Banks and building societies slash savings rates

Savers face drastically lower returns as banks and building societies slash their savings rates by up to 2.55 per cent, following the recent cut in base rate to 3 per cent.

More than half a dozen savings account providers have already cut rates, with over half of these reductions matching, and in some cases, outstripping, the base rate reduction by an additional 1.05 per cent.

For instance, Lloyds TSB has reduced its Easy Saver 2012 accounts by 1.5 per cent and term deposits by up to 2 per cent.

Capital One Savings has similarly cut its variable rates and base beater savings account by up to 2 per cent,  as has Norwich & Peterborough building society on its Gold Savings and Family Regular Savings accounts.

Anglo Irish Bank has reduced its popular range of fixed rate bonds by up to 2.40 per cent.

So what should people be doing to secure the best returns?

David Black, Defaqto banking consultant, says: “Use your cash ISA allowance of up to £3,600 as ISA rates tend to be slightly better than standard rates and the returns are tax free. If you have spare cash that you don’t need for a year, go for a fixed rate bond, such as Kent Reliance building society’s  6 per cent one year bond.

“Most variable rates are likely to come down by 1.5 per cent and you will be lucky to get anything over 5.25 per cent. Rates are being cut and accounts withdrawn all the time so you need to move quickly to get the best rates.”

The recent Monetary Policy Committee meeting minutes show that a cut of 2 per cent was considered at the last meeting, indicating that a further rate cut of 0.5 per cent is possible, as soon as December.

After tax and inflation, the recent cuts mean that most savers will receive a negative real return. But you can mitigate this to some extent by saving via tax-free and index linked accounts such as cash ISAs and National Savings & Investment products.

To view the top rates,  visit Defaqto’s best buy tables:

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/cash-isas.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/term-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/notice-savings-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx

For National Savings & Investment products visit:
http://www.nsandi.com/
 

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Savers’ dilemma puts focus on gilts

The dramatic cut in base rate to 3 per cent may spell good news for homeowners with mortgages, but for savers it could be a disaster.

For every mortgage, there are six to seven savers, and many pensioners and others on fixed incomes are dependent on the interest from their savings to top up their income.

So where can you put your money and get a decent rate of return, if banks and building societies cut savings rates by up to 1.5 per cent?

Some experts are touting gilts as the saviour of savers. Gilts are bonds issued by the Government which pay a fixed rate of interest over a set term and are considered to be safer than corporate bonds which are bonds issued by companies wanting to raise capital.

Because companies can go bust and default on their financial obligations, corporate bonds are considered more risky than gilts which are guaranteed by the Government.

Gilt managers are prediciting a return on 7 to 10 year gilts of around 4-8 per cent over the next two years. Ccompared with likely returns from banks and building societies of 3-4 per cent, gilts looks like a reasonable alternative.

But gilts are not risk free. Although you are guaranteed to get back your original investment back when your gilts mature,  prices and yields can vary significantly before the maturity date, depending on what happens to base rate and inflation.

So if you paid £100 today for a 10-year gilt with a 4 per cent yield, its face value could subsequently fall if base rate were to rise in two years’ time.

This would cause investors to flee gilts in seach of  higher returns elsewhere, thereby drving down the face value of gilts.  If you wanted to sell your gilt at that time, its sale value might be only £90, instead of £100.

Inflation is another enemy of  gilts as it erodes the value of fixed incomes. Although inflation now appears to be falling, it could re-emerge in future years, particularly with the increase in Government spending.

But if inflation and base rate fall to around 1 per cent, or even zero, as some commentators are now predicting, gilts could offer double digit returns. 

