Dynamic currency conversion at ATMs, that a new one
#1
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Joined: Feb 2005
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Dynamic currency conversion at ATMs, that a new one
I just checked my banking statement here in Japan. Ich withdrew 80.000 yen from an ATM in Osaka and was billed in USD. My Euro denominated card was charged in USD, which were then transferred into yen, loosing about 3 percent of the exchange value. Never heared of this before, so people be alert.
#3
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It was Euros to USD and USD to Yen. No chance to complain anywhere... USD to Yen took about 3 percent of the value. That conversion was done by "them" and the Euro to USD conversion appeared on my banking statement with onl‚™ a small fee, as usual.
#5
Joined: Jan 2003
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Hi L,
>I withdrew 80.000 yen from an ATM in Osaka and was billed in USD. My Euro denominated card was charged in USD, which were then transferred into yen, ...
OOOH. Sounds like some US/Japanese conspiracy to rip off Europeans.
What network does your card belong to?
What bank owned the ATM?
>I withdrew 80.000 yen from an ATM in Osaka and was billed in USD. My Euro denominated card was charged in USD, which were then transferred into yen, ...
OOOH. Sounds like some US/Japanese conspiracy to rip off Europeans.

What network does your card belong to?
What bank owned the ATM?
#6
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Its a VISA debit card. The ATM was owned by "Universal Studios Japan". That`s not a Bank anyway, but they seem to be allowed to install ATMs over here. Just another rip-off. No information given on that policy at all.
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#8
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Would they have given the information in Japanese? English? Any/all of the languages used in the Euro zone?
Standalone non-bank ATM's right here in the good old USA usually have policies/charges/ rates that do not serve the interests of the consumer (i.e., screw the user). It's the same the whole world over. Use bank ATMs only, and even then . . . .
Standalone non-bank ATM's right here in the good old USA usually have policies/charges/ rates that do not serve the interests of the consumer (i.e., screw the user). It's the same the whole world over. Use bank ATMs only, and even then . . . .
#9
Joined: Oct 2006
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Oh, yes. Now I get it. One of the most basic rules of ATM usage is to NEVER use a NON-BANK ATM, unless of course you don't care about extra or hidden fees.
Just as European banks are forbidden to add charges for any US or Canadian ATM withdrawal, non-bank ones are allowed to add just about any charges they care to.
Don't fee bad, logos, lots of tourists do that when traveling by putting their ATM card in a convenience ATM at a store or tourist attraction without looking to make sure it is a bank owned ATM. Same thing happens to them.
Just a guess here, but is Universal Studios a US company -- therefore it is logical their transactions would all go back through a US bank on their way to whatever country the ATM came from?
Just as European banks are forbidden to add charges for any US or Canadian ATM withdrawal, non-bank ones are allowed to add just about any charges they care to.
Don't fee bad, logos, lots of tourists do that when traveling by putting their ATM card in a convenience ATM at a store or tourist attraction without looking to make sure it is a bank owned ATM. Same thing happens to them.
Just a guess here, but is Universal Studios a US company -- therefore it is logical their transactions would all go back through a US bank on their way to whatever country the ATM came from?
#10
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I have heard of Universal Studios Japan, a large theme park near Osaka, but have no idea what USJ-branded ATM is. Japan is peculiar in that normal local banks' ATMs juust take domestic cards, and only a limited number of ATMs can be used with foreign cards - Visa, Master, Cirrus, Plus, Maestro etc. But those that do take them normally levy no additional charge. The kind of two-stage conversions used to take place with Visa cards around 30 years ago when all foreign withdrawals (and purchases with a credit card) were first changed into US$ and then into your billing currency, but I haven't come across one for years. It's not quite the same as DCC in which the ATM operator do the conversion upfront directly into your billing currency.
I have come across DCC at ATMs outside a bank branch in Spain this summer. It was definitely a bank ATM - not a private one, and as I tried to withdraw euro using my UK card, screen message appeared giving me a choice of being billed in sterling (at a rate around 3% worse than interbank) or in euro. I chose euro and the transaction went through in the normal way, avoiding DCC.
I have come across DCC at ATMs outside a bank branch in Spain this summer. It was definitely a bank ATM - not a private one, and as I tried to withdraw euro using my UK card, screen message appeared giving me a choice of being billed in sterling (at a rate around 3% worse than interbank) or in euro. I chose euro and the transaction went through in the normal way, avoiding DCC.
#12
Joined: Oct 2006
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Huh? Who said it was? I sure hope you're not referring to a phrase of mine "Just as European banks. . ." That sure didn't mean to imply that Japan was in Europe! It did, however, suggest that in any foreign country (or continent), non bank ATMs may not follow the same rules as Bank ATMs.
#15

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I'm not going to google to find out, but I would assume that is an American company, right? Owned by Universal Studios in the US? So the USD is their accounting currency and it doesn't seem that surprising to me, in that case. I had one hotel in a certain European country only quote me rates in euros, for example, even though that wasn't the currency used there because the company was Austrian, and they told me that was the only way they set their rates. Maybe not the perfect analogy, but I wouldn't ever use a private ATM unless desperate, anyway.
#17
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A quick google tells me that JCB International is not a bank at all but is a "payment services" brand name. They issue credit cards of their own as well In other words it sounds like they are a service set up to make money on changing money or receiving and paying out payments for goods and services. Think of PayPal as having a special card and also having ATM machines that will dispense cash when you insert a Visa or MasterCard. Ouch.
#18
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Universal Studios is a huge entertainment complex in Burbank, California.
NeoPatrick: <i>Oh, yes. Now I get it. One of the most basic rules of ATM usage is to NEVER use a NON-BANK ATM, </i>
Right on.
Even worse, there have been reports in the USA that some of the non-bank ATMs are set up to steal your account number and PIN. If you see an ATM in Slick's Snack Shop do not use it. Remember, unlike credit cards, most debit cards have no max on fraud. Your account can be cleaned out.
#20
Joined: Oct 2006
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logos, I don't know what it's like in Germany, but here in the states there are an increasing number of ATMs located in all kinds of places -- groceries, convenience stores, casinos, inside malls, etc. They mainly have official sounding names (not unlike your JCB International). I suppose the name is planned to add confidence to the person sticking his card in the machine. But once you do that anything can happen. Some will have "bank" sounding names like -- Bank-o-matic or Mini Bank Center. Here, at least they usually tell you on the screen what they might charge you, but I'm not sure that's always the case. Once you add in a foreign currency exhange with one of these machines -- anything can happen.

