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Created By: Laura Kinchen.  State and federal regulations govern the banking industry  3 key legislative acts mainly affect the check processing system.

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Presentation on theme: "Created By: Laura Kinchen.  State and federal regulations govern the banking industry  3 key legislative acts mainly affect the check processing system."— Presentation transcript:

1 Created By: Laura Kinchen

2  State and federal regulations govern the banking industry  3 key legislative acts mainly affect the check processing system

3  Federal Reserve Act of 1913  Uniform Commercial Code of 1958  Expedited Funds Availability Act of 1987

4  it directs and controls the banking system,  helps with communication,  enforces regulations,  encourages standardization

5 Banks provide regular and special printed check forms. These checks display a series of numbers printed in magnetic ink that make it possible for computers to process the checks quickly and accurately.

6

7  A check is a draft drawn on a bank and payable on demand.  Drawer : person who writes the check  Drawee : bank ordered to pay the money  Payee : person the check is made out to

8 DRAWER PAYEE B NATIONAL BANK A NATIONAL BANK FEDERAL RESERVE (or other intermediary) 1 8 2 7 6 5b 5a 3 4

9  Scenario: You write a check for $113.72 for this month’s cell phone bill (Verizon). › You are the drawer or maker of the check. › The cell phone company (Verizon) is the payee › Your bank, A National Bank, is the drawee. Beginning

10  The cell phone company deposits your check in its account at B National Bank.  If the drawer (you) and the payee (Verizon) have the same bank, that bank handles it in-house. › ***this happens about 30% of the time and the process ends here  If the banks are different, the processing continues. Step 2

11  B National Bank puts a magnetic code on your check showing the dollar amount › Then sends to Federal Reserve or other intermediary › B National Bank has not credited Verizon for the $113.72 because the check has not cleared. Step 3

12  Check is then sorted › Bank ID and dollar amount is read from magnetic code  Federal Reserve clears about 1/3 of nation’s checks. Step 4

13  Federal Reserve or intermediary credits B National Bank $113.72 in its Federal Reserve account › All financial institutions using the Fed to clear checks has an account with it.  Your check is then sent to your bank, A National Bank  B National Bank has then been credited with the $113.72 › A National Bank has not paid out anything yet.  For this brief period both banks count the same funds, which are called float  Float distorts money supply and reserve figures Step 5

14  A National Bank pays the Federal Reserve $113.72 and debits your account $113.72.  If your account doesn’t have $113.72 in it, the check is returned unpaid to B National Bank, and ultimately Verizon. › Penalties may be applied by the bank as well as Verizon Step 6

15  The canceled check is returned to you › Some banks now send an image of the check or a transaction summary with your bank statement instead of the actual check.  Sending back the actual check is declining because it costs more money Step 7

16  B National Bank credits Verizon’s account for $113.72. › Sometime this credit can happen earlier in the process depending on B National Bank’s deposit policies. End

17  Process usually take 2 – 5 days  Banks are required to make a depositor’s funds available within 5 days


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