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Cheque clearing

Cheque clearing (or check clearing in American English) or bank clearance is the process of moving cash (or its equivalent) from the bank on which a cheque is drawn to the bank in which it was deposited, usually accompanied by the movement of the cheque to the paying bank, either in the traditional physical paper form or digitally under a cheque truncation system. This process is called the clearing cycle and normally results in a credit to the account at the bank of deposit, and an equivalent debit to the account at the bank on which it was drawn, with a corresponding adjustment of accounts of the banks themselves. If there are not enough funds in the account when the cheque arrived at the issuing bank, the cheque would be returned as a dishonoured cheque marked as non-sufficient funds.[1]

History edit

England edit

Cheques came into use in England in the 1600s. The person to whom the cheque was drawn (the "payee") could go to the drawer's bank ("the issuing bank") and present the cheque and receive payment. Before payment, the drawer's bank would check that the cheque was in order – e.g., that the signature was that of the drawer, that the date was valid, that the cheque was properly set out, etc. Alternatively, the payee could deposit the cheque with their own bank who would arrange for it to be presented to the issuing bank for payment.

Until around 1770 an informal exchange of cheques took place between London banks. Clerks of each bank visited all of the other banks to exchange cheques, whilst keeping a tally of balances between them until they settled with each other. Daily cheque clearings began around 1770 when the bank clerks met at the Six Bells, a tavern in Dove Court off Lombard Street in the City of London, to exchange all their cheques in one place and settle the balances in cash.[2] The first organization for clearing cheques was the Bankers' Clearing House, established in London in the early 19th century. It was founded by Lubbock's Bank on Lombard Street in a single room where clerks for London banks met each day to exchange cheques and settle accounts.[3] In 1832 Charles Babbage, who was a friend of a founder of the Clearing House, published a book on mass production, The Economy of Machinery and Manufactures, in which Babbage described how the Clearing House operated:[4]

In a large room in Lombard Street, about 30 clerks from the several London bankers take their stations, in alphabetical order, at desks placed round the room; each having a small open box by his side, and the name of the firm to which he belongs in large characters on the wall above his head. From time to time other clerks from every [banking] house enter the room, and passing along, drop into the box the cheques due by that firm to the house from which this distributor is sent.

Beginning at 5 pm, a clerk for each debtor bank was called to go to a rostrum to pay in cash to the Inspector of the Clearing House the amount their bank owed to other banks on that day. After all of the debtor clerks had paid the Inspector, each clerk for the banks that were owed money went to the rostrum to collect the money owed to their bank. The total cash paid by the debtor banks equaled the total cash collected by the creditor banks. On the rare occasions when the total paid did not equal the total collected, other clerks working for the Inspector would examine the paper trail of documents so that the numerical errors could be found and corrected.[5]

During the Second World War, the Bankers' Clearing House was evacuated to the Trentham Estate in Staffordshire.

The clearing operation is now operated by the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company, the United Kingdom's clearing house.

United States edit

The Suffolk Bank opened the first clearing house in 1818 in Boston, and one was incorporated in New York in 1850.[6] A clearing house for bankers was opened in Philadelphia in 1858.[7]

The Americans improved on the British check clearing system and opened a bankers' clearing house, the Clearing House Association, in the Bank of New York on Wall Street, New York in 1853. Instead of the slow London procedure in which each bank clerk, one at a time, stepped up to an Inspector's rostrum, in the New York procedure two bank clerks from each bank all worked simultaneously. One clerk from each bank sat inside a 70 foot long oval table, while the second clerk from each bank stood outside the table facing the other clerk from the same bank.[8] Each of the outside clerks carried a file box. When the manager signaled, all of the outside clerks stepped one position to the left, to face the next seated clerks. If a seated clerk represented a bank to which money was owed or from which money was receivable, the net amount of cash would change hands, along with checks and paper documents.

