111011111001111111011111110111110,11111 For the Second g, 0 1191N Year m a Row... ATM page 69 Michigan's #1 e s, Standards for Excellence Dealer RINKE CADILLAC 1997 Seville 513 Stio4 828884 Chrome wheels, leather lumbar pkg., heated seats, memory-personalization pkg. *449 Month E S MMUS E one m 'ayment PLU S $11672 1997 Sedan DeVille Additional $500 Lease Renewal Incentive for current Cadillac Smart Lcasecs Stk# 294670 Leather seats, chrome wheels, leather interior. S 1900 down Month E . 49 8 smARTLEAsE PLUS thle Sin gle Parnell: . $12,982 1997 Catera Stk# 164761 Leather seats, memory seats, theft deterrent system & chrome wheels. _ E 344 1.900 down 42 Min minim _one PLUS Single Payment $ 9,378 , GMAC Smartlease 24 months, 1st pymt., ref. sec. dep. equal to 1st pymt. rounded to nearest $25 increment, new plates or transrer ree, State & Lux. tax additional. Mileage limitation of 24,000 miles. 15c/mile excess charge over limitation. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end for pre determined I ICC UUG I Ucnvci y. price. To get total pymt., multiply pymt. by no. of months. "Based on GMAC SMARTLEASE 24 month one single up-front payment plus $500 ref. sec. dep., plus plates, or transfer due on delivery, sales tax plus luxury tax additional. Administration fee due on delivery. Mile limitation is 12,000 miles per year, 150 per mile excess charge over limitation. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end. 1-696 AT VAN DYKE 758-1800 If traveling west on 1-696, exit Hoover, follow Service Drive to RINKE. If traveling east on 1-696, exit Van Dyke; take to second bridge past Van Dyke over expressway to RINKE. its basis for a populist anti-big- ness and anti-bank appeal, could be an ideal springboard for an ambitious politician try- ing to make a name for himself. Detroit's radio priest Father Charles E. Coughlin bashed the banks long before he turned to Jew-baiting in the 1930s, and neither appeal hurt his ratings. But Franklin Bank's Mr. Dunn bristles at the thought of government interference. "None of us, including me, want that help from the government. It's not a good thing," he said. "One thing I'll say positively is that it speaks to the people who wonder about the credibil- ity of this kind of profitability. With the advent of these (high- er access) fees, at least half a dozen of the really huge banks in the country have announced expansions of their ATM sys- tems, which number in each bank in the thousands of ma- chines." ATMs are already in 7-11 stores, gas stations and super markets. Are there an unlimit- ed number of possible sites? "What's driving them is this great profit opportunity, that there's so much profit that they're willing to invest in thou- sands of machines," Mr. Dunn explained. "We don't need 20 banks building 2,000 more ma- chines. When that happens, there's going to be a surplus of machines, which in economics usually leads to some price corn- petition. "So I'm hopeful that, if noth- ing else happens, what we'll get is 2,000 more machines in De- troit, and you will then have ma- chines that cost 50 cents, and you will have machines that cost $1.50. Because in an ATM, the cost is primarily fixed. You've got the machine out there and you've got to pay rent every month. The incremental cost per transaction is fractions of a pen- ny. "Once you have that fixed cost out there, and you don't have enough usage of the machine, you're going to have to attract usage to it. And I don't think there's much difference between one machine or the other, so you have to attract usage with cost." ATMs are already in 7-11 stores, gas stations and supermarkets. On the current system, a bank can charge whatever it wants. They could charge 50 cents, or $10, which is what ATMs in gaming casinos do, al- though they generally have a minimum withdrawal of a $100 bill. Particularly in Detroit, and particularly on deposit boxes, the banks tend to gravitate to- ward a central number. As Mr. Dunn observed, "It is certainly an interesting phenomenon. "I'm not remotely accusing them of price fixing, because I don't believe that. But I believe they tend not to compete ag- gressively on price on the de- posit side. ,—/ "If you get NationsBank and Banc One trying to put 500 ma- chines each in Detroit where the (-- competition is high and get mar- ket share, because what you want is usage, you'll see quite a