Wal-Mart Banks on the Unbanked
“[W]hen Wal-Mart decides it cares about a business, they usually find a way to dominate it.”
Wal-Mart’s Unbanking Business [Time]
Wal-Mart doesn’t just want you to buy gas and groceries at its superstores these days. Now it wants your entire paycheck.
On Wednesday, the nation’s largest retailer unveiled plans to open 1,000 in-store MoneyCenters aimed at serving the 40 million or so people without traditional bank accounts. The main draw at the centers, which will be in about a quarter of all Wal-Mart stores by the end of 2008, is the cashing of government and printed payroll checks for the bargain price of $3 a pop. The retailer is also debuting a reloadable, prepaid Visa debit card that does not require a bank account or proof of U.S. citizenship.
This broad rollout of low-priced check-cashing and debit cards marks a milestone for the millions of “unbanked” Americans who have long had to pay rates as high as 10% of the face value of their paychecks in order to cash them and then pay cash for every single purchase they make because they do not qualify for a credit card or checking account. “These are our core customers. We probably have more than others of this underserved customer,” says Jane Thompson, president of Wal-Mart Financial Services, who notes that the average check-cashing customer at Wal-Mart earns $350 per paycheck and has never had a credit card before.
It’s also good business. While traditional banks have struggled to attract the unbanked without outrageous charges, check cashers and payday loaners raked in an estimated $11 billion in fees from this $1 trillion economy. Cleveland-based KeyBank, for example, has attracted just 5,500 new customers in the past two years with its own check-cashing business, but has yet to make a profit from it. One problem is that people who have never had a bank account are distrustful of banks as a whole and feel unwelcome in institutions where they could not qualify for a checking account in the first place, because of lack of proper ID or employment history. Even when banks do try to reach out to this population—such as Bank of America’s new credit card that does not require a valid social security number—there has been a backlash among opponents of illegal immigration.
The new centers leave plenty of room for the Wal-Mart to work with partners to add even more financial services such as mortgages and home equity loans later, something the company has not ruled out and competitors are already bracing for. Although Wal-Mart withdrew its bid earlier this year to become a amid opposition from community banks that feared such a move would put them out of business, Wal-Mart’s new Money Centers and MoneyCards are giving them a significant foothold in the financial services industry. The centers currently offer money orders, bill payment, and phone cards in a newly designated space painted a bright, “firefly gold” in each store. Because the counters are open from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. seven days a week, they are as quick and convenient as anything but 24-hour check cashers. The $3 check-cashing fee is far lower than the average 1% to 3% charged by regular check cashers, and the Visa MoneyCards cost $8.94 plus a $4.94 monthly maintenance fee. As with any Visa card, a pin number or signature is required for each transaction, and the card can be cancelled immediately if lost or stolen.
Check-cashing services have actually been available at Wal-Mart for several years. But until now customers had to wait in long customer service lines instead of having designated counters where they can make these transactions. “They are making this a priority and making it more visible to the consumer. This is something they really care about,” says Jennifer Tescher, director of the Center for Financial Services Innovation, a nonprofit that does research and advocacy work for the unbanked. “It doesn’t matter whether or not they have a bank charter.” And as countless small retailers can tell you, when Wal-Mart decides it cares about a business, they usually find a way to dominate it.
Posted by Alex Goldschmidt on Thursday, June 21, 2007
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COMMENTS
i have heard it all now walmart is evil a bank please stop the people from this they will make you work to have a bank
rowdt rrooo in wisconsin
Thursday, June 21 at 03:14 PM
rowdt rrooo in wisconsin-
Could you say that in English, please?
Please?
Jake in
Thursday, June 21 at 03:22 PM
Whatever happend to crazy Davie Smith?
smithsonian in idabel
Thursday, June 21 at 06:19 PM
Jake,
rowdt rrooo, is just an example of the intelligence level that the anti Wal-Mart group uses to carry their signs at rallies!! They know they can get people like this, to believe anything they are told!! Ask him to tell you WHY he thinks as he does and he will be lost and looking for someone to tell him what to say!! That’s why you can’t understand him, because he is just slapping together things he has heard and doesn’t even know how to do it correctly!!
RDS in
Friday, June 22 at 09:58 AM
RDS,
So far, I am seeing this rowdt rrooo character who can’t even compose a simple sentence (maybe its a secret code ---haha), then you have the angry, protesting “Big Texas”, and last, but definitely not least, my main man with the plan, SanDiego View!
Haven’t crossed Davie Smith, yet. What’s the scoop?
If this is the best WalMartWatch has to offer, I don’t think anyone has too much to worry about..........
Jake
Jake in
Friday, June 22 at 02:31 PM
rowdt rrooo in wisconsin
Looks like you are getting some people upset.
I must admit that you sound like you are an interesting person.
Keep posting!
R E M E M B E R
J O N Q U I E R E
Q U E B E C
Home of Walmart Worker Abuse
We will never forget what you did Walmart.
Never.
R E M E M B E R
J A C K S O N V I L L E
T E X A S
Home of Walmart Worker Abuse.
Alex in Ontario, Canada
Friday, June 22 at 06:58 PM
Alex,
“rowdt rrooo in wisconsin
Looks like you are getting some people upset.
I must admit that you sound like you are an interesting person.”
Yeah, he sounds like your kind of person, one that will believe the things you say!! He sounds like a 4th grade dropout to me!!
How many more REMEMBERS are you going to add to your posts?
Jake,
Here is Alex, he is a believer in a ‘living wage’ for EVERYONE, no matter what you do!! He also wants the taxpayers to pay for healthcare for EVERYONE!! A real welfare mentality, this one is!!
RDS in
Friday, June 22 at 09:52 PM
RDS-
Has he “met” my main man SanDiego, yet?
I swar these two cats would be a regular Abbott and Costello act!
And Alex, I promise I won’t forget that Jonpierre (or whatever it is) is in Quebec........that’s why I always include Ginko Biloba in my diet.......
Just what is it I am supposed to remember in Quebec, anyway?
Jake
Jake in
Friday, June 22 at 10:12 PM
Jake,
“Haven’t crossed Davie Smith, yet. What’s the scoop?”
Dave Smith (alias IRONHEAD) used to post here and was a lot like Alex!!
Yeah, what did happen to IRONHEAD, did he run out of union material or maybe he lost his job because of the building slowdown?
“Just what is it I am supposed to remember in Quebec, anyway?”
A few years back, a Wal-mart store in Jonquiere, Quebec, got a union in and because of their low sales, Wal-Mart had to close the store. Now Alex constantly reminds us all, how unfair Wal-Mart is to it’s workers and urges more of them to join a union!!
RDS in
Friday, June 22 at 11:34 PM
“Just what is it I am supposed to remember in Quebec, anyway?”
Jake in
Friday, June 22 at 11:12 PM
Imbecile #6 social conscience at work.
SanDiegoView in
Saturday, June 23 at 03:42 AM
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