Safeguarding future house deposit over 3 banks accounts
Safeguarding future house deposit over 3 banks accounts
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Discussion

jdw1234

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

232 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
Chaps,

I would like to split some money over 3 joint bank accounts for 1-3 years.

This is so each account will be below the bank compensation limit for a joint account.

It is intended to contribute towards a house deposit in future.

Therefore, return needs to only beat house price increase/decrease (i.e. not too concerned about interest as mitigating against capital loss - this will be for family home so important not to lose it!).

I am more concerned about remaining liquid and minimising risk.

Question: Which banks would you go for and why?

My thoughts are:

1). HSBC
2). Barclays

+ one other.

Many thanks in advance for your thoughts and advice.


DayTrader

776 posts

184 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
A joint account has double the limit - so £170k.

Doesn't matter who you go with - I'd probably pick NatWest or RBS for the third if you need it.

jdw1234

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

232 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
DayTrader said:
A joint account has double the limit - so £170k.

Doesn't matter who you go with - I'd probably pick NatWest or RBS for the third if you need it.
Many thanks for reply DayTrader.

Would you have any concern over NatWest / RBS over exposure to UK mortgages or Euro debt?

Do you think they are "solid" enough banks?

Many thanks for taking the timne to reply.



Edited by jdw1234 on Tuesday 10th January 15:03

DayTrader

776 posts

184 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
jdw1234 said:
Many thanks for reply DayTrader.

Would you have any concern over NatWest / RBS over exposure to UK mortgages or Euro debt?

Do you think they are "solid" enough banks?

Many thanks for taking the timne to reply.



Edited by jdw1234 on Tuesday 10th January 15:03
I wouldn't worry about it - the money is government backed so you can't lose a penny even if they go completely tits up - which I don't think they will.

Traveller

4,268 posts

234 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
NS&I, you will not find anything safer, returns are not great but it will certainly be safe.

jdw1234

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

232 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
Once again, many thanks for your replies.

I didn't think of NS&I.

Kind regards,

JW


anonymous-user

71 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
As all the major ones are covered by the government guarantee (up to £85k per person per account) then you should simply go with the ones paying the best interest as your money is technically no safer in any particular bank. Some banks may be stronger than others but as they are all backed equally by the government then you'd only lose your money if the government was insolvent. If that happens the frankly we are all up the creek without a paddle.

I know none pay particular good interest rates but last time I looked Northern Rock and Santander were paying the best rates, HSBC, RBS and Barclays were paying some of the worst.

z4chris99

12,029 posts

196 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
Santander and a few others have a 3% account, I'd chuck it in them. Should beat resi growth in the price bracket your buying, dependant on area.

davepoth

29,395 posts

216 months

Wednesday 11th January 2012
quotequote all
Santander is about the worst on the high street for risk. Yes the government will step in, but they're horrendously exposed to Spain, and borrowed a lot of money to expand through acquisition. Nice returns maybe, but you'll pay it all back in tax if the government has to pay you your money back.

z4chris99

12,029 posts

196 months

Wednesday 11th January 2012
quotequote all
davepoth said:
Santander is about the worst on the high street for risk. Yes the government will step in, but they're horrendously exposed to Spain, and borrowed a lot of money to expand through acquisition. Nice returns maybe, but you'll pay it all back in tax if the government has to pay you your money back.
makes no sense, deposits are protected. risk doesn't come into it. I believe they even pay the interest up front.

zero risk.

jdw1234

Original Poster:

6,021 posts

232 months

Wednesday 11th January 2012
quotequote all
Many thanks for all the replies chaps.

All advice has been taken on board.