Products & Services

 
Account Analysis
The Account Analysis service determines the account balance required to avoid service charges, based on the account’s activity level. 
If the average balance in the account is equal or greater than the required to compensate for the expenses incurred for the services provided, the account will not be charged. However, if the average balance in the account is lower than the required to compensate for the expenses incurred for the services provided, the account will be charged.
The interest rate applied to the average balance (Net Investable Funds) is pegged to the prevailing Federal Reserve Discount Rate. The cost applied to each activity is published on PNB's Products & Services Brochure, and is specified on the account statement when the account is on analysis.
When is an account placed in Account Analysis?

1. When a corporate/correspondent bank requests availability of funds on its deposits before PNB's customary holds. This change is subject to approval by the Bank.
Types of availability: (i) 24 hours; (ii) 48 hours; (iii) 72 hours.

2. When a personal/corporate account has a significant volume of transactions through the account that merits to be placed in account analysis.

3. When PNB provides special services that are not recorded by the system automatically, but need its costs added normally.

The example below illustrates the analysis in a simplified way assuming the following:

Example 1:

Average available balance:

$100,000.00

Cost per check:

$0.20

Cost per deposit:

$0.10

Interest rate applied to balance:

5% per annum

Number of checks paid:

120

Number of deposits made:

50

The analysis will be as follows:

  Cost not charged Income not paid
US$100,000 @ 5% per annum:   $416.67

120 checks x $0.20:

$24
50 deposits x $0.10: $5
Total Cost: $29

 

The average available balance required to compensate for the cost not charged ($29) is $6,954.44. In this example, the account has a larger balance than the minimum required, then the account will not be charged any service fee. As you can see, the income not paid is larger than the cost not charged.

 

Example 2:

Average available balance:

$3,000

Cost per check:

$0.20

Cost per deposit:

$0.10

Interest rate applied to balance:

5% per annum
Number of checks paid: 120
Number of deposits made: 50

The analysis will be as follows:

  Cost not charged Income not paid
US$100,000 @ 5% per annum:   $12.50

120 checks x $0.20:

$24
50 deposits x $0.10: $5
Total Cost: $29

 

The minimum balance required to compensate for the cost not charged ($29) is $6,954.44. However, the average balance on the account is $3,000 for the month, therefore, the account will be charged $16.50 (the difference between the income not paid and the cost not charged).

The concepts used for this analysis are clear. On a monthly basis, the customer will receive the Account Analysis, together with the account statement, indicating the unitary cost and a detail of the activities on the account.
In reality, the analysis is more sophisticated than these two simple examples, in the sense that other concepts are included:

1. The average available balance that is used to calculate the income not paid includes the following calculation:

To calculate the Income Not Paid:
To the Average Current Balance during the month, Deduct Average Uncollected Funds during the month.
Deduct Reserve requirements by the Federal Reserve = Net Investable Funds.

To calculate the Income Not Paid, apply the interest rate to the Investable Funds.

2. Other considerations have to be contemplated to the cost analysis:

To the Cost Not Charged
Add all interests that have been actually paid to the account
Add any other cost that have not been included in the Detail of Cost
Deduct all fees actually collected from the account.
= Net Cost

The Net Cost could result in a positive or negative value. If the Net Cost is negative, then this amount should be added to the Income Not Paid. On the other hand, if the Net Cost is positive, this total is deducted from the Income Not Paid.

If the end result is a Net Loss, the account is charged for this amount or, if it results in a Net Earning, nothing is charged to the account.

Please contact us for more information, or to apply for this service.


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