sherbert wrote on Nov 17
th, 2008 at 5:57pm:
I have been one of the unlucky ones to have had money in Icesave. However the FSCS seem to be pulling out all stops to reunite everyone with their money and the process seems to be very easy.
As a fellow Icesave sufferer but hoping that my money will be back in my NatWest bank account on Wednesday or Thursday I would have to disagree with you that this has been handled at all well by the FSCS.
1. First and foremost from the point of view of this website the phone number quoted for contact on the
www.icesave.co.uk website post the Icesave collapse and in the first email sent out by the FSCS was 0845 605 6050. Especially bad bearing in mind that quite a few Icesave investors were British expats living overseas.
2. Due to the FSCS's technological incompetence in using an emailing house primarily associated with unwanted commercial spamming around 50% of the first emails from the FSCS (sent for them by this bunch of spammers known as
www.hearfrom.com) were blocked as spam by the UK's major ISPs. Despite this the FSCS did not have the email re-sent by an email house that knew what it was doing and/or after arranging with all major ISPs they would first whitelist emails from this address.
3. Staff on their helpline on the London 020 geographic number are poorly trained, grumpy, moody and rude towards Icesave depositors who call many of whom are likely to be emotinally distressed and/or in an acute state of financial distress. They all seem to be temps on minimum wage who seem to resent the fact that unlike them Icesave depositors actually had money they could lose in the first place. Service at the call centre in Newcastle is better and friendlier but make sure to call it using the geographic alternative for the 0845 number listed under Icesave on this website.
4. Especially unfairly not everyone is getting their money back at the same time and people are getting their money back in their bank account any time between about November 13th and some time in January depending on the random sequence in which the FSCS authorises their account to receive compensation and sends out a second email about it. Also some accounts do not have a linked bank account at another bank account set up and so will have to claim manually on paper. These people may not get their money back until late January.
5. Despite the above total inconsistency in when different people get their money back the FSCS is not paying any interest after October 7th when Icesave ceased operations on Instant Access accounts. It is totally unfair and unjust that people (a) lose any interest at all when those in Northern Rock, Bradford & Bingley, Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS etc have not lost any interest due to those banks being bailed out by the government and (b) that different account holders with the same amount of money with Icesave in the same account are losing different amounts of interest on a random generated based basis in terms of when they are paid out.
6. It is wrong that email was relied on to notify the process for getting money back when email is not reliable in terms of getting there. As the process was in any case slow and took weeks they should have used the 1st class post which has a 99.9% delivery reliability record.
7. I wrote to the CEO of the FSCS setting out my above issues on Wednesday 5th November but so far I have not had so much as a holding email acknowledging the complaints I have raised and saying they are being looked in to. This is very poor and I note that the Chairman and CEO of FSCS seems to have given almost no public media interviews on the crisis.
In short the FSCS should not be congratulated at all as they have screwed up badly in the way they have run the process and are not running it fairly. Also it was always inevitable that Icesave would be bailed out by the government as if it had not been all the other smaller overseas banks taking substantial deposits in the UK would have all had runs on them and also gone down like a bunch of ninepins. The only Icesave customers who have reason to feel grateful to the government are those with more than £35,000 deposited who had no reason to believe that more than £35,000 of their money would be protected until the day before the collapse when the government raised the limit to £50,000 and then decided they would pay out to all Icesave UK investors no matter how much they had deposited.