Jump to content

Incredible US banking ineptness


Recommended Posts


It seems likely that the website/company where you supplied that email address was hacked.  Hackers then sent you a phishing email to that account trying to get more data from you.

 

It's quite likely Citibank was just chosen at random by the hackers and the bank knows nothing about that email, credit card or that fictitious name you supplied.

Edited by gamb00ler
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, jaywalker2 said:

No, citibank confirmed it was a real account. They said they couldn't close it without proof it was fake.

 

I have several real Citibank credit cards and accounts. Nine out of ten representatives in those Filipino call centers are useless idiots. They know nothing, have no power or common sense and just waste your time. 

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/1/2024 at 8:55 AM, jaywalker2 said:

It's just amazing to me the hoops somebody who lives overseas has to jump through in order to open a bank account, keep it open, or get a credit card or do anything else.

 

Oh, just close the account and use a Thai account. I never have any trouble w/ my Thai banks or Thai credit card. 🙂 

Edited by BigStar
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Count yourself lucky not to be from the EU. At least as a US citizen you can still open a US bank account while living in Thailand. Once EU expats lose their EU accounts, there's nothing for it but to bank only in Asia (how do you transfer an EU stock portfolio to Thailand?), or go back and live in the EU for one fiscal year in order to open <deleted>load of new accounts before becoming moving out again.

 

Yes, setting up call-centers manned with employees who know little and can do little is the new way for bank to cut costs these days. The day crypto takes over and all banks vanish will be a victory for mankind. I'm not even a crypto investor, I missed that band-wagon, but I now understand why long term there's no alternative to crypto.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, JackGats said:

Count yourself lucky not to be from the EU. At least as a US citizen you can still open a US bank account while living in Thailand. Once EU expats lose their EU accounts, there's nothing for it but to bank only in Asia (how do you transfer an EU stock portfolio to Thailand?), or go back and live in the EU for one fiscal year in order to open <deleted>load of new accounts before becoming moving out again.

 

Yes, setting up call-centers manned with employees who know little and can do little is the new way for bank to cut costs these days. The day crypto takes over and all banks vanish will be a victory for mankind. I'm not even a crypto investor, I missed that band-wagon, but I now understand why long term there's no alternative to crypto.

Just open a Wise account, it's in Belgium with a Belgium bank nr. and IBAN.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/1/2024 at 2:07 PM, jaywalker2 said:

No, citibank confirmed it was a real account. They said they couldn't close it without proof it was fake.

I think it likely that there is some miscommunication between you and the Citibank customer service representative.

 

How likely is it for Citibank to issue a credit card in a fake name (without documentation) that presumably has no credit history?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, gamb00ler said:

I think it likely that there is some miscommunication between you and the Citibank customer service representative.

 

How likely is it for Citibank to issue a credit card in a fake name (without documentation) that presumably has no credit history?

Well, that was my exact question. I asked her if they issue credit cards without checking the application. She had no answer, of course.

 

But,, no, there was no miscommunication. She understood what I saying. It was her position that she couldn't close the account without proof that it was actually fradulent. I told her to check the social security number and compare the name with the name on the account. They can't match, so that should be proof but she wanted my personal details as well.

 

I can easily imagine this happening. In my former life, I worked with a lot of bankers and usually they have sales quotas. In this case, the maximum limit on the credit card ws only $5400, so I suppose that would be an incentive to rubber stamp it without checking the details in order to make a sales. That's how the financial crisis occurred, remember?

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, bubblegum said:

Just open a Wise account, it's in Belgium with a Belgium bank nr. and IBAN.

No, as a US citizen you can't open a bank account with a US bank. Almost all banks and brokerages require that you have a permanent US address to apply. And they might also run a credit check. You might be able to open an account if you have an address in the US that you can use but you run the risk that they will close it if they find out you're living overseas

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, JackGats said:

Count yourself lucky not to be from the EU. At least as a US citizen you can still open a US bank account while living in Thailand. Once EU expats lose their EU accounts, there's nothing for it but to bank only in Asia (how do you transfer an EU stock portfolio to Thailand?), or go back and live in the EU for one fiscal year in order to open <deleted>load of new accounts before becoming moving out again.

 

Yes, setting up call-centers manned with employees who know little and can do little is the new way for bank to cut costs these days. The day crypto takes over and all banks vanish will be a victory for mankind. I'm not even a crypto investor, I missed that band-wagon, but I now understand why long term there's no alternative to crypto.

