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Savings accounts 'have rates cut'

posted : SUNDAY, 8TH NOVEMBER 2009 06:29:05 GMT comments : 9

filed under : SAVINGS NEWS
- Search: Interest rate cut

A tenth of savings accounts have their interest rates cut
A tenth of savings accounts have their interest rates cut

A tenth of savings accounts have had their interest rates cut during the past six months despite the Bank of England base rate being kept on hold, research has shown.

Around 10% of variable rate savings accounts are now paying lower rates than they were in May, according to financial information group Moneyfacts.co.uk.

It said interest rates had been increased on only 3.5% of variable accounts during the same period, despite providers battling to get savers' money to fund their mortgage lending.

During the past month alone, savings providers have cut the returns paid on 4% of all variable rate accounts, slashing them by up to 0.86%.

The reductions mean 49% of all variable rate savings accounts are now paying interest of just 0.5% or less, with nearly a quarter offering returns of 0.1% or below.

Savers have been hit hard by the steep falls in interest rates seen during the past 12 months.

Recent figures from the Bank of England showed that the average rate paid on a branch-based instant access account is now just 0.17%, while notice accounts are offering average returns of 0.39%.

Michelle Slade, spokeswoman at Moneyfacts.co.uk, said: "Savers are already experiencing some of the lowest rates ever and this will be another bitter blow to take.

"Savers will be asking how providers can justify cutting rates further, when the base rate has remained on hold."

New regulations came into force earlier this month requiring savings providers to give customers at least two months' notice of interest rate cuts, unless the product is a tracker account, such as one where rates move up and down in line with the base rate.

    billybob
    Friday, 6 November 2009 09:05:04 GMT

    All the Pensioners i know and those about to Retire are spending whats left of their savings so they can claim Maximum Pension Credit.[ proof of this is the Car Scrappage Scheme where even the allowance is not enough to closethe huge Gap between old and new cars Recently inflated by multiple price increases this year especially ford] so the only people who can afford them are us 50/60 yr olds with savings after all the average Apr on a Rar Loan is approaching 15% thats 30 times Bank Rate.It could be ourlast Car so what the heck.only problem will there be any benefit Money to claim in future as this country is Bankrupt with a spiralling poulation.One Academic friend of mine suggests the whole Southern hemisphere Population is about to Move North due to climate change and the UKs Generouse Benefits for all.answers on an Email Please

    Scrooge
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 22:33:44 GMT

    Don't trust the banks, put your savings in gold bullion or leave it under the mattress. Either way, you will get a better rate of return on you money that the 1.1%CAR that the bankrupt banks are offering!

    The Debt Collector
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 22:31:35 GMT

    The risk element aside, isn't 30 X base rate for a loan/over-draft taking the PI**? If the debtor is not capable of paying the loan, or not credit-worthy in the first instance, why did the bank grant the loan? Sorry bankers : Vendor Emptis you only have yourselves to blame for the bad-debts you have sustained. Why should I, as a good saving, and well controlled overdraft handler be penalised for your cock-ups? Sack the bloody lot, and start from scratch.

    The Debt Collector
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 22:27:05 GMT

    Banks rely on savers to support their lending, If they do no attract savers, they have no money to use to write-off bad debt. Banks have incurred a lot of bad debt: that is because they have been slack and lent money to people, businesses and companies who were never viable in the first place. Their losses should not be picked up by the tax-payer, and their Directors should be made personally responsible for their negligence, as any other company would be had the situation been the other way around. I would go so far as to say that some of these Directors should be made Criminally Bankrupt on the grounds of deception and fraud. Whilst "disgusted" (08:37:38) is correct in their statement that "we shouldn't be surprised"; equally the Banks and now the former Building Societies should be reprimanded and their Directors dismissed for their failure to comply with the Bank of England's Base Rate Guide-line of .5%.

    Old Geezer
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 19:00:03 GMT

    All us baby boomer savers should install home safes and withdraw the cash.Our savings have supported the banks and now it also gives us a week pound.Blair let this happen so now he does not show his face for any interviews.The next government must keep a reign on the banks.

    itime
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 17:24:38 GMT

    It is savers who are paying for the mess the bankers have got the country into the The government have paid hundreds of billions to support the banks and forced down mortgage rates. Homeowners with large mortgages and little savings are getting all the benefit of this eveyone else has to suffer big time wether you have savings or not.

    Tony Ishiekwene
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 17:10:17 GMT

    There seem to be a conspiracy by the bankers to defraud. They are reducing the savings rate far below the BOE guide rates of 0.5% and then on Tracker mortgages, they bumped it to 3.00%, with renewal fees in addition, from 1.99% in the same period when BOE rates have remained at 0.5%. Talk about broad day light robbers!

    FRANK
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 14:01:11 GMT

    TO DISGUSTED, I AGREE SO AS A PENSIONER CAN YOU TELL ME WHERE TO MOVE IT TO, THE UK BANKS DONT LOOK AFTER PEOPLE LIKE ME I HAVE A BARCLAYS ISA AND THEY ARE PAYING ME 0.10 % OH TAX FREE ITS A JOKE,

    disgusted
    Thursday, 5 November 2009 08:37:38 GMT

    We all know the financial institutions by now so we shouln't be surprised. I don't understand why so many people keep their money in these low paying acounts. There are a lot of accounts out there why not move it to something better,it's quite easy.

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