You can buy individual gilts via a stockbroker, or a gilt fund or gilt index tracker via a  fund manager. For advice on gilts, contact an independent financial adviser via www.unbiased.co.uk

For more on gilts, visit the Debt Management Office’s website:
http://dmo.gov.uk/index.aspx?page=Gilts/About_Gilts
http://dmo.gov.uk/index.aspx?page=Gilts/Daily_Prices

For the best savings rates visit:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/cash-isas.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/regular-savings-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/term-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/notice-savings-accounts.aspx

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Credit card companies called to account

The Prime Minister has stepped into the row over credit card charges by calling on the industry to adopt a more responsible approach to lending. 

Card company chiefs can expect to be hauled into Downing Street to account for their actions as research this week revealed brazen increases in credit and store card charges, despite the near halving of base rate since May.

According to Defaqto research, the average annual percentage rate (APR) for credit cards has risen from 17.2 per cent to 17.6 per cent since May - at a time when base rate has fallen from 5 per cent to 3 per cent.

One of the worst examples is the NatWest credit card which has hiked its APR  from 13.9 per cent to 16.9 per cent for purchases.

Card companies have not only been increasing interest rates for purchases, but  have been quietly tweaking their terms and conditions, to the detriment of their customers.

For example, some providers have reduced the number of interest-free days before cardholders start incurring interest, while others have increased balance transfer and cash withdrawal charges.
 
Nearly a third (30 per cent) of the credit card market (44 out of 145 cards) have cut the interest-free period for new customers from 56 to 50 days, at a cost to cardholders of £3m.

91 per cent of balance transfer cards now levy a fee, compared to just 29 per cent in 2005. Balance transfer fees have soared from an average of £11.02 per transfer in 2005, to £52.09 today. An estimated 7.9m balance transfers are carried out each year, costing cardholders £412m.

In 2005, the average APR for cash withdrawals was 21.22 per cent APR, compared to 29.97 per cent today, costing cardholders £161m a year in interest.

The charges levied on store cards are even worse. The average APR on 33 store cards from high street retailers such as Argos, House of Fraser and Marks & Spencer has increased from 24.5 per cent 25.4 per cent between May and November this year.

Defaqto’s banking consultant, David Black, attributed the increases to card companies’ need to recoup losses incurred elsewhere due to fraud, bad debts and restrictions on the sale of payment protection insurance.

Politicians have expressed concern that at a time of rising unemployment and the current credit squeeze, hard pressed consumers will turn to using their credit cards to raise emergency cash.

Check out the Defaqto best buy tables for purchases:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/credit-cards/best-buys/0-percent-on-intro-purchases.aspx

Best buys for balance transfers:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/credit-cards/best-buys/0-percent-on-balance-transfers.aspx
 
Standard credit card best buys:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/credit-cards/best-buys/standard-credit-cards.aspx

Try out the Defaqto credit card calculator:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/credit-cards.aspx

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Lenders to reduce mortgage rates

The major mortgage lenders caved in to Government pressure to reduce their lending rates last Friday, following a severe ticking off by the Chancellor, Alistair Darling.

Nationwide, HBOS, the RBS/NatWest and Northern Rock will cut their main variable lending rates by the full 1.5 per cent on 1 December, to reflect last week’s cut in base rate. Lloyds TSB and the Abbey had announced similar moves last Thursday.

The Nationwide is cutting its base mortgage rate from 6.19 per cent to 4.69 per cent, while RBS/NatWest is cutting its standard variable rate (SVR) by the same amount, from from 6.69 per cent to 5.19 per cent.

The HBOS SVR will fall from 6.50 per cent to 5.00 per cent.

Lenders had come under intense political and media pressure to pass on the full 1.5 per cent cut in base rate to their customers as quickly as possible, and in full.

But the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) warned that the precise level of any reductions would be a commercial decision for each individual lender because Libor (the London Interbank Offered Rate) - the rate at which banks lend to each and which, in turn, affects mortgage rates - remains stubbornly high at 4.49 per cent.

Lenders also have to balance the needs of their borrower with those of their savers, who will see a steep fall in their income. Building societies are particularly reliant on savers‘ deposits as they are not allowed to borrow as much as banks can from the capital market.

