of Thrift Supervision assess the extent to which consumers receive specific disclosure documents on fees and account terms and conditions associated with demand and deposit accounts prior to opening an account, and incorporate steps as needed into their oversight of institutions' compliance with TISA to assure that disclosures continue to be made available. Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: We requested and received written comments on a draft of this report from FDIC, the Federal Reserve, NCUA, OCC, and OTS that are presented in appendixes V through IX. We also received technical comments from FDIC and the Federal Reserve, which we have incorporated in this report as appropriate. In their written responses, all five banking regulators indicated agreement with our report and stated that they will be taking action in response to our recommendation. For example, OCC stated that it would incorporate steps, as needed, into its oversight of institutions' compliance with TISA to assure that disclosures continue to be made available. The Federal Reserve and NCUA specifically mentioned the need to revise, improve, or strengthen the current interagency Regulation DD examination procedures. All five agencies indicated that they plan to address this issue on an interagency basis. In addition, FDIC stated that it would provide further instructions to state nonmember banks about their ongoing responsibility to provide accurate disclosures to consumers upon request and would also provide further instructions to its examiners of the importance of this requirement; NCUA stated that it would send a letter to credit unions reiterating the disclosure requirements for fees and account terms; the Federal Reserve stated that it would expand its industry outreach activities to facilitate compliance and promote awareness of Regulation DD disclosure requirements. As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report to the Ranking Member, Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, Committee on Financial Services, House of Representatives, and other interested congressional committees and the heads of the Federal Reserve, FDIC, NCUA, OCC, and OTS. We also will make copies available to others upon request. In addition, this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please contact me at (202) 512-8678 or w [Hyperlink, woodd@gao.gov] oodd@gao.gov. Contact points for our Office of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions to this report are listed in appendix X. Sincerely yours, Signed by: David G. Wood: Director, Financial Markets and Community Investments: [End of section] Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: Our report objectives were to determine (1) the trends in the types and amounts of fees associated with checking and deposit accounts since 2000; (2) how federal and selected state banking regulators address checking and deposit account fees in their oversight of depository institutions; and (3) the extent to which consumers are able to obtain account terms and conditions and disclosures of fees, including information about specific transactions and bank practices that determine when such fees are assessed, upon request prior to opening an account. Available Data on the Types and Amounts of Bank Fees and Characteristics of Consumers Who Incur These Fees: To provide information on the average amounts of various checking and savings account fees, we purchased data from two market research firms that specialize in the financial services industry; Moebs Services and Informa Research Services. Moebs Services provided us with an electronic file that contained data from 2000 to 2007 on the following fees: * annual automated teller machine (ATM) fees, * ATM surcharges, * foreign ATM fees, * insufficient funds fees, * overdraft fees, * overdraft transfer fees from a line of credit, * overdraft transfer fees from a deposit account, * return deposited item fees, * stop payment order fees and: * debit card annual fees. Moebs Services collected its data through telephone surveys with financial service personnel at each sampled institution. In the surveys, callers used a "mystery shopping" approach and requested rates and fees while posing as potential customers. The surveys were completed in June for each of the years we requested (the 2006 survey was conducted in December), and we obtained data from the following number of institutions (table 3): Table 3: Number of Institutions Surveyed by Moebs Services, 2000-2007: Year: 2000: Institutions: 2,955; Year: 2001: Institutions: 3,937; Year: 2002: Institutions: 3,937; Year: 2003: Institutions: 4,396; Year: 2004: Institutions: 5,838; Year: 2005: Institutions: 5,261; Year: 2006: Institutions: 5,264; Year: 2007: Institutions: 5,492. Source: GAO analysis of Moebs Services data. Note: The number of institutions sampled each year varied because of adding core based statistical areas, expanding number of states surveyed, a decrease in overall institutions, and refining the accuracy and precision of the sample selection. [End of table] The statistical design of the survey was developed for Moebs Services by Professor George Easton of Emory University. The design consisted of a stratified random sample by (1) institution type (banks and thrifts combined, and credit unions), (2) institution size (as shown in table 4), and (3) regions of the country defined by metropolitan statistical area. Table 4: Definition of Institution Size Categories: Institution size: Small institutions; Asset size: Assets less than $100 million. Institution size: Midsized institutions; Asset size: Assets