Thus several such transactions could be conducted simultaneously, across the oval table. When the manager signaled again, this procedure was repeated, so that after about six minutes, the clerks had completed all their assigned transactions and were back to their starting locations, and holding exactly the amount of cash their papers said they should be holding. Clerks were fined if they made errors and the amount of the fine increased rapidly as time passed.[8][9]

The Federal Reserve System check clearing system was established in the United States in 1913 to act as a central, well-capitalized clearing house. The objective was to prevent the occasional panics, where banks would refuse to accept cheques drawn on banks whose solvency was uncertain. The Federal Reserve can physically accept and transport cheques.[10]

Operation edit

When a bank customer deposits a cheque, which may be drawn on any bank, the bank would credit the depositor's account with the amount of the cheque. However, the amount so credited is "not available" to the depositor until the cheque has been cleared by the paying bank.

For cheques drawn on a customer of the same bank, the bank would, usually on the next business day, ensure that the cheque is in order and debit the account of the drawer, and the cheque would be taken to have been cleared. A cheque is not in order if, for example, the date is invalid, the drawer's signature is not like the one held by the bank, the wrong number of signatories have signed the cheque, etc. There must also be sufficient cleared funds in the account before the drawer's account is debited.

Cheques drawn on another bank (termed "the issuing bank" or "paying bank") need to be "presented" to the other bank before the deposit bank receives payment to cover the amount credited to the depositor's account. In the absence of the paying bank notifying the deposit bank of the "special clearance" of the cheque, for example, following a request from the deposit bank, the funds become available after the passing of an agreed "clearance period", commonly three business days, when the depositor's account is described as comprising "cleared funds".

If the cheque is not in order, or if there are not enough cleared funds in the account when the cheque arrived at the issuing bank, the cheque would be returned as a dishonoured cheque marked appropriately, such as "non-sufficient funds" or "present again".[1]

All banks might have clerks to take cheques drawn on other banks to those banks, and wait for payment. Clearing houses were set up to streamline the process by collected all cheques drawn on other banks, and collecting payment from those banks for the total to be cleared.[11]

Automation edit

Cheque processing edit

As volume grew, more efficient sorting methods were developed. Approaching the 1940s, two popular methods were Sort-A-Matic and Top Tab Key. Sort-A-Matic involved a set of metal or leather dividers numbered 00 through 99, operated to implement a form of radix sort: cheques would be sorted by hand according to the first two digits. The cheques would be removed, and each stack sorted into the same dividers by the third and fourth digits. The process was iterated until the cheques were completely sorted. Top Tab Key used a physical mechanism: holes were punched in the top of each cheque representing the values of various digits, and metal keys used to physically move them until sorted.

Magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) was developed and commercialized in the 1950s, and enabled computers to reliably read routing and account numbers and automated the sorting of paper cheques.

Electronic clearance edit

Cheque truncation was introduced in various countries, starting in the 1990s, to allow electronic images to be made of physical cheques, for electronic clearance.

The legalisation of remote deposit made it possible for businesses and bank customers to deposit cheques without delivering them to their own banks. In the process, a depositor would make an image of the physical cheque with a smartphone or other device, and attach the image to a deposit. The deposit bank would use the cheque image in the normal electronic clearance process, though in this case MICR data would not be available.

Electronic payments edit

As the automation of cheque processing improved, fully electronic payment systems obviated the need for paper. Two methods were developed: the Automated Clearing House (ACH) for smaller payments which complete in two business days, and Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS) for larger value same day payments.

"In 1974, ACH Associations from California, Georgia, New England and the Upper Midwest region formed NACHA within the American Bankers Association. Following that, the initial ACH rules were approved, which made Prearranged Payment and Deposit or Direct Deposit, the first ACH transaction type, effective. By 1978, it was possible for two financial institutions located anywhere in the U.S. to exchange ACH payments under a common set of rules and procedures."[12]
"The automated clearinghouse (ACH) system is a nationwide network through which depository institutions send each other batches of electronic credit and debit transfers. The direct deposit of payroll, social security benefits, and tax refunds are typical examples of ACH credit transfers. The direct debiting of mortgages and utility bills are typical examples of ACH debit transfers. While the ACH network was originally used to process mostly recurring payments, the network is today being used extensively to process one-time debit transfers, such as converted check payments and payments made over the telephone and Internet."[13]