Michael Coogan, director general of the Council of Mortgage Lenders, said: “I think over the next few days and weeks we will see that the banks and building societies will move by anywhere between 0.5 per cent and 1.5 per cent - the individual decisions will be on the basis of assessing what they want for their savers, as much as what they want for their borrowers.”

Almost all tracker mortgages have been withdrawn for new borrowers as lenders consider at what rates to reintroduce them.

Lloyds TSB, which owns Cheltenham and Gloucester, was the first to announce that it is to reduce the cost of fixed-rate deals for new borrowers.

Some deals for those offering a deposit of at least 25 per cent will become 0.3 of a percentage point cheaper from tomorrow (Tuesday 11 November).

The three-month sterling Libor rate - which has the greatest influence on new tracker mortgages - fell from 5.56 per cent to 4.49 per cent on Friday, its lowest level since the end of 2005.

But the rate remains almost one and a half percentage points above the Bank of England’s base rate - still well above pre-credit crunch levels.

Check out all the latest mortgage rates:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/mortgages.aspx

For the latest savings rates visit:
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/regular-savings-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/cash-isas.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/notice-savings-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/term-accounts.aspx

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End in sight for Icesavers’ compensation nightmare

The 230,000 customers of the insolvent Icelandic bank, Landsbanki, have started to receive emails from the Financial Services Compensation scheme explaining how they can access  the £4.5bn of  deposits held in its Icesave accounts.

The payment process, which will be rolled out over the course of November, should see customers receiving 100 per cent of their money transferred into their  ’linked’ bank accounts as from next week.

Icesave customers will receive two e-mails from the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), the first telling them that the process for retrieving their money is being launched, and the second giving them precise details of what they should do.

Savers will be asked to go onto the Icesave UK website using their existing login details and be given a time slot for logging in and transfering their money. The process will be entirely online, with customers being given a month to move their cash.

Savers can expect to receive the money in their linked bank accounts within five days of triggering the payment.
 
The FSCS’s maximum compensation limit for  savings in an insolvent UK-authorised bank is normally £50,000, but the UK Government has agreed on this occasion to guarantee deposits up to 100 per cent.

Those with Icesave ISAs will be able to move their money to ISAs with other financial institutions, without losing their tax status.

However, the outlook for the thousands of investors in the Isle of Man arm of Iceland’s Kaupthing Singer & Friedlander bank, is less certain. Savers will have to wait until 27 November to find out whether they will get any money back.
 
Its Manx operation has 7,000 accounts, holding £850m, most of which is held by savers living outside the island. 

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling, has said repeatedly that the UK Governement will not bail out individuals with offshore accounts and the Isle of Man’s Financial Supervision Commission only recently changed its compensation rules so that depositors, wherever they live, can claim up to £50,000.

In October, the UK Government arranged for the Dutch bank, ING, to take over the accounts of 160,000 customers who held money in the UK arm of Kaupthing Singer & Friedlander and of 22,200 individuals with Heritable bank, a subsidiary of Landsbanki.

In Guerney, there is no compensation scheme at all for offshore account holders.

For more on the FSCS visit: www.fscs.org.uk

FSCS customer helpline 0845 7300 131 (Icesave enquiries only)

For more on compensation arrangements at Uk banks and building societies:
http://www.find.co.uk/saving/deposits/guide-to-saving-security

Visti the Defaqto savings account best buy tables
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/regular-savings-accounts.aspx
http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/cash-isas.aspx

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Compensation on the way to Icesavers

More than 200,000 retail depositors  in Icesave UK, the UK retail  branch of Icelandic bank, Landsbanki, will get back their saving paid back to them electronically, via their ‘linked bank’ accounts,  the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) announced yesterday.

The FSCS expects to launch the process in 10 days’ time, following the Government’s guarantee that 100 per cent of all deposits held by retail depositors of Icesave will be repaid and that savers will not lose their ISA tax status.

