Bankers
Can be victims, too!
Everytime a Singaporean makes a frivolous investment claim
against a bank, he undermines thousands of genuine fide
cases
Dec 31, 2008
Liar
Liar
By Tattooed Banker
My favourite blogger has got me in the spirit of blogging
again with his latest post
I’m
tired too. So tired that I don’t have the energy to
blog regularly. This is not the best time to be a banker
I suppose.
Unlike
Mr Wong, I don’t work in an investment bank, I’m
not a lawyer, so maybe he got it tougher.
Or maybe
not. At least I bet he doesn’t get people shouting
in his face calling him a cheat.
I work
in a retail bank but we face similar problems that he mentioned
in his post
People
will really go all out to extricate themselves from a deal
gone bad
That includes employing tactics which are dishonest and
unethical, and sometimes frivolous to the point of being
baffling.
Let
me highlight an issue I handled recently. This lady came
in and handed a letter addressed to the branch manager.
A complaint letter against an ex-colleague of mine to be
exact. I can’t reproduce the letter in full here due
to disclosure issues but the gist of it was,
The
letter was drafted in english by a 3rd party, in the first
paragraph, this third party explained that this person is
illiterate and cannot read or write english or chinese so
he/she is writing the letter on the behalf.
With no fees charged. (personally, it struck me as odd that
someone would actually mentioned he/she is not being paid
a fee to write a letter. I would have thought not but the
fact that the statement was included made me think otherwise
instead.)
Customer
had bought into a unit trust for X amount of money, which
is about 60% of the what she had with our bank.(At point
of investment) Claims she is unemployed, have no other sources
of income, no other sources of funds and struggling to survive.
Thought
she invested in a fixed deposit with higher return and principal
protection.
Claims
she was told that she can get back the principal + interest
after max of 2 years.
Wanted
the bank to pay her back her principal + interest if she
had placed the money in fixed deposits claiming mis-selling.
Signed
off with a thumbprint (as customer claims to be illiterate)
Now
after reading the letter, most people would start to scream
CHEATS! and things like BANKS ARE UNSCRUPULOUS! etc I don’t
blame them.
Its
been played out too much by the media, and out of the fact
that if you had lost or knew someone that lost money too,
you end to blame or hear people blaming the banks, their
RMs, their insurance agents, their friends who recommend
them to investments etc… everyone, but themselves.
I have
honestly yet to hear anyone lamenting that “yes, it
was my fault.. I was too greedy, I have learnt a valuable
lesson”
Personally,
I have lost a huge chunk of my money in Unit trusts, stocks
and shares, currency etc but I think of it as a learning
lesson. I learnt now the importance of profit taking, cut
loss mechanism, value investing, dollar cost average and
many other valuable lessons.
Yes,
I paid dearly for these lessons, but it would put me in
good stead for maybe the next 20-30 years, so its worth
it in a perverse sort of way.
Anyway,
I digress…
What
I wanted to highlight was that, after this letter, the bank
did its own investigation. As we all know by now, all investments
have to be done in conjunction with a needs analysis. Based
on the banks investigation, the following was found
Customer
was listed as self employed in the documents, and a bizfile
search listed her as sole director of a private limited
company with X amount of paid up capital that is still in
business.
Needs
analysis showed that she declared having more than 5x her
investment amount with other banks. Was clearly written
in both english and chinese that product is not capital
protected.
The
best part - all her accounts, including her company’s
account which happened to be with the bank as well, was
operated by an english signature.
There was even a handwritten letter from her few years back
in ENGLISH, requesting for higher credit limit for her personal
credit card.
Clearly,
customer is aware of what she was getting into, but trying
to wriggle out of it in whatever way she can, riding on
the wave of ‘justice’.
I wondered
if the bank can sue her for fraud…
Who
exactly are the true victims or true villains??
The
lines are blurred.
http://tattooedbanker.wordpress.com/2008/12/29/15/