Darling accused of incompetence over Northern Rock loan

November 30, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Loans

Chancellor, Alistair Darling, found himself the recipient of a vicious verbal attack by the shadow chancellor George Osborne earlier this week, when he was challenged in the Commons over the loan that was granted to Northern Rock by the Bank of England.

The chancellor has been accused of exercising secrecy in authorising the loan to ailing bank Northern Rock, and the attack came on a day that saw the Rock’s shares plummet again, falling by over 20% in the light of no successful sale to rescue the bank.

Osborne accused Darling of misleading the public by not making the loan public, but Darling stated that the way the Northern Rock loan was handled was normal operating procedure for the Bank of England, and that making the public aware of every move could have adverse effects, which indeed it did when the public did finally learn about the loan. He added that the loan was secured against Northern Rock’s assets after being accused of putting taxpayers’ money at risk.

Mr Osborne stated: ‘Can the Chancellor tell us that all the money lent by the taxpayer will be repaid? Yes or no.’

He also said: ‘This is a tale of incompetence and weak leadership from a government that now reels from one disaster to another. We have a Chancellor who made loans he kept secret from Parliament. We have a Chancellor who has made guarantees to the taxpayer he cannot be sure of honouring. And we have a Chancellor whose weakness is contributing to the instability of the financial system. That is why we have a Chancellor whose job is on the line.’

Darling has been accused by the shadow chancellor of withholding information from the public as well as from parliament, but Darling insists that he did the right thing in authorising the loan for Northern Rock, and said that there was no secrecy involved.

Tom Smith
30th November 2007

Tags: chancellor, rock, northern, bank, england, Loans, darling

Northern Rock fined widow £800

November 26, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Banking

An elderly widow has expressed her anger after stricken bank Northern Rock fined her £800 in the midst of the chaos in September after she withdrew her savings from the bank.

After it became public knowledge that the bank had borrowed money in the form of an emergency loan from the Bank of England panic set in amongst those with savings in the bank, and many of the bank’s 1.5 million customers quickly withdrew their savings. One of these savers was seventy six year old Mrs Heather, who had tens of thousands in savings with Northern Rock.

Mrs Heather had £173,000 saved in a thirty day notice savings account, and was therefore aware that if she withdrew the money right away she would face hefty penalties. She therefore contacted Northern Rock and asked them to keep the money in the account for the thirty day period and then send a cheque out to close the account, so she effectively gave the required thirty day notice period.

However, a week later she received a cheque for the money in the post, and given the bank’s position thought that they must have decided to waive the thirty day period in light of what was going on. However, when she then asked the bank for a closing statement she realised that Northern Rock had in fact fined her £800 for withdrawing her cash early, even though she had given notice and the mistake had been on the part of the bank.

She said that she called the bank to complain: ‘The lady I was speaking to apologised, but then got very officious and said I should have sent the cheque back to them after I received it. She was very bombastic. So they expect a 76-year-old housewife to know when they have made a mistake – even when they fail to send out a statement showing what they have done?’

Alan Wright
26th November 2007

Tags: savings, 30 day, account, bank, fined, northern, notice

Another drop in Northern Rock shares

November 25, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Banking

Following the turmoil and chaos that took hold in September of this year, high street lender Northern Rock has seen its share prices plummet yet again, this time falling to their lowest level yet.

According to recent reports shares in Northern Rock, which were worth £12 back in February of this year, fell to under £1 per share on Tuesday. This comes in the light of concerns over whether the bank will be bought out, as although there have been a number of potential purchasers there has been no firm offer as yet.

The serious woes faced by Northern Rock began in September, after it became widely known that the lender had approached the Bank of England for an emergency loan of billions of pounds. Once this became public knowledge, savers flocked to the bank to withdraw their savings amidst worries that the bank was about to fold, and over the space of several days over £2 billion was withdrawn from the bank.

Share prices also plummeted, and Northern Rock gained a reputation as one of the highest profile victims of the credit crunch and the turmoil that has swept across the financial sector.

One bank official stated: ‘Based on the information it has so far, the board of Northern Rock believes that the range of values for the existing equity implied by the proposals is materially below the market price at the close of business on Friday.’

Chairman Bryan Sanderson added: ‘The value to shareholders from any proposals… remains highly uncertain and will be dependent, among other things, on when and if there is an improvement in market conditions including access to liquidity and the value created, if any, from the run-off of the assets and liabilities remaining in the company following any disposal of all or part of its business.’

Tom Smith
25th November 2007

Tags: bank, northern, prices, rock, fall, shares, drop

King advised Darling not to lend to Lloyds

November 15, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Banking

The Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King has spoken out about his advice to the Chancellor of the Exchequer with regards to a loan request from banking giant Lloyds TSB.

The high street bank had approached the Bank of England for a loan to the tune of £30 billion in order to fund the takeover of Northern Rock. However, the governor advised the chancellor not to authorize the loan, which Lloyds wanted to take out over two years at competitive rates.

According to Mr King he told Darling that the Bank of England should not be providing loans to a company in order to allow the takeover of another company.

Speaking on Radio 4 Mr King stated: “I said to the chancellor: ‘This is not something which a central bank can do. They don’t normally finance takeovers by one company for another, let alone to the tune of £30bn, which is rather a large amount of money’.”

When speaking on Radio 4 Mr King also added that it could take months before banks get back to normal following the effects of the credit crunch.

He stated: “I think most people expect that we have several more months to get through before the banks have revealed all the losses that have occurred, and have taken measures to finance their obligations that result from that, but we’re going in the right direction.”

He also added: “There is always, in a period like this, the possibility that a shock from outside the UK, one from the world economy, might create further fragilities, but to some extent there are always risks, there are always fragilities. What I would say is that the situation now is, in my view, different from that in August, though it’s not without risk.”

Tom Smith
15th November 2007

Tags: king, lloyds, credit, chancellor, crunch, england, Banking, darling, rock

Who is covered by the Treasury guarantee over Northern Rock savings?

October 17, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Banking

Over the past week Northern Rock has suffered huge problems after it was revealed that the bank had taken a loan from the Bank of England.

Despite assurances from the government and from Northern Rock that the company was still solvent and financially sound savers flocked to the branches of the bank for days, queuing to take out their money, with billions being withdrawn by many of its 1.5 million savers. Share prices also plummeted leaving the future looking very bleak for the bank.

Earlier this week the Treasury decided to step in, and in addition to assuring consumers that it would not have considered lending money to a company that was not financially viable and stable, it also offered guarantees to savers to try and reduce the number of people hastily withdrawing their money from the bank amidst fears that Northern Rock would go bust.

The Treasury has now elaborated on its guarantee to ensure that consumers in the UK are clear with regards to who is covered and who is not. For those covered the government has guaranteed the safety of every penny of their savings. Bank accounts that were open as at midnight on 19th September, and any accounts that were closed and are now re-opened will be guaranteed. However, new accounts opened after this time will not be under the guarantee.

Officials stated: “This guarantee covers future interest payments, movements of funds between existing accounts, and new deposits into existing accounts. Since it would otherwise be unfair to other banks and building societies, the arrangements would not cover any new accounts set up after 19 September.”

Tom Smith
17th October 2007

Tags: accounts, treasury, england, bank, savings, northern, cover, personal, guarantee, rock

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.

Tags: rock, savers, scare, scotland, Website, pension crisis, clearing banks, Many people