between $100 million to $1 billion. Institution size: Large institutions; Asset size: Assets more than $1 billion. Source: GAO analysis of Moebs Services data. [End of table] We took the data we obtained from Moebs Services and computed average fees for institutions overall, as well as for institutions by type, size, and region. We interviewed Moebs Services representatives to understand their methodology for collecting the data and ensuring its integrity. In addition, we conducted reasonableness checks on the data we received and identified any missing, erroneous, or outlying data. We also worked with Moebs Services representatives to ensure our analysis of their data was correct. Finally, for the years 2000 through 2002, we compared the average fee amounts we calculated with averages the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve) had calculated using Moebs Services data for their "Annual Report to the Congress on Retail Fees and Services of Depository Institutions." We found our averages to be comparable to those derived by the Federal Reserve and determined that the Moebs Service's data were reliable for the purposes of this report. Informa Research Services also provided us with an electronic file that included summary level fee data from 2000 to 2006. The data included information for the same fees that Moebs Services had provided, but, also included the following fees: * monthly fees for checking and savings account; * insufficient funds and overdraft tiered fees; * check enclosure and imaging fees; * foreign ATM balance inquiry fees; and: * foreign ATM denied transaction fees. In addition to fee data, Informa Research Services also provided us with data on the minimum balances required to open an account, the monthly balances needed to waive fees, and the maximum number of overdrafts or insufficient funds fees that an institution would charge per day. Informa Research Services collected its data by gathering the proprietary fee statements of the financial institutions, as well as making anonymous in-branch, telephone, and Web site inquiries for a variety of bank fees. Informa Research Services also receives the information directly from its contacts at the financial institutions. The data are not statistically representative of the entire population of depository institutions in the country because the company collects fee data for particular institutions in specific geographical markets so that these institutions can compare their fees against their competitors. That is, surveyed institutions are self-selected into the sample, or are selected at the request of subscribers. To the extent that institutions selected in this manner differ from those which are not, results of the survey would not accurately reflect the industry as a whole. Informa Research Services collects data on over 1,500 institutions, including a mix of banks, thrifts, credit unions, and Internet-only banks. The institutions from which it collects data tend to be large institutions that have a large percentage of the deposits in a particular market. Additionally, the company has access to individuals and information from the 100 largest commercial banks. Table 5 shows the mix of institutions for which Informa Research Services collected fee type data from 2000-2006. Table 5: Number of Institutions for Which Informa Research Services Collected Data, 2000-2006: Year: 2000: Institutions: 119; Year: 2001: Institutions: 308; Year: 2002: Institutions: 412; Year: 2003: Institutions: 947; Year: 2004: Institutions: 1,150; Year: 2005: Institutions: 1,418; Year: 2006: Institutions: 1,571. Source: GAO analysis of Informa Research Services data. [End of table] The summary level data Informa Research Services provided us for each data element included the average amount, the standard deviation, the minimum and maximum values, and the number of institutions for which data were available to calculate the averages. Informa Research Services also provided this summary level data by the same categories of institution type and size as the Moebs Services data. In addition, Informa Research Services provided us with data for nine specific geographic areas: California, Eastern United States, Florida, Michigan, Midwestern United States, New York, Southern United States, Texas, and Western United States. We interviewed Informa Research Services representatives to gain an understanding of their methodology for collecting the data and the processes they had in place to ensure the integrity of the data. We also conducted reasonableness checks on the data and identified any missing, erroneous, or outlying data and worked with Informa Research Services representatives to correct any mistakes we found. As we did with the Moebs Services data, we compared the average fee amounts Informa Research Services had calculated for selected fees for 2000, 2001, and 2002 with the Federal Reserve's "Annual Report to the Congress on Retail Fees and Services of Depository Institutions." We found the averages to be comparable to those derived by the Federal Reserve and determined that the Informa Research Services data were sufficiently reliable for this report. To evaluate bank fee trends, for both the Moebs Services and Informa Research Services data, we adjusted the numbers for inflation to remove the effect of changes in prices. The inflation adjusted estimates used a base year of 2006 and Consumer Price Index calendar year values as the deflator. To determine the extent to which bank fees are contributing to depository institutions' revenue, we obtained data from the quarterly financial information (call reports) filed