Donate SIGN UP

Bad Banking Advice

Avatar Image
durbs | 15:24 Tue 02nd May 2006 | Business & Finance
4 Answers

My friend and husband have a personal loan at the Nat West for �12,000 plus an overdraft facility which is currently standing at �4,500 and her husband has been made redundant. My friend only earns approx �900 per month and they have a 14yr old son. My friend's husband was in jail last year for a period of four months and during this time he had no income but the bank still allowed them to increase their overdraft facility to �8,000 I feel that the bank has been negligent in their handling and advice to them can they do anything about this?

Gravatar

Answers

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by durbs. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
of course, they need to cancel the extra overdraft facility that they have not used or they are placing their debt higher and more out of control.
I would suggest your friend and her husband have knowingly entered into this situation, surely it is they who are responsible, not the bank.
Question Author
Dear Sparkles3 I agree with you to a point but surely the Bank should also take some responsibility, are there no rules in a bank to what they are allowed to do and not do? I would have thought a bank would be more careful with their customers than the credit card companies and loan sharks that are out there. I would have thought this is not good financial advise and certainly wouldn't expect my bank to act in this way.

I understand where you're coming from on that, but I just feel that in society we're always looking for someone else to blame. I prefer to make my own decisions on what I think I can afford - and if I misjudge it, then I've only myself to blame on that. If you are missold a policy or something, then yes, I believe there is a case for the bank having responsibility, but in the case of loans and overdrafts, we all know it's not free money and that it must be repaid - regardless of what our circumstances are or what happens in the future.


I think probably we both understand each others' perspective - just don't agree - perhaps we should just agree to disagree! :-)

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Bad Banking Advice

Answer Question >>