The FSCS will write to IceSave depositors setting out how the process will work and will contact customers again with instructions on how to complete a short electronic process to effect the transfer.

The process will be phased over a number of days to prevent  system overload and for security reasons.

FSCS chief executive, Loretta Minghella, says:  “We will be contacting retail depositors to tell them how the transfer process will work and when they can access the system.

 ”The automated payment process is expected to be in place in 10 days’ time and the first payments are scheduled to start in the second week of November.”

Icesave’s customers do not need to do anything for the time being. The correspondence you receive will tell you everything you need to know about how to access your savings, ISAs or term accounts.

The FSCS is also processing compensation applications from customers of Heritable and Kaupthing Singer and Friedlander whose accounts were not transferred to ING Direct.

The FSCS made the first compensation payments to members of Heritable Bank just 17 days after the bank was declared in default by the Financial Services Authority (FSA).

FSCS director of claims, Jonathan Clark, says: “We have sent application forms for compensation to all individuals whose accounts were not transferred to ING Direct and would encourage those who believe they have lost money to return the forms as soon as
possible.

 ”We are hoping to have paid all eligible claims by the end of November.”

The FSCS thinks there are less than 100 eligible retail depositor accounts that have not transferred to ING Direct.

For more information about the FSCS visit www.fscs.org.uk.

You can check whether the financial institution you are dealing with
is authorised by the FSA, by phoning the FSA’s Helpline: 0845 606 1234.

Check out the Defaqto best buy tables for instant access  savings accounts:

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx

Top 10 regular savings accounts:

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/regular-savings-accounts.aspx

Top 10 cash ISAs

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/cash-isas.aspx

Top 10 children’s accounts

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/childrens-accounts.aspx

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Societies face new round of carpet bagging

A KPMG report published last week  predicted that the building society sector could be due for another round of carpet bagging, as societies are forced to merge due to financial and regulatory pressures. The UK’s 58 building societies have withstood the credit crunch relatively  well compared to their banking counterparts,  although a few, such as Derbyshire and Cheshire, have experienced problems with commercial loans or on sub prime lending.  

But times are tough and some societies are having difficulty competing with the banks on mortgage rates because of their reliance on retail deposits for the bulk of their funding, which could become vulnerable in the event of a prolonged economic downturn. 

Nationwide recently announced it intends to set up a Dublin operation so that it can tap the European Central Bank for additional funds.  New capital requirements under Basel II regulations will also add to the pressure on societies. 

KPMG financial services partner, Richard Gabbertas, reckons that these pressures will force a number of the societies to merge with their larger peers, such as Nationwide, triggering cash windfalls for the members of the societies being taken over. 

The latest such windfall is going to the members of the Catholic building society who are set to receive a yet unstated cash payment following its takeover by Chelsea earlier this year. Anyone who remembers the building society demutualisation bonanza in the 1990s may want to cash in by opening accounts with a range of societies which they think are likely to be taken over. 

But experts says the payouts for carpetbaggers this time round are likely to be in the low hundreds and many societies now insist that you assign any windfalls triggered by a demutalisation to a charitable foundation for the first five years of membership, although this does not apply to merger bonuses. 

Defaqto banking principal, David Black, says: “It is likely to be the smaller societies which are forced to merger because of regulatory and succession issues. However, some regional societies restrict membership to local residents and some require higher minimum deposits of a £1,000 or more.” Many societies are currently offering  high rates of interest on regular savings accounts.

For details, visit:http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/regular-savings-accounts.aspx

For more the top instant access savings accounts visit:

http://www.defaqto.com/consumer/savings-accounts/instant-access-accounts.aspx

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Tax refund change set to hit pensioners and higher rate taxpayers

Pensioners, non working spouses and higher rate taxpayers are all likely to be among the individuals to be hit by the Revenue’s move to shorten the time limit for tax refunds from six years to four.

