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Money | 09/17/2008 9:55 am

Is My Money Safe? Three Ways to Check if Your Money Is Safe With the FDIC, SIPC and State Insurance Guarantees

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
iStock

The dramatic events on Wall Street are making us on Main Street nervous about the safety of our money. Is my savings account safe? What about my investment accounts? What about my IRA account? Who administers my 401-K? And what about my annuity with AIG? Or my life-insurance plan with one of the other insurance companies?

In other words, "Is my money safe?"

Join the wowOwow Finance Forum: weigh in on all of the dramatic goings-on on Wall Street, at the Fed and at the White House …

Consumers need to take control and find out if their money is safe. Here are a few tips on what you can do in these tumultuous financial times to educate yourself:

SAVINGS: Check to see whether your bank or savings association is FDIC-insured by calling 877-275-3342 or using the agency’s online "Bank Find" tool. Small businesses, in particular, which often keep large deposits in banks, should check to see if their deposits are above the insurance limits.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), an independent agency of the U.S. government that protects depositors against the loss of their insured deposits if an FDIC-insured bank or savings association fails, offers information on your insured deposits. You can also read the FDIC insurance basics here.

If your money at one FDIC-insured bank or savings association totals $100,000 or less, your deposits are fully insured. Someone can have more than $100,000 at one insured bank or savings association and still be fully insured provided the accounts meet certain requirements.

If your deposits exceed the insurance limits, spread your money around to a few different banks. You may also want to open accounts in the names of different family members.

You can use the FDIC’s Certificate of Deposit Account Registry Service, or CDARS, which splits deposits into chunks under the $100,000 insurance limit and funnels the money out to 2,000 banks in the network. Only banks considered "well capitalized" by the FDIC are included.

INVESTMENTS: Both the bankrupt Lehman Brothers and the just-acquired Merrill Lynch are brokerage firms. What happens to your money when your investment house is in trouble? Visit the website of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), which maintains a special reserve fund authorized by Congress to help investors at failed brokerage firms. The SIPC has an “Investor’s Guide to Brokerage Firm Liquidations: What You Need to Know … and Do.”

Check if your broker is an SIPC member. Nearly all brokerages are but if yours isn’t, consider moving to a more-established firm. Make sure your advisers are working with SIPC members, too.

Lehman Brothers participates in the SIPC. The SIPC’s website says it protects “the cash and securities – such as stocks and bonds – held by a customer at a financially troubled brokerage firm."

INSURANCE: Is my insurance money safe? What about my annuity and life-insurance policy if my insurance company gets in trouble? Insurance companies are insured by the individual state where the policy was written, so there are 50 different answers to this question. Every state now offers at least $100,000 in cash for annuities and $300,000 in death benefits. In the event a consumer has a larger policy than the state guarantees, they become a creditor for the difference. The National Conference of Insurance Guaranty Funds has a website with information on these rules. You can also search "<name of your state> insurance guaranty."

Join the wowOwow Finance Forum: weigh in on all of the dramatic goings-on on Wall Street, at the Fed and at the White House …

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66 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

