Alliance
turning towards the financial dark side
Released on
= June 29, 2005, 3:30 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = Financial industry cutting costs at expense of high street
savers
Press Release
Body = Following in the footsteps of many of its high street
competitors, Alliance and Leicester has announced that it will no
longer accept new customers onto its Online Saver and Direct ISA
accounts. The interest rate for the Online Savers account is also
being cut from 5.35% to a straight 5%.
Richard Brown
of the financial comparison website Moneynet (
http://www.moneynet.co.uk ) believes that Alliance and Leicester
(A&L), in common with its high street competitors, has seen
its costs rise as a result of recent rule changes covering things
like the way mortgages and general insurance are policed. He added,
“Unfortunately it’s the consumer who shoulders much
of this additional burden”
It seems to
many of their loyal customers that A&L is indeed determined
to make their customers pay in an effort to purge costs and boost
their profits. These cuts are only the latest of a series of changes
that A&L have made during recent months. First to go was the
cashback scheme on their Moneyback credit card. The Moneyfacts (http://www.moneyfacts.co.uk)
financial data website pointed out in February, that A&L had
increased the APR on their credit cards for all purchases up to
16.9%; as well as increasing penalty fees, and introducing punitive
new clauses to current
accounts. Other charges have been introduced to their mortgage products,
balance transfer fees on credit cards, reductions in children’s
savings accounts, whilst The Guardian (http://money.guardian.co.uk/saving/banks/story/0,12410,1509094,00.html)
has revealed some suspect changes that have been implemented to
their systems to increase the number of customers who breach their
overdraft agreements, trigger ing penalty charges.
A&L has
said that there is no hidden agenda, and that it still leads the
way
compared with its banking rivals.
A&L however,
are not the only financial group to be feeling the pinch. Barclays,
HBOS and Royal Bank of Scotland have all warned about credit arrears.
An announcement concerning job losses at Scottish Widows, came alongside
admissions from their owners LLOYDS TSB that there was, “An
increase in the number of customers experiencing repayment difficulties”
with their credit card debts and unsecured personal loans. According
to Lloyds' Chief Executive, Eric Daniels, we are currently experiencing,
"a slowing consumer environment".
Recent announcements
by the Treasury delivered the worst monthly public borrowing figures
since records began in 1993, re-igniting fears over a possible rise
in taxes.
Consumers are
reducing the amount they borrow on credit cards and analysts predict
mortgage lending in the UK will plummet by 10 per cent over the
next three years, as the out of control growth in house prices finally
stalls.
Independent
market analyst Datamonitor claims, lenders who have been enjoying
a boom in recent years, will struggle to maintain the momentum and
be forced to work harder to secure market share.
Investor Connections,
a group of independent financial advisers, has called for an accurate
assessment of the UK's current economic position, after statistics
showed the three main asset classes, shares, bonds and property
are all experiencing downward trends.
This downturn
should spell good news for borrowers and homeowners, as the mortgage
and credit industries fight for customers and sharpen up on their
competitiveness; however the evidence of Lloyds TSB’s actions
seems to belie this. With HBOS forced to criticise the other credit
card companies for failing to provide customers with adequate product
information, despite repeated requests to do so from consumer lobby
groups and watchdogs on the Treasury Select Committee, it looks
like the majority of finance companies are currently out to protect
themselves and their share-holders,
with little regard for their customers. At a time when UK consumers
are proportionately saving less than half of what they were 25 years
ago, you might be forgiven for thinking that competition in the
banking world would be becoming increasingly cut-throat in order
to gain customers’ business, but it seems that the big institutions
are instead looking to go down the
route of cost reduction to protect their profits. There are savings
are out there to be made, but they are savings in costs to be made
by the finance companies, at the expense of the consumer, rather
than beneficial savings for the customer.
Released by
http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Web Site = http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Contact Details
= Moneynet
Sussex House
8-10 Homesdale Road
Bromley
Kent
BR2 9LZ
Telephone: 020 8313 9030
Fax: 020 8464 1971
E-mail: INFO@MONEYNET.CO.UK
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