Archive for June, 2009

Just where should you put your money right now?

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Strangely enough, it might not be where you think.

Typically most people will move their money into cash savings in times like these and put those cash savings in a local savings institution on the basis that they know and trust the people in the branch. However, that’s a fatal error to make. Sure, you can trust the people in your local bank or building society branch with your cash but the problem is that they aren’t the people who’ll be investing that cash.

That’s how come Northern Rock created such a stir last year: it was very much trusted locally and indeed was well thought of generally too for that matter. However, what felled it was the way in which the financial wizards at HQ invested the money and pulled in more money to fund mortgages.

In fact, the safest place at the moment is one that’s commonly overlooked. It’s National Savings in the UK. That’s part of HM Treasury and it’s the one UK financial instution that can’t go bankrupt because they’re the people that create the money in the first place. No, interest rates with them aren’t as high as with other places but then interest rates aren’t that great at the moment anywhere and these days it’s safety that you should be looking towards.

Copyright 2008-2010 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

It’s getting serious when times are tough for accountants!

Monday, June 15th, 2009

It’s usually taken as read that an accountancy job is a job for life but these days that’s no longer the case and that there is such a thing a specialist accountancy recruitment agency should be no surprise to anyone.

The particular difficult with accountants is that there can frequently be tie-in, no-competition and no conflict of interest terms in their employment contract. So, it’s not quite so easy to move jobs or to find a new accountancy job even in normal times as it is with “normal” jobs and, of course, these are far from normal times so it’s that much more difficult these days.

That said, if you’re searching for, say, “accountant jobs Edinburgh” you will find jobs around with some of those at quite surprisingly high levels. What you will see though, courtesy of the contract restrictions above and, of course, non-disclosure that there’s very little meat to the job descriptions and you’ll usually need to formally contact the employment agency to find out more should you be attracted to one of those on offer. In many ways that’s something of a nuisance but unfortunately it’s something that isn’t easily avoided.

So, if you fancy being a qualified accountant in Edinburgh there are definitely possibilities, just allow for needing to contact the agency rather than relying on information on the website listings.

Copyright 2008-2010 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Rumour becoming reality in dire economic times

Monday, June 15th, 2009

In eras of normal economic activity there are always rumours that come true. That interest rates will fall (or rise), that the chancellor is on his way out (or not) and so on. However, it’s more of a problem in times like these.

For example, the West Bromwich building society was rumoured to be about to need a rescue package back in May. In fact, that hasn’t happened and may never happen, yet I’m quite sure that more than a few depositors with the society withdrew cash whilst other potential depositors probably decided on a different building society. So far that’s been “a few” depositors or potential depositors but it could very easily become a tide and fell the society just as happened with the Northern Rock.

And yet, we also get rumours in the other direction. Thus the markets don’t seem in such dire straits lately as they were not so long ago. The flow of companies announcing bankruptcies seems to be slowing (no substantial companies for a while now) and even the housing market may be in the first stages of an upturn.

The problem isn’t the rumours as such but rather that in dire economic times the effect of such rumours tends to be much more extreme than would normally be the case. That’s, of course, why the government tend to be somewhat more reluctant to say anything as it’s extremely easy for an off the cuff comment to be perceived as negative these days. Still, we’re sure to have a new government soon, aren’t we? Or is that just a rumour too?

Copyright 2008-2010 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

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