Saturday, December 13, 2008

Biggest Ponzi scheme fraud exposed

The recent exposure to $50 billion Ponzi scheme fraud by the former NASDAQ chairman, Bernard Madoff caused a stir in financial and investment world. Most of the Spanish and Swiss banks lost over a billion US dollars each.
The UK asset manager, Bramdean Alternatives Ltd headed by well-known fund manager Nicola Horlick, said almost 10 percent of its holdings were exposed to Madoff. Bramdean said it had two holdings that maintain trading accounts with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities that represented 9.5 percent of its net asset value at the end of October. A UK real estate investor, Vincent Tchenguiz is also reported to have his asset invested in Madoff scheme.

Some people familiar with the case said that Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, which he founded in 1960 was never inspected by U.S. regulators after he subjected it to oversight two years ago. The Securities and Exchange Commission hasn’t examined Madoff’s books since he registered the unit with the agency in September 2006, two people said, declining to be identified because the reviews aren’t public. The SEC tries to inspect advisers at least every five years and to scrutinize newly registered firms in their first year, former agency officials and securities lawyers said.

Madoff was charged on 11 December 2008 by federal prosecutors with a multibillion- dollar securities fraud. He is currently free on a $10m bond.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

The Rise of Islamic Banking in a Time of economic Crisis

Posted December 10, 2008

Shopping for a business loan during a global credit crisis is tough work even if you're a fast-growing start-up like Ireland's Blue Ocean Wireless. And the scrutiny can cut both ways. Blue Ocean, which supplies wireless communications for merchant shipping, was giving a closer-than-normal look at whether possible lenders could be counted on amid the ongoing financial shakeout.

When the company got a $25 million loan this fall, it came from what might seem an unusual source: the Bank of London and the Middle East, or BLME, which strictly follows Islamic sharia law rather than conventional western banking practices. Read more

Banking competition still strong in Scotland

LONDON, Dec 10 (Reuters) - Competition among banks in Scotland will remain strong despite the likely disappearance of the Edinburgh-based HBOS (HBOS.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) following its merger with Lloyds TSB (LLOY.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), businessmen told lawmakers on Wednesday.

Iain McMillan, director of the Scottish Confederation of Business Industry (CBI), said there was still a vibrant banking sector.

"Clearly there is going to be one less high street bank if on Friday the HBOS shareholders vote in favour of the merger," he told the Scottish Affairs Committee.

"But there does seem to be that there is quite a lot of competition there, certainly in the big cities."

HBOS shareholders are due to vote on the government-brokered deal to create Britain's second-biggest bank on Friday. More than 95 percent of Lloyds investors have already voted in favour of the newly-named "superbank" Lloyds Banking Group.

The deal would leave the Royal Bank of Scotland, the Clydesdale and the Airdrie among the surviving Scottish banks.

The banks and financial services sector have been a key driver of the Scottish economy during the past decade, boosting growth by more than 90 percent since 1998 -- more than 7 percent a year.

Up to 14,000 jobs are predicted to go as part of the shake-out of the Scottish financial services sector, a report by the Ernst & Young Scottish Item Club said on Wednesday.

"The knock to our previous star performer in financial services makes this recession unprecedented," Hywel Ball, managing partner of Ernst & Young's Scottish practice, said.

Scotland is entering its first ever services sector-led recession, with its weakest performance since the early 1980s, the report added.

The growth rate is expected to be 0.9 percent in 2008, contracting to -0.4 percent a year later.

But in 2010, growth should recover to 1.5 percent and in 2011 to 2.5 percent.

The recession should be less severe in Scotland than the rest of the UK because of the country's reduced exposure to the housing market and a larger public sector, the Item Club said.

"Scotland's critical mass of banking, insurance and fund management skills, along with a reputation for low rates of labour turnover, may provide the base to retain or attract activities north of the border, with beneficial impacts to the wider services economy," Ball said.

"The key for all businesses is to be outward-looking and competitive. Those that can innovate and diversify will come out the other end of this recession tunnel in a stable or even better position than when they went in."

(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

Best balance transfer

This is the no-hassle route; simply get the card, move your debts, then put the card away and pay it off, knowing it’s cheap. Most people will be better off going for a long term cheap ‘stable relationship’ rather than trying to be a credit card tart; as it only takes a few mistakes to make tarting very costly.

The gold standard for long term cards is a ‘life-of-balance' transfer deal; here the cheap rate lasts until the debt you've shifted is repaid in full.

BARCLAY PLATINUM
The current cheapest is barclay platinum card at 6.5% life of balance. You must shift your debts to it within 60 days of opening the account to get this rate, and anything over £5,000 is charged at 6.9%. Do beware though, this card operates a rate for risk policy.