"CHIPS is the largest private-sector U.S.-dollar funds-transfer system in the world, clearing and settling an average of $1.5 trillion in cross-border and domestic payments daily. It combines best of two types of payments systems: the liquidity efficiency of a netting system and the intraday finality of a RTGS."[14] Organized in 1970 by eight New York banks who were members of the Federal Reserve system, CHIPS competes with the Federal Reserve for high value payments. Until 2001, CHIPS settled at the end of the day, but now provides intraday payment finality through a real-time system.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Business Directory. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014. Retrieved August 21, 2014.
  2. ^ Nevin and Davis, The London Clearing Banks, (1970) pp.40-41
  3. ^ Ingram 1911, p. 477.
  4. ^ Campbell-Kelly, page 20
  5. ^ Matthews, Philip W (1921). Bankers' clearing house: what it is and what it does. Banker's Library. Pitman.
  6. ^ U.S. House of Representatives Banking and Currency Reform Hearings of the Subcommittee of the Committee on Banking and Currency, January 7, 1913, Part 1, Statements of A. Barton Hepburn, Victor Morawetz and Paul M. Warburg (1913) Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, p.388
  7. ^ Blanchard, C. (Ed.) The Progressive Men of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Vol. 2) (1900) Logansport, Indiana: A.W. Bowen & Co., p. 873
  8. ^ a b Campbell-Kelly, page 21
  9. ^ Campbell-Kelly, Martin (October 2010). "Victorian Data Processing". Communications of the ACM. 53 (10): 19–21. doi:10.1145/1831407.1831417. S2CID 30255647.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-03-25. Retrieved 2013-03-27.
  11. ^ Ingram 1911, pp. 476–477.
  12. ^ "The Evollution of a Strong ACH Network". NACHA. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  13. ^ "Automated Clearing House Services". The Federal Reserve. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  14. ^ . The Clearing House Association. Archived from the original on 2017-03-20. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  15. ^ "CHIPS". Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Retrieved 5 April 2017.

