Archive for the ‘Savings’ Category

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.

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

What should we do in the current economic difficulties?

Monday, December 1st, 2008

The current economic difficulties are pretty unusual in their severity and therefore what “we” should do is not necessarily the same as what we’d ordinarily do by ourselves.

Typically, it’s prudent to build up some reserves in the bank to tide oneself over the hard times. However, if we all do that in the moment then chances are that the downturn will go on for a great deal longer than it needs to. What’s needed is for each of us to act as though the downturn didn’t exist as much as possible.

So, for instance, the banks have basically been told to return to normal lending practices “or else”. In fact, they need to do that for their own sake as tightening up on the lending criteria as many had been doing was simply acting to stagnate the economy which is good for nobody, including the banks.

From the rest of us what’s required is that we don’t simply bank any savings that we’re making but rather that we spend them and thereby do our bit to restart the economy.

Whilst your instinct might be to increase the size of any savings reserve as much as you are able, it’s the worst thing that we could do collectively.

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Savings, investment,… gambling

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Normally people move from savings to investment but draw the line at risky investments and don’t consider gambling as being in the same continum.

But it is. Certainly savings and gambling are very much at the extreme ends of that continum but some high risk investments aren’t nearly so far from gambling as the investment community in general would have you believe.

Is it any more risky to put £1 on a horse or to put £1 on a penny share? Well, sure, it’s usually riskier to put it on a horse BUT remember that whilst you might put £1 on a horse, chances are it would be more like £1000 that you’d be putting on that penny share which is a whole lot more to lose.

Of course, that difference in the amount of money involved is critical in how you should rate a gamble as compared to a very high risk investment. However, don’t forget that even the safest investments are also gambles as any investor in Northern Rock will tell you now or for that matter policy holders in what was the even more solid Equitable Life.

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