Originally posted by: kranky
Well, the UK equivalent of FDIC insurance protects depositors up to the equivalent of about $63,000. Anyone with more money in the bank than that is probably quite concerned.
In one incident, police were called to the branch in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire when two joint accountholders barricaded the bank manager in her office after she refused to let them withdraw £1 million from their account. Their money was held in an internet only account, which became inaccessible after the Northern Rock website crashed due to the volume of customers trying to log on
Originally posted by: kranky
Well, the UK equivalent of FDIC insurance protects depositors up to the equivalent of about $63,000. Anyone with more money in the bank than that is probably quite concerned.
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose
Originally posted by: kranky
Well, the UK equivalent of FDIC insurance protects depositors up to the equivalent of about $63,000. Anyone with more money in the bank than that is probably quite concerned.
In one incident, police were called to the branch in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire when two joint accountholders barricaded the bank manager in her office after she refused to let them withdraw £1 million from their account. Their money was held in an internet only account, which became inaccessible after the Northern Rock website crashed due to the volume of customers trying to log on
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Originally posted by: dug777
Originally posted by: kranky
Well, the UK equivalent of FDIC insurance protects depositors up to the equivalent of about $63,000. Anyone with more money in the bank than that is probably quite concerned.
The bank is solvent, so nobody's money is actually at risk.
It's solvent in so far as its assets are currently valued more than its liabilities.Originally posted by: dug777
Originally posted by: kranky
Well, the UK equivalent of FDIC insurance protects depositors up to the equivalent of about $63,000. Anyone with more money in the bank than that is probably quite concerned.
The bank is solvent, so nobody's money is actually at risk.
It is an international problem. It is not at all limited to the US.Originally posted by: maddogchen
interesting how its US mortgage problems that are causing this.
Originally posted by: dullard
In case you don't go into P&N, there is a 3 day old thread on this subject. I don't think we have seen the last of this type of thing. I suspect there will be more bank runs in the future as people irrationally fear news and make the problems far more severe.
Originally posted by: Mark R
The government has just announced a very unusal move. It has now announced it will be giving a government guarantee for every penny in every account.
The cynics will, I'm sure, take this as an admission that the bank was insolvent and that it is being bailed out for political reasons - even though that is probably not true.
What is interesting is that the financial regulator, the financial services association has announced investigations into 3 other banks, to reassess whether they are solvent or not.
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose
Frankly, I'm concerned that the Fed's actions tomorrow will make things worse. You don't cure a heroin addict by giving them more heroin. Unfortunately so close to the election I'm sure there is political pressure on the voting members of the fed to cut the prime rate.