by depository institutions and maintained by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). From this data, we analyzed interest income, noninterest income, and service charges on deposit accounts for commercial banks and thrifts from 2000 to 2006. We analyzed the data for all institutions, as well as by institution type (banks versus thrifts) and institution size (assets greater than $1 billion, assets between $100 million and $1 billion, and assets less than $100 million). Similarly, for credit unions, we reviewed the National Credit Union Administration's (NCUA) "Financial Performance Reports," which provided quarterly data for interest income, noninterest income, and fee income for all federally insured credit unions from 2000 to 2006. Based on past work, we have found the quarterly financial data maintained by FDIC and NCUA to be sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our reports. To determine the effect, if any, of changing consumer payment preferences and bank processing practices on the types and frequency of account fees incurred by consumers, we reviewed the 2004 and 2007 Federal Reserve payment studies on noncash payment trends in the United States.[Footnote 39] We also reviewed data on payment trends in debit and credit card transactions from the EFT Data Book.[Footnote 40] In addition, we spoke with multiple industry experts, including bank representatives and consumer group representatives, such as the Consumer Federation of America, the Center for Responsible Lending, and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group to understand what practices banks employ to process transactions on deposit accounts, how these practices have changed over the past few years, and the potential impact these practices have had on consumers incurring fees, such as overdraft fees. Furthermore, we reviewed studies that analyzed electronic payment preferences and identified one study that used transaction-level data to determine how payment preferences influence overdraft fees.[Footnote 41] To determine what data are available on the characteristics of consumers who pay bank fees, we reviewed two studies on the topic; one by an academic researcher and another by a consumer group. The academic study used transaction-level account data and regression models to estimate the probability of overdrawing an account. The data included customer information and all transactions with associated balances from May-August 2003, from one small Midwestern bank.[Footnote 42] The second study used data collected by telephone surveys of 3,310 adults, who were 18 years or older, between October 2005 and January 2006.[Footnote 43] Both studies suffer from limitations that preclude making inferences to the broader populations of banking customers who pay fees, but they represent the only relevant research at this point, and are suggestive of the characteristics of these customers. We also reviewed documentation on and interviewed officials at the FDIC about their ongoing study of overdraft protection programs, including the phase of their study in which they will review transaction-level data. Finally, we interviewed two academic researchers and representatives of eight consumer groups; five depository institutions; two software vendors; and four industry trade associations, including the American Bankers Association, Independent Community Bankers of America, America's Community Bankers, and the Credit Union National Association, to determine what research had been done on the topic. How Regulators Address Fees Associated with Checking and Deposit Accounts: To assess the extent that federal and selected state banking regulators review fees associated with checking and deposit accounts as part of their oversight of depository institutions, we obtained and reviewed examination manuals and guidance used by the five federal banking regulators--Federal Reserve, FDIC, NCUA, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)--and conducted interviews with agency officials. We also obtained and reviewed a sample of 25 compliance examination reports, on examinations completed during 2006, to identify how the federal regulators carried out examinations for compliance with Regulations DD and E. We selected five examination reports from each regulator based on an institution's asset size and geographic dispersion, in an attempt to capture a variety of examinations. The asset size of the institutions ranged from $2 million to $1.2 trillion. In addition, we obtained information on the regulatory efforts of six states. We selected the states based on recommendations from the Conferences of State Banking Supervisors, New York State Banking Department, and Massachusetts Division of Banks and to achieve geographical dispersion. The selected states were: California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, and New York. We reviewed compliance examination manuals and guidance used by the six state regulators and asked specific questions to each state's appropriate banking officials. To determine the number of complaints that the regulators received on checking and savings accounts, in addition to complaints about fees and disclosures, we requested complaint data, including data on resolutions, for calendar years 2002 through 2006. For the complaint data, we obtained data on the banking products or services involved, the complaint category and, in some cases, the citation of the regulation. While our estimates of the proportions of complaints related to fees depend on how the banking regulators coded the subjects of the complaint they received, and how we