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RBC agent pushes unnecessary chequing account on customer, comments on his accent

A Royal Bank customer says he was pressured into signing up for a chequing account he didnt need. His experience mirrors the findings of a report on the big six banks, years in the making, after Go Public exposed high-pressure environments leading to inappropriate sales.

Canadas big banks more likely to upsell racialized, Indigenous customers, report suggests

Hardik Patel, seen outside Royal Bank's head office in Toronto, says one of the bank's representatives tried to pressure him into opening an unnecessary chequing account. (Submitted by Hardik Patel)

Hardik Patel knew something wasn't right when a Royal Bank customer service agent told him there was only one way he could access his online RRSP account he'd have to open a chequing account, with monthly fees.

He knew that wasn't true. Patel, who immigrated to Toronto from India four years ago, hadalready accessed his RRSP many times.

Frustrated that he was being sold a product he didn't need, he asked to speak with a manager.

Patel wanted assurances that RBC staff wouldn't try to upsell someone else, and also objected to a remark the agent had made about his accent.

"They were pushing me to buy something I didn't need," he told Go Public.

WATCH | Upsellingto bank customers:

Canadas big banks more likely to upsell racialized customers, report suggests | Go Public

2 years ago
Duration 2:05
A Royal Bank customer says he was pressured into signing up for a chequing account he didnt need. His experience mirrors the findings of a report on Canada's big six banks after Go Public exposed high-pressure environments leading to inappropriate sales.

Patel's experience mirrors some findings of a recent report, years in the making, from the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) which suggestsracializedbank customers are pitched inappropriatefinancial products more often than other customers.

The report was prompted in part by a Go Public investigation into high-pressure sales tactics inside the big banks.

  • Got a story you want investigated? Contact Erica and theGo Public team

Five years ago, in the wake of a story featuring three TD Bank employees who spokeabout what they felt was unethical sales pressure, more than 3,000current and former employeesat Canada's biggest banks told Go Public they, too, were under immense pressure to sell products and services that people didn't need and often couldn't afford.

They described feeling desperate to meet ever-increasing sales targets and being under pressure to increase customers' lines of credit, push credit cards with high annual fees and secretly open chequing accounts for customers, among other things.

The FCAC conducted a nationalreview in 2018, which found afocus on sales targets was increasing the risk of banks placing sales ahead of the interests of customers.

It then hireda private company to send mystery shoppers into 712 branches of the big six banks in every provinceat the end of 2019.

The resulting report says they tested how frontline employees at Bank of Montreal, CIBC, Scotiabank, National, TD Bank and RBCsell products and services, and found"concerning" experiencesinvolving inappropriate recommendations, unnecessary product pitches and confusing communication.

Five years ago, more than 3,000 current and former employeesat Canada's biggest banks told Go Public they were under immense pressure to sell products and services that people didn't need and often couldn't afford. (Dillon Hodgin/CBC)

"The mystery shopping exercise revealed sales experiences that raise concerns," said Judith Robertson, commissioner of the FCACin a news release.

An expert in business and economics says she's heartened the banking watchdog detected those red flags.

"They have every right to be concerned about this kind of sales culture," said Caroline Hossein, an associate professor of global development at the University of Toronto Scarborough.

The reportalso says undercover shoppers who identified as racialized or Indigenous were pitched financial products that were inappropriate more often than other customers and experienced unsolicited product pitches.

"This is not a shocking surprise to anyone who has been following the news," saidHossein.

"There is ... systemic racism occurring in Canada's commercial banking system."

Pushed 'premium' credit cards

During Go Public's investigation in 2017, all the big banks repeatedly denied they usedhigh-pressure sales tactics and said that customers always came first.

But the mystery shopper investigation found that nearly a third of all credit card recommendations were for "premium" credit cards which often have hefty annual fees and typically require a minimum individual or household income.

Yet in 80 per cent of cases, bank staff promoting them never asked shoppers about their income.

