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Israel issues banking fees edict

The Banking Supervision Department of the Bank of Israel has announced further measures regarding banking fees, which are part of an amendment to the Banking (Service to the Customer)(Fees) Rules, 5768–2008, and the publication of a Supervisory Order.
This amendment joins another amendment that was recently
published (and came into effect last month), which led to the
cancellation of a number of fees collected from banking
corporation customers, including the direct channel fee for a
charge to a debit card, the fee for printing a confirmation of
ownership of an account (one confirmation per year), housing loan
management fees, deferred payment fees collected for deferred
payment transactions on payment cards, and others.
The following are the main points of the amendments:
* Declaration of the fee for notices as a supervised
fee, and setting the maximum fee at 5 shekels (80p).
This amendment comes from a recommendation of the Bank's "team to
examine how to increase competitiveness in the banking system."
Due to the high price of "services for sending notices" at some
of the banks (prices ranging from NIS 20 to NIS 90 per notice),
and in view of the fact that this is a service that the customer
can obtain only at the bank at which he manages his account, it
should be declared a supervised service pursuant to s9k(a)(2)
Banking (Service to the Customer) Law, 5741–1981. The
maximum price for this service (sending notices and warnings of
late payments) is not to exceed 5 shekels per notice.
* Cancellation of the charge fee for a depositor of a
cheque that bounces.
* Non-collection of debit card fees for a customer who
holds a credit card. In conjunction with some
recommendations and measures to introduce debit cards in Israel
and to increase competition in the field of debit cards, as part
of a report published on 10 February, a banking corporation is
not to be allowed to collect card fees for a debit card it has
issued to a customer who also holds a credit card issued by the
same banking corporation. This amendment is intended to
encourage the distribution of debit cards among customers and to
serve as an alternative to cash payments.
* Foreign currency transactions and foreign currency
withdrawals abroad. As part of the amendment to the Banking
Rules published on 29 January, a change has been made to the fees
collected from card holders for foreign currency transactions and
for foreign currency withdrawals abroad. The current amendment
completes the process begun with the previous amendment, to make
it easier and simpler for customers to compare, and mainly
provides credit card companies with the ability to set separate
rates for these services by distinguishing between major
currencies (US$ and €) as one rate and the other currencies as
another rate. Due to this amendment, the effective date of
the previous amendment is being delayed to 1 July.