K O
It’s not a different perspective. It’s wrong.
By K O on 09/18/2008 1:40 am
B. Nyce
Hi Kitty, I have always respected your comments, but I think this one is not of your “caliber,” as my grandmother would say.
By B. Nyce on 09/17/2008 7:56 pm
K O
Hi Duchess, Point taken. I lost my temper. You’d think after working in a male dominant business all my life, I’d play nicer with boys. Miss Kitty’s going to take a break for a while until she calms the heck down.
By K O on 09/18/2008 2:01 am
Deni G
Hey Duchess! How goes it? How is life treating you?
By Deni G on 09/19/2008 2:59 am
B. Nyce
Hi Deni, If I can keep the kids in the playground to play nice, life would be much better! How have you been?
By B. Nyce on 09/20/2008 2:46 pm
Deni G
I am good. And I think you might have your hands full. What with the latest financial news, people are freaking out everywhere and throwing crap across the living room. There’s no outlets I’m afraid for this level of anxiety and uncertainty. Well If your a guy, there’s a plethora of outlets. But women, not nearly so much. We’re the sane ones. But everybody needs a little time to go nuts, and a little sweet release. Well maybe I am just talking about myself. I hope you are calm and happy.
By Deni G on 09/20/2008 3:47 pm
B. Nyce
Thanks Deni. I hope you are the same.
By B. Nyce on 09/20/2008 8:02 pm
Juanita Ward
Chicken Little did not believe either, But it happen!
By Juanita Ward on 09/17/2008 2:13 pm
K O
Juanita, if you have a shred of evidence that this economy is entering a Depression, I would be most interested in reviewing it and discussing it with you.
By K O on 09/17/2008 2:29 pm
Deni G
wow Kitty! You got the Duchess to make an appearance! That was so nice of you, to momentarily sacrifice your spotless reputation, just so we could say hi to the Duchess. We know that’s why you did it. And we owe you one! You Go Girl!
By Deni G on 09/19/2008 3:03 am
Diana T
Kitty, For years I have read Yale Global, and today I read this piece from it. It is an informative article…a good overview. http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=11338
By Diana T on 09/17/2008 8:00 pm
K O
Hi Maurine, Well, this will probably be more of an answer than you wanted, so feel free to skim. Greenspan - I agree that keeping rates so low for so long was a major contributor to this problem. I don’t agree that he was responsible for the regulatory side - a Fed chairman’s job is price stability and full employment. Solution - It’s a great economist’s solution, but the executive incentive would be almost impossible to implement and enforce, and the number of regulatory commissions he proposes would create a huge bureaucratic nightmare. Again, it’s a “top-down” approach that is theoretically fine, but hard to actually administer. I think Summers’ plan that includes infusing capital, removing unpricable assets from balance sheets and overhauling the current regulatory system with the specific goals of transparency, proactivity and public interest is a better solution from a practical standpoint. What do you think?
By K O on 09/17/2008 12:53 pm
Maurine H
Hi Kitty - Thanks for getting back to me. I’m glad to hear you say that Summers’ plan is realistic for a number of reasons. First, of course, is that there IS a sensible plan that could assist the economy, and second, because Summers is advising the Obama campaign and I’ve been hoping that their plan would be workable and beneficial to the American public. The transparency Summers proposes is one of the most attractive components, I think. I don’t know what to think about Greenspan because he’s saying this is the worst situation he’s ever seen and yet he was directly involved in the near past. Don’t you think he’d have seen this crisis coming and would/should have warned the public and the Administration? I have such a superficial understanding of the interwoven pieces of the current situation that I look to your postings for some demystification. I’m grateful to you for lending us your expertise. Mo
By Maurine H on 09/17/2008 6:11 pm
K O
Hi Maureen, So far, the Obama economic plan is most viable for many reasons - the most significant of which is that he adds $1.6b LESS to the national debt according to current projections. I’m a little worried about Robert Rubin on his team because when he chaired Citigroup he authorized the highly leveraged (lots of debt) model that is now getting everybody into so much trouble. And Greenspan, well, his job as Fed chairman is price stability (low inflation) and full employment, so technically it wasn’t his job to blow the whistle on this stuff, but morally, I think he should have. He’s a pure capitalist, though, and believes in NO regulation. So, he’s not allowed to bitch about this now, from my point of view. Hey, want a fun quote? Bloomberg News Greenspan Says McCain Tax Cuts Need Budget Reductions (Update1) By Scott Lanman Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. can’t afford $3.3 trillion of tax cuts proposed by Republican presidential nominee John McCain without similar reductions in the federal budget. Greenspan, a lifelong Republican and longtime friend of McCain, said on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt” that “I’m not in favor of financing tax cuts with borrowed money.” It’s bad when your supporters don’t support your economic plan, don’t you think?
By K O on 09/17/2008 6:37 pm
Maurine H
Thanks, Kitty. I’d read the Greenspan quote and my first thought was, “I wonder how many McCain supporters have read it and if it’s even made them think twice.” I live in a heavily Republican populated area where there are horse ranches, McMansions and big SUVs…just about all owned by Republicans who, I imagine are invested in the Market. I would love to hear some of the conversations going on in their homes right now because I’m sure they’re on the horns of a dilemma. They want to vote Republican but if they do, they’re on the road to further hell. I know you deliberated for a long time in your previous posts about whose economic plan was best, and I’m assuming from what you’ve written lately that you think the Obama/Summers plan is most realistic for the country. Do you have any thoughts about whether McCain will try to tweak his plan to make it more palatable to Republicans? In order to do that wouldn’t he have to line up more with Obama? Thanks again, Mo
By Maurine H on 09/17/2008 6:54 pm