His classic response to this question, and notwithstanding the wads of notes we sometimes find in drawers, is that he likes to keep enough money 'in case the roof needs doing'. Why this scenario causes so much angst I have no idea. Barring a substantial storm, the roof is going nowhere, and even in the event of the storm of the century, he has buildings insurance.weeksy wrote: Tue Feb 11, 2025 2:08 pmDid he give any indication of what type of scenario may actually require this ?gremlin wrote: Tue Feb 11, 2025 2:06 pm Father-in-law was round for dinner last night. He has a fair few quid stashed in premium bonds, but it cropped into the conversation that he's accumulated £16,000 in his current account, as you do.![]()
'WTF have you got that much in your current account? we both asked, 'You're not earning any interest on it'.
'In case I need to get hold of some money quickly', he replied.![]()
Between us, we convinced him that rather than earning feck-all on £16k, maybe we could open an instant access savings account. Cue much complaining of how he hasn't got time, it'll be too complicated, don't want to lose my money on the stock market, etc. So I grabbed his phone and opened him a Chase savings account in less than 15 minutes ('Chase who? Never heard of them'). He's still holding back a few grand in case of a sudden zombie apocalypse or such like, but it's a start.
Must be an age thing.
