bank transfer day

    By Bruce Watson

    | 1:20PM 2/07/2012
    Switching banks is a hassle, but outrage over the big financial institutions' efforts to pile on new steep fees pushed more than 2 million people to close their accounts over the past 3 months. Is Bank Transfer Day becoming Bank Transfer Year?

    By Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool

    | 4:15PM 12/09/2011
    Remember Bank Transfer Day? Well, mark your calendar: Dec. 11 is being publicized as "Balance Transfer Day," with Americans urged to transfer their credit card balances from high-interest cards to low- or no-interest ones.

    By Catherine New

    | 6:15PM 11/14/2011
    Big banks risk losing as much as $185 billion in the next 12 months as account holders say no to being nickeled and dimed, according to a new report

    By Catherine New

    | 5:15PM 11/14/2011
    For all the anti-bank anger erupting across the country, relatively few of us are actually leaving our financial institutions.

    By Catherine New

    | 1:35PM 11/07/2011
    Did Bank Transfer Day work? Over the weekend, many Americans came out to protest big banks, and while there's no hard data yet to gauge the day's impact, credit unions around the country are reporting a continuing upsurge in interest. And the protests don't appear to be fading.

    By Catherine New

    | 2:30PM 11/04/2011
    On Saturday, tens of thousands will march, protest and move their money out of big banks. But plenty of Americans haven't waited for Bank Transfer Day. For Frank Sheldon of Seattle, his journey to a credit union started in 2008 when his old bank was absorbed by J.P. Morgan Chase.

    By Matt Cropp, The Motley Fool

    | 7:00AM 11/03/2011
    Like some other recent revolutionary movements, Bank Transfer Day had its genesis on Facebook. But can this grassroots rebellion against the nickel-and-diming of the big banks actually accomplish anything, and how much will the nation's credit unions really benefit?