Showing posts with label Deposits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deposits. Show all posts

Monday, 4 July 2011

An Irish institution bites the dust


I couldn't help feeling a little bit sentimental when I got a notification on Friday last that the EBS Building Society has been replaced by EBS Limited with immediate effect. While it may seem like just a name change and has no impact on customers' accounts, it's actually more than that. It's the demise of the old Educational Building Society, a mutual society founded in 1935 to help teachers and civil servants to buy homes. In its place is EBS Limited, a limited company which will soon become a part of AIB.

It is a shame to see an old mutual society disappear like this, even if the name will continue. Mutuals are owned by their members and would traditionally offer better value for money than private or public companies, which are run for the benefit of their shareholders. I can remember that EBS had a reputation for consistently offering competitive interest rates to their members before the property mania gripped us all.

Admittedly, EBS did lose its way somewhat in recent years as it tried to compete with the other mortgage lenders. It entered the commercial lending arena just as the wheels were beginning to come off, a move from which it never really recovered.

Shame how some bad decisions over a relatively short period of time can bring down a reputable society with a history spanning over 75 years.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

Deposit Guarantee Scheme extended


The Department of Finance has announced that the Credit Institutions (Eligible Liabilities Guarantee) Scheme (the ‘ELG Scheme’) has been extended from its original end date of 29th September 2010 to 31st December 2010.

It's important to note that there are two deposit guarantee schemes in operation - the Deposit Guarantee Scheme, which covers all deposits up to €100,000 and does not have an end date and this ELG scheme which covers deposits in excess of €100,000 and has been extended to 31/12/2010.

It's also important to make sure you know if your own bank is part of either or both schemes. Not all banks operating in Ireland are part of both schemes and some are part of neither, as they participate in their own country's deposit guarantee scheme.

See the Department's press release here.

Feel free to talk to us about your deposits and their security. We are authorised to arrange deposit accounts and have attractive rates for demand, notice and fixed rate accounts for individuals, corporate customers, charities and pension funds.