Washington Mutual
No, JP Morgan Chase acquired Bank One in 2004. Bank of America is a competitor.
Chase Bank offer many services for its customers. A few are online and mobile banking, and auto loans. For auto loans, chase might be able to lend you some money so that you can buy the car that you want.
cash the check and buy a new car. you dont have to buy a car with that money but i recomend it
No, banks do not buy old coins. However, there are a lot of coin dealers and jewelry stores that will buy old coins. There are also private collectors of older coins who will purchase them too.
No.
Washington Mutual
Best Buy does not own it's own bank. They use the services of Household Bank and Chase for their Credit Cards.
No, JP Morgan Chase acquired Bank One in 2004. Bank of America is a competitor.
At any bank, and some larger shops have exchanges in them.
Chase Bank offer many services for its customers. A few are online and mobile banking, and auto loans. For auto loans, chase might be able to lend you some money so that you can buy the car that you want.
One could simply visit every major Forex website to buy currency. Another option would be going to a bank or credit company's website and purchasing it there.
Both of these terms, relative to currency, are made up by scammers convincing people to buy currencies like Iraqi Dinar or Viet Namese Dong with the idea that they are bout to be "revalued" to some huge amount. Of course the exchnage rate for a pegged currecny (one where the central bank, directly or through a downstream bank, is on one side or ther other of nearly all exchnages) can be changed at any time. But the rate is constrained by the ratio of the money supply in the country (the liabilites of the central bank) to the central banks foreign reserves that back the currency (their assets). This limit (about 15% at this time for Iraq) is typically vastly less then the "RV" claims (100,000%) of the scammers pushing people to buy physcal currency at inflated prices (often 20% above the official central bank rate).
No, definitely did not. Capital recently purchased Chevy Chase Bank
The centeral bank is not allowed to just print money and go buy their morning coffee with it. They have to buy bonds if they want to inject money into the economy. When the bonds mature, they are repaid using currency. So the reserve bank looses an asset (the bond), and gets nothing in return (remember they can't go spend the currency that they just received in payement for the bond. The currency is just stored away, removed from the economy). In effect, outstanding currency means that the bank 'owes' somebody a bond, and they can come and claim that bond with their currency (obiously an oversimplification but you get the idea.) Many years ago money was a liability to the bank because it was redeemable for gold. Now it is redeemable for bonds.
I believe so, but you will have to pay your bank for currency conversion
cash the check and buy a new car. you dont have to buy a car with that money but i recomend it