Even worse, most banks now have automated answering systems so it's almost impossible to talk to a real person or report a problem that isn't related to an account. I had to dial the number for credit card applications to get a live representative and then have him transfer me to an appropriate department (which didn't really work).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, jaywalker2 said:

No, as a US citizen you can't open a bank account with a US bank. Almost all banks and brokerages require that you have a permanent US address to apply. And they might also run a credit check. You might be able to open an account if you have an address in the US that you can use but you run the risk that they will close it if they find out you're living overseas

Read again, I'm talking Eu.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, JackGats said:

Count yourself lucky not to be from the EU. At least as a US citizen you can still open a US bank account while living in Thailand. Once EU expats lose their EU accounts, there's nothing for it but to bank only in Asia (how do you transfer an EU stock portfolio to Thailand?), or go back and live in the EU for one fiscal year in order to open <deleted>load of new accounts before becoming moving out again.

 

Yes, setting up call-centers manned with employees who know little and can do little is the new way for bank to cut costs these days. The day crypto takes over and all banks vanish will be a victory for mankind. I'm not even a crypto investor, I missed that band-wagon, but I now understand why long term there's no alternative to crypto.

You didnt miss anything. I keep my savings in bitcoin, and only what im ok with losing in a bank.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, bubblegum said:

Read again, I'm talking Eu.

Sorry, I was responding to the other post about opening US bank accounts from Thailand. Wise isn't a bank and I would certainly never put a substantial amount of money in it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, bubblegum said:

Just open a Wise account, it's in Belgium with a Belgium bank nr. and IBAN.

I predict that someday Wise will go out of business causing tremendous losses and sadly all of their account holders will realize that it is not a bank and their losses are not covered by any government agency (in the USA anyway).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, Everyman said:

 

I have several real Citibank credit cards and accounts. Nine out of ten representatives in those Filipino call centers are useless idiots. They know nothing, have no power or common sense and just waste your time. 

 Nine out of ten representatives in those Filipino call centers are useless idiots. They know nothing, have no power or common sense and just waste your time.

 

This is very common today. Call centers are the worst. But, sales persons, technicians, etc are the same - and its international!

We cant expect the service standards we experienced a couple of decades ago.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, ricklev said:

I predict that someday Wise will go out of business causing tremendous losses and sadly all of their account holders will realize that it is not a bank and their losses are not covered by any government agency (in the USA anyway).

people hold money on wise? I thought it was just currency conversion

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, jaywalker2 said:

No, as a US citizen you can't open a bank account with a US bank. Almost all banks and brokerages require that you have a permanent US address to apply. And they might also run a credit check. You might be able to open an account if you have an address in the US that you can use but you run the risk that they will close it if they find out you're living overseas

Ok, so US as bad as the EU. Western countries are now screwing their own citizens. From what I see around me Russians have it easier with settling wherever they want and accessing their money.

 

We are now in an inverted Cold War World. Our beloved "democracies" are restricting our freedom. Soon they will start refusing to issue us with passports.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Celsius said:

How different do you think Thai customer service would handle your complaint?

Except in Thailand you can still walk into the bank and have your problem taken care of. Which is more than you can say for many banks in other countries. Even non-direct banks, ie banks that have high-street branches, will not do much if you have a technical problem. And if you want cash they will refer you to the nearest ATM, too bad if your ATM card doesn't work.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, JackGats said:

Ok, so US as bad as the EU. Western countries are now screwing their own citizens. From what I see around me Russians have it easier with settling wherever they want and accessing their money.

 

We are now in an inverted Cold War World. Our beloved "democracies" are restricting our freedom. Soon they will start refusing to issue us with passports.

You had it right with crypto. Follow your own advice and use bitcoin as your bank. I trust it a lot more than i trust bankers

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, mdr224 said:

You had it right with crypto. Follow your own advice and use bitcoin as your bank. I trust it a lot more than i trust bankers

I suppose you use it with your own crypto wallet? My feeling is that BC exchanges can be as devious as banks when it comes to freezing your account.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, JackGats said:

I suppose you use it with your own crypto wallet? My feeling is that BC exchanges can be as devious as banks when it comes to freezing your account.

Yeah dont use an exchange, use a hardware wallet like trezor

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, JackGats said:

I suppose you use it with your own crypto wallet? My feeling is that BC exchanges can be as devious as banks when it comes to freezing your account.

 

No, they are much, much worse than banks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








×
×
  • Create New...