Here is a link where you can find out if any bank is FDIC insured:http://www4.fdic.gov/IDASP/
Yes, ING Direct is an FDIC insured Bank. This means that deposits are insured up to $250,000, as are singly held accounts. Joint accounts which are 50/50 ownership are insured up to $250,000 per person, on the account, totalling up to $500,000 for the account. ING Direct is registered with the FDIC in Wilmington, Delaware, under number 35489.
Your funds are insured up to $100,000 per "ownership category" per FDIC-insured bank. Examples of ownership categories are an account that is solely in your name, a joint account with your spouse, and an account that is solely in your spouse's name. There would be a total of $300,000 of FDIC-insured money at this particular bank if all three of these accounts held $100,000. You may open an account at a different bank if you'd like more funds to be FDIC insured. Here are details: http://www.fdic.gov/deposit/deposits/insured/index.html Investment-Income.net shops many banks for the best rates, and holds the funds in a single account, as long as each bank is below the FDIC Insurance limit the amount of funds covered in a single account is unlimited. Enclosed it the bank CD lists http://investment-income.net/rates/bank-cd-rate-page
Money market mutual funds are safe and extremely liquid. There are usually no fees associated with transactions in money market funds. Most brokerage accounts provide access to money market funds which can be used to park funds from stock or bond sales pending reinvestment. The drawbacks to money market funds are that the interest rate paid is only a fraction of a percent and the money held in brokerage accounts is not insured against loss by the FDIC. CDs and savings accounts offered by banks offer higher rates of interest and are insured against loss by the FDIC.
RBC's US Banking arm, titled RBC Bank (USA), is indeed FDIC insured. RBC Bank is a US bank headquartered in Raleigh, NC and operates in 6 Southeastern states. On the other hand, the deposits held in the bank in Canada (RBC Royal Bank) are not insured through the FDIC, as they are held outside the US. A crown corporation owned by the Canadian government that insures bank deposits up to C$100,000 per personal account held in member Canadian banks in they event that the financial institution fails. The corporation was formed under the Financial Administration Act and Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act in 1967. The CDIC is similar to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in the United States
The Treasury Secretary under President Harding was Andrew W. Mellon, who held the position from 1921 until 1933.
The San Joaquin Bank was closed on Friday, October 16, 2009 by the California Department of Financial Institutions and the FDIC. The FDIC has further information regarding any accounts you may have held with this bank in regards with savings, loans, certificates of deposits, SSI and so forth.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is a United States government corporation created by the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. It provides deposit insurance which guarantees the safety of checking and savings deposits in member banks, currently up to $100,000 per depositor per bank. The vast number of bank failures in the Great Depression spurred the United States Congress to create an institution to guarantee deposits held by commercial banks, inspired by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and its Depositors Insurance Fund (DIF). The FDIC insures accounts at different banks separately. For example, a person with accounts at two separate banks (not merely branches of the same bank) can keep $100,000 in each account and be insured for the total of $200,000. Also, accounts in different ownerships (such as beneficial ownership, trusts, and joint accounts) are considered separately for the $100,000 insurance limit. The Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 raised the amount of insurance for an Individual Retirement Account to $250,000.
In 1994, federally insured depository institutions held $5 trillion in assets
Yes,brokerage accounts are held in Anchorage, Alaska valid in Canada
A certificate of deposit - an agreed upon rate depending on the amount deposited and length of time the deposit is held by the bank. From Wikipedia Certificate of Deposits or CDs are similar to savings accounts in that they are insured and thus virtually risk-free; they are "money in the bank" (CDs are insured by the FDIC for banks or by the NCUA for credit unions). They are different from savings accounts in that the CD has a specific, fixed term (often three months, six months, or one to five years), and, usually, a fixed interest rate. It is intended that the CD be held until maturity, at which time the money may be withdrawn together with the accrued interest. In exchange for keeping the money on deposit for the agreed-on term, institutions usually grant higher interest rates than they do on accounts from which money may be withdrawn on demand, although this may not be the case in an inverted yield curve situation. Fixed rates are common, but some institutions offer CDs with various forms of variable rates.
A non insured driver may be held liable for the accident. Insurance is a requirement in the majority of states.
Accounts receivable