stockbunny
- 17 May 2004 15:25
- 16 of 28
Little Woman - thanks for the info on the Egg account, it does
sound hassle to be honest, easier to keep things as they are.
Crystalclear - err..unless I am wrong (quite possible)the
first 30,000 of your money held in a UK bank is protected from
loss from the bank going bankrupt not the first 18,000.
Obviously if you have more on deposit than that with any bank you
need to shift the excess above the protected ceiling to another one
just in case - highly unlikely event..- that the bank goes belly up.
I certainly wouldn't go for the mattress idea personally, but there
again you might live in a crime-free area that might make the idea
attractive - if you find an interest paying mattress please let me know
where to get one!!
crystalclear
- 18 May 2004 00:34
- 17 of 28
stockbunny
The threshhold may have gone up. I think the sum was 20,000 is 90% protected, which is why you get up to 18,000 if a bank goes belly up.
You might want to make a pretty much unsecured low interest loan to your local bank. Its musical chairs really. The banks lend out other peoples money for things like Enron, Ford, 3G telecoms licences, peoples mortages, etc. That's not the nightmare scenario, that's the case for banks that are solvent. 1 in a bank is say 10 people 1 in credit and 9 people 1 in debt. What happens then, when two people take their 1 out and buy Chinese toys for their kids? (Or a Toyota, for an more real life example? Toyota makes more than twice as much profit as the big three put together!)
If someone wants his money back, its no problem, but if a few do, then its time to start asking people to repay their mortgages straight away and not in installments; time to ask the telecoms companies for the cost of their 3G licences back now, and not when the service is in profit in the years to come.
If you want an interest paying matress, take part of your wealth in the form of carrot seeds and bury them in the garden. My girlfriend's potatoes are giving her a tax free regular 1000% return on her investment. Trouble is she eats 900% and only plants the same again the next year. Do you have the odd can of spare petrol in the garage? What is the interest rate on that if you filled the can a year ago?
Okay, thinking of how to do that sort of thing with 30,000 is harder, but you get the idea? But if you have huge sums, and want to lend it to Ford, why not lend it to Ford? Why have somebody you don't know lend it out for you, without you knowing where? At least if you lend to Ford and Ford boes bust you only have yourself to blame.
amberjane
- 20 May 2004 09:10
- 18 of 28
Anyone know whose offering interest free on credit cards at the moment, and whose rates stay low after free period?
IanT(MoneyAM)
- 20 May 2004 09:18
- 19 of 28
amber,
Have a look at this link - it is from MoneyAM's new personal finance page
http://www.moneyam.com/pfinance/?page=Credit%20Cards
Regards
Ian
amberjane
- 20 May 2004 09:34
- 20 of 28
Many thanks Ian.
Regards, Amber
jj50
- 20 May 2004 13:13
- 21 of 28
For info, ING Direct account up to 4.7% from June.
stockbunny
- 20 May 2004 13:54
- 22 of 28
I know..goood huh....(giggle)
bagnut
- 20 May 2004 14:09
- 24 of 28
Amber,
I have a MINT card which at the moment is offering interest free credit on all purchases and transfers until Feb 2005, plus I believe, money back on purchases. Worth a look.
stockbunny
- 20 May 2004 14:12
- 25 of 28
Little Woman - in a word NO...but I am reliably informed that it is
about as painless as pulling teeth!! (lol)
Golddog
- 01 Jun 2004 22:28
- 26 of 28
Just applied for an ing account after reading your comments little woman and am now waiting for my 'starter pack', does this outfit belong to another bank or is it on it's own?
little woman
- 02 Jun 2004 09:13
- 27 of 28
parents web site:
http://www.ing.com
started as a dutch company
Kayak
- 02 Jun 2004 09:16
- 28 of 28
Golddog, ING is a blue-chip Dutch company.