Many elderly people could be left unable to reclaim hundreds of pounds of tax deducted at source from savings income and annuities, while higher rate taxpayers who are members of  company pension schemes, may be unable to claim the extra 20 per cent tax relief due on their pension contributions.

Cuurrently individuals can reclaim overpaid tax going back six years to the 2002-03 tax year. But as part of the Finance Bill currently going through Parliament, this time limit will be reduced to four years from 2010.

Many older people and those on PAYE often have their tax affairs reviewed only every few years and therefore may discover too late that they are eligible to  make a reclaim for overpaid tax or claim a tax relief. 

Retired and non-working spouses often find they have paid too much tax because of the banks’  requirement to deduct 20 per cent income tax at source on  savings interest. If your total annual income is less than your tax free personal allowance, you can register to receive interest gross by completing form R85.

But this isn’t possible if your income exceeds your personal allowance, in which case the bank or building society will deduct 20 per cent income tax automatically on all your savings interest, even if your circumstances change during the tax year.

This means that savers entitled to the 10 per cent tax band, which has been retained for certain low income groups, will have to make a reclaim for overpaid tax at a later date.

Higher rate taxpayers contributing to company pensions often assume that the higher rate tax relief which is payable on pension contributions is recouped by their pension scheme and added to their pension fund automatically. But this isn’t the case.

All pension contributions (whether to a company scheme or to any form of personal pension) are paid net of 20 per cent income tax.   Higher rate taxpayers need to reclaim the remaining 20 per cent tax relief they are entitled to via their self assessment tax returns.

Any overpaid tax will then be refunded, either by raising their tax- free allowance through PAYE (if employed), or used to reduce your tax bill, if you are self employed.

Employees who are higher rate taxpayers and who opt to pay their company pension contributions via salary sacrfice, don’t have to worry about this. Their contributions are paid gross, directly from their employer to the pension provider, so their pension funds benefit from higher rate tax relief automatically.

STOP PRESS: Self employed individuals who owe tax need to get their tax bills paid today if they want to avoid swingeing penalties and fines. The deadline foor second payments on account for the  2007-08 tax year is midnight on Thursday 31 July.

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IFA news round up

June saw a continuing lively debate on the implications of the FSA’s interim feedback report on the future of financial services distribution.

While IFAs see it as an opportunity to differentiate themselves as true advisers, the banks are fighting a fierce rearguard action to have the proposals overturned.

Independent analyst, Ned Cazalet, warned that the FSA could face “high legal hurdles”, if it tries to carry through its planned separation of sales and advice, saying that the regulator should have given more focus to issues such as churning and the sustainability of business models rather than multi-ties.

But Pump Court barrister, Peter Hamilton, disputed this, saying that the meaning of ‘adviser’ should boil down to for whom the intermediary is acting: “If an intermediary is an agent of a product provider, then anything said to investors can be no more than a recommendation.”

Actuarial firm, Towers Perrin, meanwhile, said the RDR had failed to recognise that tied or multi-tied advisers can in many cases deliver a better service than whole of market advisers.

AIFA warned that the banks are fighting a rearguard action to get the interim proposals of the RDR reversed, prompting the trade body to reconvene its RDR working party, consisting of executives from the principal networks and a number of IFA firms.

But the FSA is reported to be standing its ground against heavy lobbying by the British Bankers’ Association, with FSA officials understood to have rebuffed calls from the BBA for a rethink on a primary advice channel. The ABI and the BBA are currently conducting research into assisted purchase with a report due in August.

However, the Smaller Businesses Practitioner Panel fears that the RDR may force some small firms out of business and push up regulatory fees.

AIFA director general, Chris Cummings, urged advisers to grasp the opportunity handed to them by the RDR by rising to the challenge and raising their game. The RDR proposals would give IFAs the chance to take sole ownership of the ‘advice tag’ and push out the sales people who are currently masquerading as advisers.

