One of the most popular articles on the entire internet this week is a BuzzFeed post called “This Bank’s ATM Surprised Its Customers In The Most Incredibly Touching Way.” The post is about TD Bank branches in Canada celebrating “Customer Appreciation Day” by giving away gifts and prizes.
It’s all captured very dramatically in a four minute video produced
by TD Bank. A woman gets $2,000 to start a college fund for her kids. A
man gets a Blue Jays jersey and a chance to throw out a pitch at a game.
Another woman gets a bouquet of flowers, etc. etc. . .
Although it’s not shown in the video, most customers received a green
envelope with a twenty dollar bill. BuzzFeed describes the gifts as “a
life-changing surprise.”
Something you won’t learn about in the video or any of the articles
covering it: this week, a federal appeals court upheld a $67 million
verdict against TD Bank for “their complicity in disbarred South Florida
attorney Scott Rothstein’s $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme.” During the trial, Frank Spinosa, TD Bank’s former regional VP, took the Fifth 170 times. (Rothstein plead guilty to fraud and is currently serving 50 years in jail.) TD Bank was also sanctioned during the trial for “willfully” withholding relevant evidence from the plaintiffs.
And in 2011, TD Ameritrade — an American affiliate offering brokerage services — was charged by the SEC for misrepresenting the nature of their money market accounts
to customers. The SEC asserted that TD “violated the securities laws
when they mischaracterized the fund as a money market fund, as safe as
cash, or as an investment with guaranteed liquidity.” The fund, in fact,
included risky investments issued by Lehman Brothers, which became
worthless when Lehman went bankrupt. As part of a settlement, TD agreed
to refund $10 million to its customers. The action is listed on an SEC
webpage entitled “Addressing Misconduct That Lead To Or Arose From The Financial Crisis.”
Just how incredible was TD Bank’s customer appreciation day?
To put it in perspective, the bank gave away about $600,000 worth of
stuff on customer appreciation day. TD Bank, which also operates
extensively in the United States, collected over $6.2 billion in profits
in the fiscal year ending in October 2013. So the bank’s appreciation
for its customers stopped at about 0.0097 percent of its yearly profit,
or what the bank makes in about 51 minutes. The value of the Ponzi
scheme the court ruled that TD Bank was complicit in is roughly two
thousand times larger than the amount the bank spent appreciating
customers.
Of course, the gifts have no true cost to the bank. The marketing
value of over 4 million people watching a 4 minute advertisement for
your company far exceeds $600,000.
from here with links to details and video
2 comments:
I have an interesting experience about TD Bank's Appreciation Day. I went into a branch near my office at Vic Park / Sheppard in Toronto and was pleasantly surprised at being given free coffee/etc. and also was given a Tim Horton's Tim Card. I gave the card to my wife to use. She tried to use the card at a Tim Horton store in Toronto East General Hospital (TEGH) and was rudely told thatthe card has a zero balance. So basically the Tim's Card that they gave out on their Customer Appreciation day had zero balance. Not sure what to make of it.
Not sure what to make of it? - The perks of capitalism: plenty for those at the top, mostly zero for the rest of us.
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