I’m a foreigner but work for a US company. The company gave me some stock (on E*trade) which I sold, so there is some money, and I’d like to wire the money to another account, which is also in US (firstrade)
The wire took several days and charge me 25 US dollars. In my country, wire transfer between different banks is near instant and charge less than 1 US dollars.
So my question is, is it how wire transfer normally works in the USA? Or perhaps it’s because I’m a foreigner? If it’s normal, what’s the difference between US bank and other countries’?
In: Economics
In EU, your banks probably transferred via SEPA payment rail and payment cleared quickly because the payment details were reconciled to your account quickly (ie it was a common transfer between your accounts). Sepa is considered the US’s ACH equivalent and typically sent in batches, used for low-value payments, and clears 1 day. It’s cheaper for banks to send. Payments were also sent with more payment details like your name account number address etc to reconcile to your ownership of funds.
US (Fed)wires are same day and are considered “expensive” payment form because its final and irrevocable. Institutions typically use wires for high value transfers for this reason, and a retail user like yourself can get by with using ACH (typically free and 1-2 day settle). Your wire transfer probably took a few days to reconcile to your bank account because the receiving bank didn’t recognize the funds belonged to you from the payment details (ie it was the first time receiving a transfer from E*Trade for credit to your account).
Most countries have “wire” and “ACH” payment rails for high value and batch transfers, respectively. Most countries also have fast or real-time payment rails, but its adoption with banks is mixed because of implementation costs. The payment rails are also managed by different governing bodies depending on the regions. US Fed (the central bank) handles wire infrastructure vs NACHA handles ACH. In EU, ECB and EU commission handles SEPA infrastructure. Payment communication is done via SWIFT or proprietary batch methods (like ACH).
I’ve had to wire find multiple times in the last six months between law offices, my bank, my financial services company, to other individuals’ banks, etc. All of it has been essentially instant. The banks and financial services companies sometimes have time for the money to “settle” but that’s their internal whatever, not the wire transfer system itself.
Float, The longer the entities hold the transfer the more vig they make on your funds.
Speaking of “float” did you know that Starbucks holds 1.7 Billion in other peoples money in their app like a massive unregulated bank? And they owe no one anything but about 50 cents worth of coffee each time you use it. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ym7YwFq8ZuM](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ym7YwFq8ZuM)
The US has hundreds of bank, all of which fight tooth and nail against government oversight, hence trying to get them to agree on any form of common electronic interchange of money fails. Tied in with that is that there is money to be made with existing, archaic means of transfer.
So the US is stuck with an archaic, expensive form of money exchange.
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