Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Modern Banking and Lending, and the Unfairness of It All



Reading David Moyal’s fate after his bank, a subsidiary of the People’s United Bank in the United States, had withdrawn its funding for his business’ equipment I could not help but think how unfair banks have become. 



David Moyal is an owner of Color-Web, a printing company. He ordered new machinery from Mitsubishi Lithographic Presses (MLP). However, when regulators and shareholders pressured banks to clean up their act, many small business who received financing they erased from their papers by withdrawing their financing.

Moyal’s case had him lose hundreds of thousands of dollars for equipment and had to lay off some employees because of the losses.

I couldn’t help but empathise with him. Banks in the UK have done the same. We’re actually facing the biggest financial scandal in history, and yet banks have the nerve to use regulatory provisions and even reduce the refund of consumers by forgetting to refund penalties incurred because of the policy.

In the end, regardless of how flowery the words of financial leaders are in the world, they are still companies looking to gain profit. But they will still gang up on you in the end. Moyal is still fighting his case against a bank who had kept a secret deal with the MLP, who had returned his bank’s down payment, but still demanded it from him.