2016年4月5日 星期二

Chase ATMs to Limit Withdrawals for Noncustomers to $1,000 a Day

finance.yahoo.com

A funny thing happened as J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. modified its ATMs to dispense hundred-dollar bills with no limit: Some people started pulling out tens of thousands of dollars at a time.

Now the bank is cracking down, capping ATM withdrawals at $1,000 per card daily for noncustomers.

The bank run by Chairman and Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said there doesn’t appear to be fraud involved. But in part due to heightened regulatory scrutiny, banks are paying more attention to large cash transfers that could be a sign of money laundering or other types of shady activity. Typically the card-issuing bank sets withdrawal limits, not the bank owning the ATM.

The move by the largest bank in the country doesn’t affect J.P. Morgan Chase’s own customers, whose maximum daily withdrawals are set depending on the client’s account type. The bank has seen high-dollar withdrawals at both new and old ATMs, said bank spokeswoman Patricia Wexler.

J.P. Morgan Chase’s change last month affects roughly 18,000 automated teller machines nationwide and followed an interim step earlier this year limiting noncustomer cash removals at $1,000 per transaction. The earlier move was made as a temporary fix while the bank could make software changes to roll out the more stringent daily limit, said Ms. Wexler said.

Ms. Wexler added that the bank “felt it was prudent to set withdrawal limits on all of our ATMs” after identifying some large cash withdrawals from noncustomers.

J.P. Morgan has been upgrading the hardware and technology at its ATMs nationwide, most of which are at the company’s Chase branches. The new ATMs allow consumers to withdraw more money quickly because they include $50 and $100 bills where old machines stuck mainly to $20 bills.

Most large U.S. banks, including Chase, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. have been rolling out new ATMs, which in some cases replace tellers. That includes allowing customers to withdraw different dollar denominations than the usual $20, typically ranging from $1 to $100.

At Chase’s annual investor day presentation in February it touted “higher funds availability and withdrawal limits at the ATM.” The bank also said around 90% of all teller transactions will be ATM-enabled in the near future.

“Banks are looking to provide the flexibility but at the same time balancing their own exposure,” said David Albertazzi, a senior analyst focusing on retail bank channels at Boston-based consultancy Aite Group.

The efforts run counter to recent calls to phase out large bills such as the $100 bill or the €500 note ($569) to discourage corruption while putting up hurdles for tax evaders, terrorists, drug dealers and human traffickers.

The Wall Street Journal reported in February that the European Central Bank was considering eliminating its highest paper currency denomination, the €500 note. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers also has called for an agreement by monetary authorities to stop issuing notes worth more than $50 or $100.

While it was changing to newer ATM technology, J.P. Morgan found that some customers of banks in countries such as Russia and Ukraine had used Chase ATMs to withdraw tens of thousands of dollars in a single day, people familiar with the situation said. Chase had instances of people withdrawing $20,000 in one transaction, they added.

Chase said those instances weren’t widespread. Ms. Wexler says the bank doesn’t know the identity of people who withdrew the money but did identify each person’s bank and confirm the transactions appeared legitimate.

Generally, ATM limits are set by the bank that issues the ATM card and handles the customer’s account. But limits set by banks owning the machine are starting to catch on -- with Chase among the first big U.S. banks -- as concerns increase among law-enforcement officials about how criminals can move money across the globe using various new bank technologies.

Regulators don’t have specific rules on appropriate withdrawal amounts and leave that to the individual banks. Large U.S. banks’ policies vary.

Banks must also file a Currency Transaction Report for cash transactions over $10,000 in one day, according to the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN. Almost all countries have similar reports for their currencies, a FinCEN spokesman said.

Emily Glazer at emily.glazer@wsj.com

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