Tips offered on mortgage protection
December 11, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Mortgages
Don’t borrow more than you can afford and seek independent advice before buying are just two of the mortgage protection tips offered by industry experts, LifeSearch.
The guidance arrives as consumer confidence has been affected by the Northern Rock crisis. Interest rates are also near a six-year high at 5.5 per cent, despite coming down last week.
Matt Morris, LifeSearch policy adviser, said: “Many people consider protecting their mortgage, but they usually select a policy that will pay it for them when they can’t work.”
He added that what they actually should be protecting is their income, which not only pays the mortgage, but also pays all the other bills and the everyday cost of living.
LifeSearch also advises consumers to check employee benefits, not to buy Mortgage Payment Protection Insurance without considering Income Protection and ultimately take some form of action.
LifeSearch is a life insurance and protection specialist which was established in 1997. It currently has over 200,000 customers and more than £13 billion worth of cover arranged.
Banks crack down on credit cards for Christmas
December 4, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Banking
The amount of time allowed for one to pay off a credit card is to be cut substantially by some banks over the holiday season.
Both NatWest and the Royal Bank of Scotland have given their customers just ten days after January 2nd to pay off their balances before late payment and interest charges are levied.
The change in rules has caused an outcry from consumer groups who claim that it is a deliberate move to charge customers at the time of year when they use their credit cards the most.
A spokesman for the consumer group Which? said: “Many people will use their credit cards over the festive period and wait until they get paid in January before paying off this balance.
“But this shorter interest-free period may not give cardholders the same flexibility and many will incur charges.”
All the banks that have slashed the time given to pay off credit cards are owned by the Royal Bank of Scotland.
Northern Rock causes saver caution
September 24, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Banking
Savers are being far more cautious with the money that they put into savings following the recent credit squeeze and subsequent Northern Rock scare, price comparison site Peopleschampion.com has revealed.
Conducting polls of people standing in the queues outside Northern Rock, the website found that customers were taking their savings to larger institutions such as the clearing banks – Lloyds TSB, the Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and Halifax and Bank of Scotland (HBOS).
This is in spite of the fact that the Bank of England has assured savers that their money is 100 per cent guaranteed in the event of a bank collapse. The savers that were surveyed were unanimous in their stance: safety now comes before higher interest rates.
Jim Spowart, a spokesman for the website, said: “Many people – especially older people – are being much more cautious with their money. They have been bitten first by the pension crisis, and now Northern Rock, so instead of going instinctively for the highest return, they are looking more at safer havens where they know their money is secure.”
According to Simon Ward, a top economist at asset management firm New Star, the Bank of England’s last resort support to Northern Rock may well have amounted to as much as £2.9 billion.


