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CIBC GIC Refund

berndzhang

Full Member
Jun 27, 2023
42
5
I bought GIC from CIBC in May 2023, but my study permit application was rejected from IRCC in August 2023 and I decided not to try again. So I asked CIBC for refund.

But I never thought requesting the refund could be so complicated. When I wire transferred the money to CIBC, they did not ask anything else and accepted the money happily and issued me the GIC certificate, but when I asked for refund, they asked me to submit an ASIF form, request letter and rejection letter. The bank demands "The ASIF has to be signed by you and your bank, a lawyer or notary, or A Government organization (crown corporation) any one as indicated on the form".

But I find it very difficult to meet these demands, as in my country (China), a notary is not allowed to sign the ASIF form according to Chinese law, a state-owned bank has no such business and no employees will do things beyond their scope of responsibility. A lawyer charges a large amount of money to sign the form, and I am not sure if the signature of an unknown lawyer will be accepted by CIBC.

Anyway, I did fill in the ASIF form and signed in front of a notary, and the notary issued a notarial certificate of my signature, instead of signing on the form. And when I submitted this document along with a handwritten request letter and the rejection letter, CIBC rejected my request citing vague reason as "In order to reinitiate a refund, please submit your request online with a letter identifying the reason for your request."

I contacted CIBC ISBO <mailbox.isbo@cibc.com> many times, their responses were contradictory and every time it appeared to be a different employee that replied me. Some customer service employees say both Chinese and English ASIF forms are acceptable, but when I submitted the notarized Chinese version, others demanded I provide ASIF form in English. And some say a request letter or rejection letter should be submitted, and others say both request letter and rejection letter have to be submitted. And nobody explicitly tells me if the request letter should also be notarized.

Now after several months, my refund request has not been approved. I paid a lot of time and some money for the process but still got no positive outcome. Sometimes I doubt CIBC deliberately sets obstacles in the way and its purpose could to delay sending back the money and even the money of GIC buyers.

Does anyone have the same experience? How did you get the refund in the end?
 

Impatient Dankaroo

VIP Member
Jan 10, 2020
4,380
2,670
I bought GIC from CIBC in May 2023, but my study permit application was rejected from IRCC in August 2023 and I decided not to try again. So I asked CIBC for refund.

But I never thought requesting the refund could be so complicated. When I wire transferred the money to CIBC, they did not ask anything else and accepted the money happily and issued me the GIC certificate, but when I asked for refund, they asked me to submit an ASIF form, request letter and rejection letter. The bank demands "The ASIF has to be signed by you and your bank, a lawyer or notary, or A Government organization (crown corporation) any one as indicated on the form".

But I find it very difficult to meet these demands, as in my country (China), a notary is not allowed to sign the ASIF form according to Chinese law, a state-owned bank has no such business and no employees will do things beyond their scope of responsibility. A lawyer charges a large amount of money to sign the form, and I am not sure if the signature of an unknown lawyer will be accepted by CIBC.

Anyway, I did fill in the ASIF form and signed in front of a notary, and the notary issued a notarial certificate of my signature, instead of signing on the form. And when I submitted this document along with a handwritten request letter and the rejection letter, CIBC rejected my request citing vague reason as "In order to reinitiate a refund, please submit your request online with a letter identifying the reason for your request."

I contacted CIBC ISBO <mailbox.isbo@cibc.com> many times, their responses were contradictory and every time it appeared to be a different employee that replied me. Some customer service employees say both Chinese and English ASIF forms are acceptable, but when I submitted the notarized Chinese version, others demanded I provide ASIF form in English. And some say a request letter or rejection letter should be submitted, and others say both request letter and rejection letter have to be submitted. And nobody explicitly tells me if the request letter should also be notarized.

Now after several months, my refund request has not been approved. I paid a lot of time and some money for the process but still got no positive outcome. Sometimes I doubt CIBC deliberately sets obstacles in the way and its purpose could to delay sending back the money and even the money of GIC buyers.

Does anyone have the same experience? How did you get the refund in the end?
Congrats, you have experienced Canada without even coming here
 
Apr 23, 2024
1
0
Hi any one has experience with CIBC?
Exactly that. My wife applied for a course, the immigration law was changed in Jan 24 (no work permit for spouse, unless masters or Phd), and we could no longer come. The school refunded us no problem, to an account specified. We did the notary gig, with the notarized translation, attached that, attached the refund confirmation from the school, cited the reason in the comment section - as due to the changes in the law - we can't come any longer as we wouldn't be able to to sustain our family costs. And we got exactly same response.
Can you please advise if you were able to overcome this? And how?
 

Hana09

Newbie
Sep 13, 2024
2
0
I bought GIC from CIBC in May 2023, but my study permit application was rejected from IRCC in August 2023 and I decided not to try again. So I asked CIBC for refund.

But I never thought requesting the refund could be so complicated. When I wire transferred the money to CIBC, they did not ask anything else and accepted the money happily and issued me the GIC certificate, but when I asked for refund, they asked me to submit an ASIF form, request letter and rejection letter. The bank demands "The ASIF has to be signed by you and your bank, a lawyer or notary, or A Government organization (crown corporation) any one as indicated on the form".

But I find it very difficult to meet these demands, as in my country (China), a notary is not allowed to sign the ASIF form according to Chinese law, a state-owned bank has no such business and no employees will do things beyond their scope of responsibility. A lawyer charges a large amount of money to sign the form, and I am not sure if the signature of an unknown lawyer will be accepted by CIBC.