Questions about spending habits were few and far between, too. Only 16 per cent of employees who recommended a premium card asked about a shopper's spending habits, said the report.

According to Hossein, that's because those details would affect an employee's ability to push a sale, should they discover the individual isn't a good candidate for the product.

"Once they go down that line, then they have the obligation not to offer those product lines," she said.

WATCH | Alternative banking options:

An alternative banking option

2 years ago
Duration 1:56
Caroline Hossein, an expert in business and economics, on why she says commercial bank culture will be hard to change and where Canadians could turn instead.

FCAC says in the reportbanks "have a responsibility to ensure frontline staff make recommendations that meet consumers' needs."

Sales targets and incentives "should not conflict with these objectives," it said.

'Sell, sell, sell'

Undercover shoppers who identified as racialized or Indigenous were offered overdraft protection, which involves monthly fees and accrues interest,at nearly twice the rate as other shoppers.

Theywere also more than three times as likely to be offered balance protection insurance which coversthe minimum monthly payment on a card's outstanding balance, but which comes with high fees and so many exclusions it's often difficult to make a claim.

Bank employees are "making this assumption that Black, racialized and Indigenous people are more likely to default or overextend themselves," saidHossein.

The regulator considered the findings troublesome, too, saying in the report that "more can be done by banks to ensure that the demographic groups at higher risk are protected from experiencing concerning sales practices."

The report also says banks have a responsibility "to ensure frontline staff are effectively trained,"citing instances when employees lacked the proper knowledge to deal with shoppers.

Hosseinsays that wrongly puts the blame on the staff.

"What [the FCAC]should be thinking about is why is it that there is so much pressure for them to sell, sell, sell, that it actually compromises the bank's integrity and commitment to taking care of the financial health of Canadians?" said Hossein.

Shestudies and advocates for banking alternatives such as credit unions, that are member-owned and not mandated to make a profit.

The findings also failed to surpriseDuff Conacher, co-founder of Democracy Watch, a non-profit citizen advocacy organization that focuses on government and corporate accountability.

"The FCAC could have discovered [racial discrimination] 20 years ago if they had done a mystery shopper survey," he said.

He notes U.S. banks have tracked racial discrimination for years.

"For 40 years they have required banks to track and disclose their service lending and investment records by race, gender, income level and neighbourhood, and disclose the data, which proves discrimination again and again," he said.

"They're required to take corrective action. And we [Canada] are decades behind."

The Canadian Bankers Association did not respond to Go Public's questions about the survey's findings, but in a statementsaid bankshave "a deep commitment to high ethical standards" and have worked hard to earn the confidence of millions of Canadians.

Agent's remark 'inappropriate'

Patel escalated his complaint at RBCwhich confirmed, in aletter, he should not have been told he had to open a new chequing account and that "appropriate coaching" had since taken place.

"I think they should have said more about what they'll do to prevent this from happening to someone else," said Patel.

When Patel first complained to RBC, the bank said in a letter it regretted the 'unfortunate incident.' (Submitted by Hardik Patel)

The letter also said that management had reviewed his call with customer service and determined that the agent's comment regarding Patel's accent "was inappropriate."

RBC said it regretted the incident and that "proper measures" had been taken to prevent anything similar in the future but didn't spell out those measures.

"What [the RBC agent] said was racist," said Patel. "I want this to stop. So tell me what actions you're going to take to make sure more people don't get treated this way."

Dissatisfied, Patel filed a complaint with the Human Rights Commission. Last month, he and RBC reached a settlement before his case was heard.

He's not permitted to discuss the details or comment on what happened, because the bank required that he sign a non-disclosure agreement.

In a recent statement to Go Public, an RBC spokesperson said, "Discrimination in any form is against everything we stand for and is not tolerated."

It also said that the bank continues to provide employee training "to deepen awareness of the concepts of diversity, bias and racism."

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With files from Kimberly Ivany