Monday, July 28, 2008
Shariah compliant insurance for Muslims
Policyholders' premiums are pooled then put into sharia-compliant investments which don't pay interest or involve alcohol or other prohibited products and services. The common fund is then used to pay any claims. If at the end of the year, the pool has a surplus the excess is passed back to policyholders through a discount on their next premium.
This is the latest product aimed at Britain's growing Islamic finance market, joining the Islamic Bank of Britain, Britain's first 100% Islamic bank and Lloyds TSB's range of Islamic finance products for businesses and individuals.
If the car insurance venture proves successful, Salaam, which offers services in English, Arabic, Bengali, Gujarati or Urdu, hopes to launch home insurance policies later this year.
Friday, July 18, 2008
How much life insurance do you really need?
Have a go, you might be quite surprised.
Saturday, July 12, 2008
1 in 10 driving without insurance
More on this and what to do if you are involved in an accident with an uninsured driver here.
FSA fines Land of Leather over insurance selling
Struggling sofa retailer Land of Leather was dealt another blow after being fined £210,000 by The Financial Services Authority for selling payment protection insurance (PPI) without properly training their staff or having adequate monitoring procedures in place according to The Times.
Of the 6 firms the FSA has penalised during its recent clampdown on PPI sales tactics Land of Leather is the first high street retailer. Although it is the last thing the struggling furniture group needed they may consider themselves lucky to escape the £1,000,000 fine levied on HFC Bank.
The FSA concluded that as a result of Land of Leather's actions 58,000 customers were exposed to “an unacceptable increased risk of buying unsuitable PPI”. They estimated that between May 2006 and June 2007 the retailer generated in excess of £3 million from sales of the policies and set the level of the fine accordingly.
Land of Leather has suspended all PPI sales while it tries to bring its procedures into line with the regulator’s guidelines.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Update on mortgage rate insurance
So far, it is looking like the general consensus on this one is that it is a opportunistic gimmick designed to cash in on people's fears about the current financial climate.
Monday, July 7, 2008
Is mortgage interest rate insurance really worth it?
Costs vary depending on the amount borrowed and rate insured against, but average around the equivalent of a half percent interest rate rise in themselves
But the cover only lasts two years after which terms are renegotiated, the entire premium has to be paid up front in a single lump sum and mortgage brokers insist that in most cases it would be cheaper to opt for a fixed rate mortgage or remortgage at a later date. However, in the current climate the possibility of remortgaging is not available to everyone, and the Bank of England base rate has risen nineteen times in the last ten years, so Marketguard might just be an alternative worth investigating.
Insurance fraud on the rise
The police report incidents of car crashes being staged to help people struggling with debt put in fraudulent claims to raise funds to ease their financial plight.
Of course predictably enough it doesn't actually cost the insurance companies £260 million, instead it adds an average of £40 to the premium of the average motorist. Bet you didn't see that coming.