Anyway, I did fill in the ASIF form and signed in front of a notary, and the notary issued a notarial certificate of my signature, instead of signing on the form. And when I submitted this document along with a handwritten request letter and the rejection letter, CIBC rejected my request citing vague reason as "In order to reinitiate a refund, please submit your request online with a letter identifying the reason for your request."

I contacted CIBC ISBO <mailbox.isbo@cibc.com> many times, their responses were contradictory and every time it appeared to be a different employee that replied me. Some customer service employees say both Chinese and English ASIF forms are acceptable, but when I submitted the notarized Chinese version, others demanded I provide ASIF form in English. And some say a request letter or rejection letter should be submitted, and others say both request letter and rejection letter have to be submitted. And nobody explicitly tells me if the request letter should also be notarized.

Now after several months, my refund request has not been approved. I paid a lot of time and some money for the process but still got no positive outcome. Sometimes I doubt CIBC deliberately sets obstacles in the way and its purpose could to delay sending back the money and even the money of GIC buyers.

Does anyone have the same experience? How did you get the refund in the end?
Hi Have you got your GIC refund from CIBC?
 

Beenath17

Newbie
Apr 28, 2018
8
0
I bought GIC from CIBC in May 2023, but my study permit application was rejected from IRCC in August 2023 and I decided not to try again. So I asked CIBC for refund.

But I never thought requesting the refund could be so complicated. When I wire transferred the money to CIBC, they did not ask anything else and accepted the money happily and issued me the GIC certificate, but when I asked for refund, they asked me to submit an ASIF form, request letter and rejection letter. The bank demands "The ASIF has to be signed by you and your bank, a lawyer or notary, or A Government organization (crown corporation) any one as indicated on the form".

But I find it very difficult to meet these demands, as in my country (China), a notary is not allowed to sign the ASIF form according to Chinese law, a state-owned bank has no such business and no employees will do things beyond their scope of responsibility. A lawyer charges a large amount of money to sign the form, and I am not sure if the signature of an unknown lawyer will be accepted by CIBC.

Anyway, I did fill in the ASIF form and signed in front of a notary, and the notary issued a notarial certificate of my signature, instead of signing on the form. And when I submitted this document along with a handwritten request letter and the rejection letter, CIBC rejected my request citing vague reason as "In order to reinitiate a refund, please submit your request online with a letter identifying the reason for your request."

I contacted CIBC ISBO <mailbox.isbo@cibc.com> many times, their responses were contradictory and every time it appeared to be a different employee that replied me. Some customer service employees say both Chinese and English ASIF forms are acceptable, but when I submitted the notarized Chinese version, others demanded I provide ASIF form in English. And some say a request letter or rejection letter should be submitted, and others say both request letter and rejection letter have to be submitted. And nobody explicitly tells me if the request letter should also be notarized.

Now after several months, my refund request has not been approved. I paid a lot of time and some money for the process but still got no positive outcome. Sometimes I doubt CIBC deliberately sets obstacles in the way and its purpose could to delay sending back the money and even the money of GIC buyers.

Does anyone have the same experience? How did you get the refund in the end?
Have you managed to get your refund?
 

steaky

VIP Member
Nov 11, 2008
14,747
1,744
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
What I am reading here is unbelievable. Can everyone having problem with this refund raise a platform where the world will know what is happening?
Why OP did not get GIC with HSBC while HSBC still have business both in Canada and China (at least in 2023)?
 

bcb318

Full Member
Sep 18, 2023
31
0
I bought GIC from CIBC in May 2023, but my study permit application was rejected from IRCC in August 2023 and I decided not to try again. So I asked CIBC for refund.

But I never thought requesting the refund could be so complicated. When I wire transferred the money to CIBC, they did not ask anything else and accepted the money happily and issued me the GIC certificate, but when I asked for refund, they asked me to submit an ASIF form, request letter and rejection letter. The bank demands "The ASIF has to be signed by you and your bank, a lawyer or notary, or A Government organization (crown corporation) any one as indicated on the form".

But I find it very difficult to meet these demands, as in my country (China), a notary is not allowed to sign the ASIF form according to Chinese law, a state-owned bank has no such business and no employees will do things beyond their scope of responsibility. A lawyer charges a large amount of money to sign the form, and I am not sure if the signature of an unknown lawyer will be accepted by CIBC.

Anyway, I did fill in the ASIF form and signed in front of a notary, and the notary issued a notarial certificate of my signature, instead of signing on the form. And when I submitted this document along with a handwritten request letter and the rejection letter, CIBC rejected my request citing vague reason as "In order to reinitiate a refund, please submit your request online with a letter identifying the reason for your request."

I contacted CIBC ISBO <mailbox.isbo@cibc.com> many times, their responses were contradictory and every time it appeared to be a different employee that replied me. Some customer service employees say both Chinese and English ASIF forms are acceptable, but when I submitted the notarized Chinese version, others demanded I provide ASIF form in English. And some say a request letter or rejection letter should be submitted, and others say both request letter and rejection letter have to be submitted. And nobody explicitly tells me if the request letter should also be notarized.

Now after several months, my refund request has not been approved. I paid a lot of time and some money for the process but still got no positive outcome. Sometimes I doubt CIBC deliberately sets obstacles in the way and its purpose could to delay sending back the money and even the money of GIC buyers.

Does anyone have the same experience? How did you get the refund in the end?
As someone with a pending SDS application in Canada, this is very alarming. Please let us know if you have any update on your refund.
 

akash08

Star Member
Jul 29, 2024
105
5
I have paid my GIC amount through CIBC in order to use it while I would be in Canada from September 2024. However, I have now deferred my admission to January 2025. Do I need to inform CIBC about the same or do any other process, or can I just arrive in January and withdraw money as per the plan?