How to Ensure Your Savings are Safe

With so much turmoil in the banking sector over the past few months, savers are feeling justifiably jittery about the safety of their hard-earned cash – but just how safe are their savings?

Many are nervous about putting their faith in savings institutions, having had their fingers burned by the collapse of the likes of Northern Rock and the Icelandic banks. And while things seemed to have settled down a little of late, there are no absolute guarantees that other banks won't go the same way.

Are my savings protected?

The good news is, if you have your savings with a UK bank authorised by financial watchdog, the Financial Services Authority (FSA), you will have protection under the UK's Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). This is the official safety net for customers of financial firms that go bust, and guarantees your savings up to a limit of £50,000 - or £100,000 for a joint account.

Don't keep all your eggs in one basket



When checking the safety of your cash, you need to note that the FSCS level of protection applies per person, per authorised institution - and not per account. This means that if you have more than £50,000 with any one bank, you need to spread your money around between different providers.

You also need to beware that some institutions offer accounts under a number of brand names or subsidiaries which are all trading arms of the same authorised institution. If there is a single registration for the entire group, your compensation is limited to a total of £50,000 protection across all of its brands.

Some examples

HBOS, for example, operates savings accounts under the Halifax, Bank of Scotland, Birmingham Midshires and Intelligent Finance brands. However, all HBOS brands operate under a single FSA authorisation, so if you have £30,000 savings with the Halifax and £30,000 with Intelligent Finance, only £50,000 of the £60,000 total would be guaranteed.

In contrast, the UK banks owned by Santander are operating under two authorisations - one covers Abbey and B&B, and the other covers A&L. This means savers are covered for up to £50,000 across Abbey and B&B, and are also covered for a further £50,000 with A&L - but be warned that this could change from the middle of next year.

You can find more information on who owns who in this FSA download.

More info found here

Gold vending



Just an addition to our post about gold investments back in June.

Apparently it's soon going to be possible to buy gold from vending machines, just as you might buy a sandwich, a drink, a tube of sweets or a pack of postage stamps.

The idea is to install the new vending machines in airports, where people will be looking to disburse their money either on expensive guilt-assuaging last minute gifts. But the machines will also hold bullion - the notion being that it will also be possible to make investments by purchasing bars of up to 250 grams.

For the time being the only vending machine selling gold is in Frankfurt airport, but the machine's inventors hope to start moving their products in the UK and Asia soon, the best gold and precious gems markets in the world.

For those who dislike paying for their investments - think again - the machines are said to be built like tanks.

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