Cummings also welcomed the interim feedback’s stipulation that QCA level 4 should be the minimum qualification for advisers but called for membership of a professional body to be voluntary so that firms can differentiate themselves.

FSA RDR associate, William Tolmie, told delegates on PIMS not to worry about the timescale to conform with the RDR because the final shape of the regulation was not decided and because “qualifications take time to acquire.” CII head of policy and public affairs, David Thompson called for a transition period of four to six years.

Elsewhere, personal accounts continued to attract differing views. Ned Cazalet dubbed the government-sponsored pensions “a mis-selling scandal in the making” because of the effect of means testing on poorer workers pension pots, an issue much publicised by Scottish Life’s Steve Bee and pensions economist, Ros Altmann.

But Clerical Medical managing director, John van Der Wielen, called for compulsion, rather than soft compulsion, while a growing band of industry bodies is calling for  auto-enrolment for GPPs to be allowed before 2012.

Personal Accounts Delivery Authority, chief executive Tim Jones, admitted at a meeting that it would not be able to check whether contributions to personal accounts were correct and Alan Whalley of the Actuarial Profession doubted whether the two year timetable to test the new scheme was achievable.

Meanwhile, the Court of Appeal rejected the county court judgement which said it is unfair for advisers to have to pay a FOS case fee where a complaint is not upheld. Dolly and Brian Pickering of IFA firm Heath Moor & Edgecomb (HME) are to take their case to the House of Lords.

HME also lost another Appeal Court case in which it had argued that the FOS should follow common law when adjudicating complaints.

Elsewhere, investment bond business fell by nearly 40 per cent in Q1 2008 compared with the previous quarter because of the changes to the capital gains tax regime.

The ABI extended until 2014 the moratorium on genetic test results, allowing consumers to buy substantial amounts of insurance without having to disclose adverse results of predictive genetic tests.

Norwich Union is to join Legal & General by introducing postcode pricing for annuities from September.

Clive Cowdery astonished the City by making a play for Bradford& Bingley, along with some its principal investors, but then withdrew his offer when B&B refused to open its books.

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£15bn in unclaimed assets up for grabs

The race is on to reunite owners with long forgotten bank and building society accounts, as a Government Bill to reclaim ‘dormant accounts’ goes back to the House of Commons for a second reading next week.

There is an estimated £400m sitting in abandoned bank and building society accounts which the Government plans to use  to fund youth and community projects once the Dormant Accounts bill becomes law.

But the total amount of all unclaimed assets is believed to be nearer £15bn, including £466m with National Savings & Investments.

Even after the Dormant Accounts bill comes into force, forgotten bank and building society accounts can still be reclaimed by their rightful owners (or their heirs) at any time, providing they can  prove ownership.

Halifax and the Nationwide and Yorkshire building societies have launched their own initiatives in recent years to trace the owners of dormant accounts - defined as those where there has been no activity for 15 years.

To make it easier for customers to trace long lost assets, the banks, building societies and National Savings & Investments  established a free of charge website called www.mylostaccount.org in January this year to list the details of all their known dormant accounts  in one place.

Another website, www.uar.co.uk, charges a small fee but has a much more comprehensive database including occupational pensions, personal pensions, shares, dividends, unit trusts and endowment life policies as well as bank and building society accounts.

Lloyds TSB, and its mortgage arm, Cheltenham & GLcouester (formerly a building society) is the latest bank to step  up its efforts to find the owners of 120,000 dormant accounts worth £69m by employing a specialist tracing agency.

The average amount in the Lloyds’ accounts is £575, with 10 per cent holding £1,000 or more.

People forget about accounts for a variety of reasons such as moving home,  going abroad, their circumstances change or institutional name changes. 

Those who die intestate (without a will) leave no record of their assets and even those who do write  wills sometimes forget to  list all their assets so that executors cannot make a claim.
 

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