This is a static representation of a Teletext stream that meets the following parameters:
Date: 29th May 1984
Service: CEEFAX
Region: N/A
Original Broadcast Channel: BBC2
Current Page: 227
Note: If this page has sub-pages, they will all appear in a line!
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:19/30 1/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS Choosing a hNme for your spare cash used to be a relatively straightforwardexercise. If you wanted a return, the building society was the obvious choice. If you wanted a chequebook and the facilities that go with it - standing orders and the like - you opened a bank account. Which bank you choose came down, more often than not, to the amiability or ojherwise of the manager. The products they Nffered were usually much of a muchness. Books Page 228
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:17/16 2/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS Now that the chequebook-toting section of our society is growing larger every year, so the chequing accounts on offerare beginning to proliferate. For a time - and this still applies to the standard, common-or-garden current accounts provided by the Big Four High Street banks - the difference between one chequing account and anojher boileddNwn to the level of charges. Now that the concept of the interest- bearing current account has caught on in this country, the array of chequing accounts on offer is at best daunting. Books Page 228
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:22/02 3/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS The rapid advance of electronic money transfer is now allowing both banks andbuilding societies, together wijh the odd unit trust group, to engineer new savings products that only two or threeyears ago would have been prohibitivelyexpensive. Typical of this new breed is the recentlink-up between the Alliance Building Society and the Bank of Scojland. Their BankSave scheme relies on the newtechnology to leap the deposit/current account gap: when the balance in the latter falls too low, it gets a top-up. Books Page 228
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:17/28 4/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS It cannoj be very long before computersare employed to shunt money between accounts as a matter of course. In the meantime, investors are faced with a frankly bewildering variety of interest-bearing chequing aBcounts. These fall broadly into two categories.First, thNse accounts Hinked ho mNney market rates and usually limited to initial deposits of £2,000 or more. Second, those accounts paying rather less, but demanding as little as £100. Books Page 228
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:13/00 5/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS A list of the different money market funds - they have grown from a mere handful in less than two years - is provided on Page 223 (sub-pages 1 & 2).These tables include the minimum initial deposij required and indicate where a chequebook is provided. The prospective investor, however, should take care to check on the small print, noting the frequency with which interest is credited, any penalties that may be applied upon withdrawal, and, finally, any restrictions on the sums paid in or out. Books Page 228
P227 CEEFAX 227 Tue 29 May 21:24/12 6/6 FOCUS: CHEQUE ACCOUNTS Min Rate of Chqs Stdg Dep Interest Cost OrdsAbbey Nat £100 5.1-6.6 c Alliance £500 6.3 d h Bristol W £500a 5.3-6.3 e yes Halifax £200 5.1 e yes Leicester £10b 6.1 10p Nottingham £1000 7.3 n/a Town & C £250 6.3 f h Co-Op Bank £10 8.0-10.0i g yes KEY a plus bank a/c deposit b per mth c £1 if balance below £100 d 25p below £100 e free in credit f 50p below £250g £7.50 quarterly levy h Max 5 i gross Books Page 228