CAPITAL ONEAt the same rate is Capital One Low Rate card locks in debts at 6.5% until your statement date in January 2011, so if you've already got a Barclaycard and can pay off within two years, this is a good alternative. The link provided takes you to a special deal via comparison BeatThatQuote; apply elsewhere and you might get a worse deal.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Alliance n leicester


You can still get an 8.5% return on your savings....

What we should be looking for in an easy-access savings account is:

A good interest rate. Typically, these days, that’s around 6%.

A great guarantee. These are almost impossible to find now.

True easy access.This means you can withdraw your money at any time without penalty.

Relatively safe from a possible bank collapse. This has become more important for many people these days.

Great guarantees used to be linked to the Base Rate, but with the best savings accounts now paying around double the Base Rate, these guarantees are redundant. Now a more attractive guarantee is a fixed rate. Problem is, these are not a common feature of an easy-access account. However, we can improvise an account that ticks all these boxes, and has the best interest rate:

Improvise yourself a perfect, table-topping savings account

We do this using Alliance & Leicester’s Premier Direct account. I say improvise, because it’s not a savings account at all, but a current account. However, it fulfills all our criteria:

A good interest rate. In fact it’s an outstanding interest rate at 8.5% AER. This wallops all the best easy-access savings accounts, which, with many rates falling 1.5% last week, are more like 6%.

A great guarantee. The rate is fixed for one year. That’s great when rates are expected to fall. What’s more, it’s extremely rare that the best easy-access interest rate available is fixed!

True easy access. Like just about any personal current account, you can take money out whenever you like without charge or penalty.

Relatively safe from a possible bank collapse. Alliance & Leicester is probably one of the safest banks in the UK at present.

Catch # 1

Of course there’s a catch. Two rather. Catch one is that you get this rate just on the first £2,500 in the account. Anything over this attracts a pathetic rate that’s not worth mentioning in a savings article. However, we can all still use this account to boost our average savings rate:

If you have no savings, or savings of £2,500 or less

If you have savings of £2,500 or less, you can earn the full 8.5% AER. Here’s how it works for you:

Interest earned on £2,500 in the Alliance & Leicester Premier Direct account

Interest earned on £2,500

Interest rate after tax

Basic-rate taxpayer

£170

6.8%

Higher-rate taxpayer

£128

5.1%

Non-taxpayer

£213

8.5%

So, that’s between £170 and £213 interest in a year, depending on your tax status.

Even if you have no savings, you can still boost the interest you get by switching to this bank account. If you’re paid, say, £1,200 per month, you could expect maybe £6 or £7 interest per month, or £70 or £80 in the year. (It varies because the amount in your current account does.)

If you have £5,000 in savings

If you have £5,000 in savings, you could still boost your savings-interest rate from, say, 5.5% (most of you won’t be earning more than that at present) to 7% by moving half your savings to the Alliance & Leicester account. With inflation likely to fall somewhat over the next months, this switch should see you actually making a little money, rather than simply slowing the negative impact of rising prices.

Here’s how your earnings would look in a year:

Interest earned on £5,000

Interest earned in an account paying 5.5%

Interest earned if you split savings between one account paying 5.5% and A&L’s paying 8.5%

Basic-rate taxpayer

£220

£280

Higher-rate taxpayer

£165

£210

Non-taxpayer

£275

£350

A further advantage for the safety conscious is that you’ve split your savings between banks. If one goes down, you’ll still have immediate access to the other half of your cash.

slashed base interest rate

Base interest rates at 2%.

The Bank of England has slashed its base rate to 2%, matching the lowest level in its 314-year history. The last time the base rate was this low was in 1951, when Winston Churchill was in power, and the country was recovering from its massive war effort.

The battle of 2008 is The Great Credit War or The First World Recession. Individuals and businesses have too much debt. Banks are not willing to lend, for fear of exposing themselves to yet more bad debts. People are not spending, instead they are hoarding whatever spare cash they have. (Ed: It’s called saving, stupid, an ancient pastime last seen in the early 1980s!)

House prices continue to fall, plunging an annualised 16% in the year to November, the fastest rate in 25 years. With unemployment on the rise, banks unwilling to sell, some house prices being temporarily propped up by the government’s ridiculous emergency rescue for middle-class mortgage defaulters package.

But think ahead. Think ahead to the days when the economy gets back to some level of normality. Believe it or not, it will happen. Think about mortgage rates of maybe 4%. Think about how attractive the dividend yields on shares are compared to savings rates.