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How to survive the eurozone meltdown

As Europe descends into chaos, we look at how to ensure your cash is safe.

The euro is in chaos. Greece is going through hell. Spain, Portugal and Italy are on the edge. Experts talk of emergency, catastrophe, armageddon... but what does it mean for you?

There’s no point asking the Government, it doesn’t know. So this urgent task has fallen to me.

Here is my ten-part survival guide to the eurozone meltdown.

1. Save your savings

You need to protect your savings from another full-blown banking crisis. If you have less than £85,000, panic over, you are already covered. Provided you hold them with an FSA-registered bank, they are 100% protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS).

If you have more, spread it between different banks. Watch out as some banks have several different brands, but qualify for just one FSCS payout, notably The AA, Aviva, Bank of Scotland, BM Savings, Halifax, Intelligent Finance and Saga. If you have more than £85,000 with these banks, switch the surplus elsewhere.

Santander UK is protected by the FSCS, but other EU-owned banks are not, notably Bank of Cyprus, and the Dutch-owned ING Direct and Triodos Bank. Under EU law, you have up to €100,000 of protection, but have to seek compensation from the local deposit protection scheme. Remember Icesave? It could be an anxious wait.

2. Destroy your debts

In tough times, you have to be ruthless. Love your savings, but loathe your debts.

Show them no mercy. Debt is what got us into this mess. Now it’s payback time.

3. Kill bills

And while you’re at it, kill those bills. Remortgage to a cheaper home loan. Find the UK”s cheapest energy deal. Get dirt cheap broadband. Slash your supermarket delivery costs.

That’s the spirit. If you keep it up, one day you might learn to love your bills.

Keep calm, and carry on killing.

4. Avoid unnecessary risks

There are times in life when you need to take risks. This isn’t one of them.

Say you are thinking of buying your first property. If you have found the perfect place, can afford the monthly repayments and feel relatively secure in your job, you should probably still buy.

But if you’re overstretching yourself, worried about work, or would struggle if mortgage rates rise, think twice. Unless you’re buying in prime central London, house prices aren’t going anywhere. Time is on your side.

5. Go on holiday...

Take a break from the eurozone crisis by taking a holiday in… the eurozone!

Bad news for the euro is good news for the pound. Last summer, £1 bought you just €1.12. At time of writing, it buys you €1.25. That means for every £500 you spend in France, Spain, Italy, Portugal or Greece, you get an extra £50. The pound also goes a lot further in Brazil, Turkey, India, South Africa and Mexico.

When the going gets tough, the tough get going. On holiday.

6. ... but carry protection

Local strikes, riots and civil unrest could cast a cloud over your fortnight in the sun. Before taking out travel insurance, check what cover your policy offers.

You should also protect yourself in case your tour operator or travel agent goes bust, by booking your trip through a member of travel bonding schemes ATOL and ABTA.

If you book your flights and hotel separately, you don’t get that protection. That’s why you should pay with a credit (NOT debit) card.  If you spend between £100 and £30,000 on Visa or MasterCard, the issuer is equally liable for any losses, say, if your airline collapses or hotel closes.

This protection is the result of Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act, which you can find out more about in this article.

If the euro is plunged into crisis while you’re away, what happens to your holiday cash is anybody’s guess. Consider packing some emergency pounds or dollars.

7. Keep your head

Private investors are fleeing the stock market in droves, but do your best to stay calm. Unless you need the money in a hurry, the worst thing you can do is sell your stocks and shares ISAs now. That way you will only crystallise your losses. And you won’t claw them back when markets finally rebound.

If you’re feeling brave, buy on the dips instead. Shares are nearly 12% cheaper than just three months ago. Markets could fall further, so don’t commit all your money at once. Then hold for years.

The recovery could take time, but it will come.

8. Go shopping

If you have a little money to spare, it is your patriotic duty to help your fellow citizens. A little bit of consumer confidence can go a long way.

Your high street needs you.

9. Feed your career

You may grumble about your job, but you need it in a crisis. Developing your career is easier than you think, according to new research from professional network LinkedIn. It takes just 10 minutes a day.

Updating your CV, building networks (both offline and online), maintaining relationships, publishing an article, starting a blog, speaking publicly and getting to know your clients and competitors can raise your profile and boost your career. So you think networking is for nerds? It is cooler than being unemployed.

10. Stockpile optimism

In troubled times, people stockpile essentials such as canned food and bottled water. That isn’t necessary this time. Instead, you should stockpile cans of optimism and bottles of positive thinking. There is a shortage of both right now, but do your best. And no hoarding, share it around.

Remember, they all predicted the end of the world in 2008. It didn’t happen. Maybe we’ll get lucky this time as well. But prepare yourself, just in case.

More on the economy:

Consumers get more confident, says Nationwide

UK falls back into recession

Why the super-rich are good for us

The dangers of telling lies on your CV

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Comments



  • 31 May 2012

    eL Jay said 'save your cash etc' .... Well, I know it is not possible for everybody but keeping cash in the bank right now is the last place I would want it. We keep max £5k in the bank(s); with resources now in metals, some UK shares, property and yes, nickpike, beginning the gradual stockpile; particularly of natural medicines etc which are disappearing from our shelves thanks to Codex Alimentarius. So maybe no immediate solvency but if we are to do more than survive the next 3-4 years with the promise of everything from planetary axis shift, to Fukishima radiation already reaching the west coast of America, Canada etc; implosion of the world economy, weather modification etc etc..... the list goes on. My view is we need to introduce the idea that this change we are experiencing is not going to follow that of previous models our world has known. I am preparing myself for the worst so that I do not lose it if the metaphoric tzunami hits. My partner who works in the City of course laughs at this talk; as he did when I stockpiled for 2000 (practice run). Thankfully finished off the last tin of chick peas before the close of 2011. Aren't folks still eating bully beef from tins from 1945? So nice to see a hint of the reality the world is facing beginning to surface in the comments here.

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  • 28 May 2012

    Save your cash don't waste it, invest wisely and try to come out of the other side better off than when you went in! Same story as normal then!

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  • 27 May 2012

    stevbo "Quantitative easing is theft". By creating more money, the government is stealing from everyone who holds savings or cash. More money means each pound is less valuable i.e. QE (printing more money) creates inflation. Inflation is in fact an unofficial policy of all governments, because it is so useful to them: • the national debt can be paid back with devalued pounds (ND is now so large that it’s doubtful that it can ever be paid back any other way) • fiscal drag i.e. income inflation puts people into higher tax brackets and of course the poor get clobbered (as usual) • higher prices produce more VAT income • more capital gains tax (CGT is in fact a tax on inflation) So all in all a complete government scam

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