combined those related to fees, we judge any possible variations to be slight. For the complaint resolution data, we obtained information about the resolution (outcomes) of complaints and the banking products or services involved. The data came from five different databases: (1) OCC's REMEDY database, (2) the Federal Reserve's Complaint Analysis Evaluation System and Reports (CAESAR), (3) FDIC's Specialized Tracking and Reporting System (STARS), (4) OTS' Consumer Complaint System (CCS), and (5) NCUA's regionally based system on complaints. We obtained data from OCC, the Federal Reserve, FDIC, OTS, and NCUA that covered calendar years 2002 through 2006. For purposes of this report, we used data from the regulators' consumer complaint databases to describe the number of complaints that each regulator received related to fees and disclosures for checking and savings accounts, as well as complaints received by four major product categories--checking accounts, savings accounts, mortgage loans, and credit cards. With respect to the data on complaint resolutions, we used the regulators' data to describe the number of cases each regulator handled, what products consumers complained about, and how the regulators resolved the complaints. To assess the reliability of data from the five databases, we reviewed relevant documentation and interviewed agency officials. We also had the agencies produce the queries or data extracts they used to generate the data we requested. Also, we reviewed the related queries, data extracts, and the output for logical consistency. We determined these data to be sufficiently reliable for use in our report. Finally, we obtained data from each of the federal regulators on violations they cited against institutions for noncompliance with Regulation DD and Regulation E provisions. Specifically, we asked for data on the total number of violations that each regulator cited for all examined provisions of Regulations DD and E during 2002 to 2006, as well as for data on violations of selected disclosure provisions. The Regulation DD sections that we requested and obtained data on were: §§ 230.3, 230.4, 230.8, and 230.11. The Regulation E sections that we requested and obtained data on were: §§ 205.4 and 205.7. We compiled the data and summarized the total number of violations found for all of the federal regulators during 2002 to 2006. We also obtained data from 2002 through 2006 on the total number of enforcement actions that each regulator took against institutions for violations of all provisions of Regulations DD and E and the selected disclosure provisions. To assess the reliability of data from the five databases, we reviewed relevant documentation and interviewed agency officials. We also had the agencies produce the queries or data extracts they used to generate the data we requested. Also, we reviewed the related queries, data extracts, and the output for logical consistency. We determined these data to be sufficiently reliable for use in our report. Finally, we also requested information from each state regulator on consumer complaint, violation, and enforcement data pertaining to bank fees and disclosures, state specific bank examination processes, and any additional state laws pertaining to bank fees and disclosures. We did not receive all our requested data because some states' systems did not capture complaint, violation, or enforcement data related to bank fees and disclosures. For those states where information was available, the number of complaints and violations were minimal and not consistently reported among states. We, therefore, attributed the limited information on complaints, violations, and enforcement actions to state officials and did not assess the reliability of this data. Effective Disclosures of Fees to Consumers: To assess the extent to which consumers, upon request prior to opening a checking and savings account, are provided disclosures of fees and the conditions under which these fees are assessed, GAO employees visited 103 bank branches, 36 thrift branches, and 46 credit union branches of 154 depository institutions throughout the nation. We selected these institutions to ensure a mix of institution type (bank, thrift, and credit union) and size; however, the results cannot be generalized to all institutions. We reviewed the federal Truth-in- Savings Act (TISA) and Regulation DD, which implements TISA, to determine what disclosure documents depository institutions were required to provide to new and potential customers. Using a standardized, prescribed script, GAO employees posed as consumers and specifically requested a comprehensive fee schedule and terms and conditions associated with checking and savings accounts. The branches were located in the following cities: Atlanta, Georgia; Boston, Massachusetts; Chicago, Illinois; Dallas, Texas; Dayton, Ohio; Denver, Colorado; Huntsville, Alabama; Los Angeles, California; Norfolk, Virginia; San Francisco, California; Seattle, Washington; and Washington, D.C. The GAO employees visiting these branches also reviewed the institutions' Web sites to determine if these sites had comprehensive fee schedules and terms and conditions associated with checking and savings accounts. After both visiting branches and reviewing Web sites, GAO employees used standardized forms and recorded whether or not they were able to obtain the specific documents (examples were provided) and whether or not they were able to locate specific information on each institutions' Web site. To obtain information on issues related to providing consumers with real-time account information during debit card transactions at point- of-sale terminals and automated teller machines (see app. II), we reviewed available literature from the Federal Reserve, including a 2004 report on the issues in providing consumers point-of-sale debit card fees during a transaction.