cheque, clearing, check, clearing, american, english, bank, clearance, process, moving, cash, equivalent, from, bank, which, cheque, drawn, bank, which, deposited, usually, accompanied, movement, cheque, paying, bank, either, traditional, physical, paper, form. Cheque clearing or check clearing in American English or bank clearance is the process of moving cash or its equivalent from the bank on which a cheque is drawn to the bank in which it was deposited usually accompanied by the movement of the cheque to the paying bank either in the traditional physical paper form or digitally under a cheque truncation system This process is called the clearing cycle and normally results in a credit to the account at the bank of deposit and an equivalent debit to the account at the bank on which it was drawn with a corresponding adjustment of accounts of the banks themselves If there are not enough funds in the account when the cheque arrived at the issuing bank the cheque would be returned as a dishonoured cheque marked as non sufficient funds 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 England 1 2 United States 2 Operation 3 Automation 3 1 Cheque processing 3 2 Electronic clearance 3 3 Electronic payments 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory editEngland edit Cheques came into use in England in the 1600s The person to whom the cheque was drawn the payee could go to the drawer s bank the issuing bank and present the cheque and receive payment Before payment the drawer s bank would check that the cheque was in order e g that the signature was that of the drawer that the date was valid that the cheque was properly set out etc Alternatively the payee could deposit the cheque with their own bank who would arrange for it to be presented to the issuing bank for payment Until around 1770 an informal exchange of cheques took place between London banks Clerks of each bank visited all of the other banks to exchange cheques whilst keeping a tally of balances between them until they settled with each other Daily cheque clearings began around 1770 when the bank clerks met at the Six Bells a tavern in Dove Court off Lombard Street in the City of London to exchange all their cheques in one place and settle the balances in cash 2 The first organization for clearing cheques was the Bankers Clearing House established in London in the early 19th century It was founded by Lubbock s Bank on Lombard Street in a single room where clerks for London banks met each day to exchange cheques and settle accounts 3 In 1832 Charles Babbage who was a friend of a founder of the Clearing House published a book on mass production The Economy of Machinery and Manufactures in which Babbage described how the Clearing House operated 4 In a large room in Lombard Street about 30 clerks from the several London bankers take their stations in alphabetical order at desks placed round the room each having a small open box by his side and the name of the firm to which he belongs in large characters on the wall above his head From time to time other clerks from every banking house enter the room and passing along drop into the box the cheques due by that firm to the house from which this distributor is sent Beginning at 5 pm a clerk for each debtor bank was called to go to a rostrum to pay in cash to the Inspector of the Clearing House the amount their bank owed to other banks on that day After all of the debtor clerks had paid the Inspector each clerk for the banks that were owed money went to the rostrum to collect the money owed to their bank The total cash paid by the debtor banks equaled the total cash collected by the creditor banks On the rare occasions when the total paid did not equal the total collected other clerks working for the Inspector would examine the paper trail of documents so that the numerical errors could be found and corrected 5 During the Second World War the Bankers Clearing House was evacuated to the Trentham Estate in Staffordshire The clearing operation is now operated by the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company the United Kingdom s clearing house United States edit The Suffolk Bank opened the first clearing house in 1818 in Boston and one was incorporated in New York in 1850 6 A clearing house for bankers was opened in Philadelphia in 1858 7 The Americans improved on the British check clearing system and opened a bankers clearing house the Clearing House Association in the Bank of New York on Wall Street New York in 1853 Instead of the slow London procedure in which each bank clerk one at a time stepped up to an Inspector s rostrum in the New York procedure two bank clerks from each bank all worked simultaneously One clerk from each bank sat inside a 70 foot long oval table while the second clerk from each bank stood outside the table facing the other clerk from the same bank 8 Each of the outside clerks carried a file box When the manager signaled all of the outside clerks stepped one position to the left to face the next seated clerks If a seated clerk represented a bank to which money was owed or from which money was receivable the net amount of cash would change hands along with checks and paper documents Thus several such transactions could be conducted simultaneously across the oval table When the manager signaled again this procedure was repeated so that after about six minutes the clerks had completed all their assigned transactions and were back to their starting locations and holding exactly the amount of cash their papers said they should be holding Clerks were fined if they made errors and the amount of the fine increased rapidly as time passed 8 9 The Federal Reserve System check clearing system was established in the United States in 1913 to act as a central well capitalized clearing house The objective was to prevent the occasional panics where banks would refuse to accept cheques drawn on banks whose solvency was uncertain The Federal Reserve can physically accept and transport cheques 10 Operation editWhen a bank customer deposits a cheque which may be drawn on any bank the bank would credit the depositor s account with the amount of the cheque However the amount so credited is not available to the depositor until the cheque has been cleared by the paying bank For cheques drawn on a customer of the same bank the bank would usually on the next business day ensure that the cheque is in order and debit the account of the drawer and the cheque would be taken to have been cleared A cheque is not in order if for example the date is invalid the drawer s signature is not like the one held by the