[Footnote 44] We also reviewed other sources that described the payment processing system related to debit card transactions at merchants and ATMs. In addition, we conducted structured interviews with officials from five banks, two card associations, three third-party processors, four bank industry associations, and one merchant trade organization, and summarized our findings. We conducted this performance audit in Atlanta, Georgia; Boston, Massachusetts; Chicago, Illinois; Dallas, Texas; Dayton, Ohio; Denver, Colorado; Huntsville, Alabama; Los Angeles, California; Norfolk, Virginia; San Francisco, California; Seattle, Washington; and Washington, D.C., from January 2007 to January 2008 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. [End of section] Appendix II: Issues with Providing Consumers Real-Time Account Information at Point-of-Sale Terminals and ATMs When Using a Debit Card: According to debit card industry representatives we contacted, providing consumers with their "real-time" account balance information during a debit card transaction is technically feasible but presents a number of issues that would need resolution.[Footnote 45] These issues include the costs associated with upgrading merchant terminals and software to allow for consumers' account balances to be displayed at the terminals; the potential difficulty of determining a consumer's real-time account balance, given the different types of transactions that occur throughout the day; concerns over privacy and security raised by account balances potentially being visible to others besides account holders; and the increased time it would take to complete a transaction at merchant locations.[Footnote 46] Challenges Stem in Part From Existing Technology and Steps Used to Accomplish Transactions: A consumer using a debit card to make a purchase at a merchant's checkout counter (referred to as a point-of-sale debit transaction) has two options for completing the transaction: (1) entering a personal identification number (PIN) or (2) signing for the transaction (similar to a credit card transaction). The consumer is typically prompted at the point-of-sale terminal to choose either "debit" (in which case the transaction is referred to as "PIN-based") or "credit" (in which case the transaction is referred to as "signature-based"). Regardless of which option the consumer chooses, the transaction is a debit card transaction. PIN-and signature-based debit card transactions differ not only with respect to the input required from the consumer but also the debit networks over which the transactions are carried and the number and timing of steps involved in carrying out the transactions. Similarly, transactions initiated at ATMs can differ in how they are processed. Customers can make withdrawals and deposits not only at ATMs owned by their card-issuing institutions but also at ATMs owned by other depository institutions or entities.[Footnote 47] An ATM card is typically a dual ATM/debit card that can be used for both ATM and debit card transactions, both PIN-based and signature-based, at participating retailers.[Footnote 48] PIN-Based Debit Card Transactions: PIN-based debit card transactions are referred to as "single message" because the authorization--the approval to complete the transaction-- and settlement--the process of transmitting and reconciling payment orders--of the transaction take place using a single electronic message.[Footnote 49] As shown in figure 7, PIN-based debit card transactions involve a number of steps between the merchant's terminal and the consumer's deposit account. Generally, at the locations of large national merchants, after the consumer has swiped the card a message about the transaction is transmitted directly to the electronic funds transfer (EFT) network.[Footnote 50] (For other merchants, the transaction reaches the EFT network via the merchant's processor, also known as the merchant acquirer.[Footnote 51]) The message identifies the consumer's institution and account, the merchant, and the dollar amount of the purchase. The EFT network routes the transaction to the card issuer (or to the card issuer's processor, which then passes it to the card issuer). The card issuer--usually the consumer's depository institution--receives the message and uses the identifying information to verify that the account is valid, that the card has not been reported lost or stolen, and that there are either sufficient funds available in the account or the account is covered by an overdraft protection program (that is, the issuer covers the transaction even if there are insufficient funds in the account, which is also known as bounce protection).[Footnote 52] If these conditions are met, the issuer authorizes the debit transaction. Specifically, the issuer then debits the consumer's account and sends an authorization message to the EFT network, which sends it to the merchant's acquirer, which forwards the authorization to the merchant's terminal. The entire sequence typically occurs in a matter of seconds. Figure 7: Path of a Typical PIN-Based Debit Card Transaction: [See PDF for image] This figure is an illustration of the path of a typical PIN-based debit card transaction. The following path is depicted: * Cardholder swipes card, enters PIN at merchant site; * Transaction authorization request transmitted from merchant to merchant's ac