bank the wrong number of signatories have signed the cheque etc There must also be sufficient cleared funds in the account before the drawer s account is debited Cheques drawn on another bank termed the issuing bank or paying bank need to be presented to the other bank before the deposit bank receives payment to cover the amount credited to the depositor s account In the absence of the paying bank notifying the deposit bank of the special clearance of the cheque for example following a request from the deposit bank the funds become available after the passing of an agreed clearance period commonly three business days when the depositor s account is described as comprising cleared funds If the cheque is not in order or if there are not enough cleared funds in the account when the cheque arrived at the issuing bank the cheque would be returned as a dishonoured cheque marked appropriately such as non sufficient funds or present again 1 All banks might have clerks to take cheques drawn on other banks to those banks and wait for payment Clearing houses were set up to streamline the process by collected all cheques drawn on other banks and collecting payment from those banks for the total to be cleared 11 Automation editCheque processing edit As volume grew more efficient sorting methods were developed Approaching the 1940s two popular methods were Sort A Matic and Top Tab Key Sort A Matic involved a set of metal or leather dividers numbered 00 through 99 operated to implement a form of radix sort cheques would be sorted by hand according to the first two digits The cheques would be removed and each stack sorted into the same dividers by the third and fourth digits The process was iterated until the cheques were completely sorted Top Tab Key used a physical mechanism holes were punched in the top of each cheque representing the values of various digits and metal keys used to physically move them until sorted Magnetic ink character recognition MICR was developed and commercialized in the 1950s and enabled computers to reliably read routing and account numbers and automated the sorting of paper cheques Electronic clearance edit See also Substitute check in United States Cheque truncation was introduced in various countries starting in the 1990s to allow electronic images to be made of physical cheques for electronic clearance The legalisation of remote deposit made it possible for businesses and bank customers to deposit cheques without delivering them to their own banks In the process a depositor would make an image of the physical cheque with a smartphone or other device and attach the image to a deposit The deposit bank would use the cheque image in the normal electronic clearance process though in this case MICR data would not be available Electronic payments edit As the automation of cheque processing improved fully electronic payment systems obviated the need for paper Two methods were developed the Automated Clearing House ACH for smaller payments which complete in two business days and Clearing House Interbank Payments System CHIPS for larger value same day payments In 1974 ACH Associations from California Georgia New England and the Upper Midwest region formed NACHA within the American Bankers Association Following that the initial ACH rules were approved which made Prearranged Payment and Deposit or Direct Deposit the first ACH transaction type effective By 1978 it was possible for two financial institutions located anywhere in the U S to exchange ACH payments under a common set of rules and procedures 12 The automated clearinghouse ACH system is a nationwide network through which depository institutions send each other batches of electronic credit and debit transfers The direct deposit of payroll social security benefits and tax refunds are typical examples of ACH credit transfers The direct debiting of mortgages and utility bills are typical examples of ACH debit transfers While the ACH network was originally used to process mostly recurring payments the network is today being used extensively to process one time debit transfers such as converted check payments and payments made over the telephone and Internet 13 CHIPS is the largest private sector U S dollar funds transfer system in the world clearing and settling an average of 1 5 trillion in cross border and domestic payments daily It combines best of two types of payments systems the liquidity efficiency of a netting system and the intraday finality of a RTGS 14 Organized in 1970 by eight New York banks who were members of the Federal Reserve system CHIPS competes with the Federal Reserve for high value payments Until 2001 CHIPS settled at the end of the day but now provides intraday payment finality through a real time system 15 See also editAutomated clearing house ACH CHAPS the UK equivalent of CHIPS Electronic Benefit Transfer Electronic Check Council ECC Electronic funds transfer EFT Fedwire NACHA the US national ACH network Payment system Substitute checkReferences edit a b what is check clearing definition Business Directory Archived from the original on August 21 2014 Retrieved August 21 2014 Nevin and Davis The London Clearing Banks 1970 pp 40 41 Ingram 1911 p 477 Campbell Kelly page 20 Matthews Philip W 1921 Bankers clearing house what it is and what it does Banker s Library Pitman U S House of Representatives Banking and Currency Reform Hearings of the Subcommittee of the Committee on Banking and Currency January 7 1913 Part 1 Statements of A Barton Hepburn Victor Morawetz and Paul M Warburg 1913 Washington D C Government Printing Office p 388 Blanchard C Ed The Progressive Men of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Vol 2 1900 Logansport Indiana A W Bowen amp Co p 873 a b Campbell Kelly page 21 Campbell Kelly Martin October 2010 Victorian Data Processing Communications of the ACM 53 10 19 21 doi 10 1145 1831407 1831417 S2CID 30255647 Check Services Offerings Archived from the original on 2013 03 25 Retrieved 2013 03 27 Ingram 1911 pp 476 477 The Evollution of a Strong ACH Network NACHA Retrieved 5 April 2017 Automated Clearing House Services The Federal Reserve Retrieved 5 April 2017 CHIPS The Clearing House Association Archived from the original on 2017 03 20 Retrieved 5 April 2017 CHIPS Federal Reserve Bank of New York Retrieved 5 April 2017 Ingram Thomas Allan 1911 Clearing house In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 476 478 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cheque clearing amp oldid 1141399459 England, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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