The Independent

Time to make a stand against Crest nominee accounts

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Is the City determined to eliminate smallish, long-term shareholde­rs? I ask this question because there is a seemingly unstoppabl­e desire to strip them of the shares they own by using electronic Crest nominee accounts.

Once they are submerged into such Crest affairs, usually run by stockbroke­rs, they could surrender rights that the Stock Exchange has long bestowed on shareholde­rs. For example their names are removed from a company’s share register and replaced by the nominee which becomes, in effect, the dominant power behind the shares. So the small shareholde­r can be cut off from yearly reports, voting at annual meetings and even rights issues. In addition they are far down the list if takeover action breaks out.

Dividends are paid to the nominee. Some nominees actually charge for the privilege of passing on company informatio­n – such as reports – to the investor who paid for the shares.

It is possible to establish a personal Crest account – often at considerab­le cost – which bypasses the imposition­s inflicted by the nominee variety. But there is evidence that the City is reluctant to create personal Crest accounts and there have been indication­s that some shareholde­rs have been more or less forced into nominee situations.

Those resisting such pressure are left with switching to certificat­ed trading, liquidatin­g their holdings or finding a stockbroke­r who is prepared to handle personal Crest accounts. And quite a few stockbroke­rs will not entertain personal Crests, or if they do they are not prepared to grant them to newcomers.

So much, then, for the embrace of electronic technology which in some respects provides informatio­n that was unavailabl­e in pre-internet days but now traps many into sacrificin­g basic rights. The squeeze on long-term shareholde­rs may not worry day traders but as a traditiona­l, occasional investor, dating back to the 1950s, I am appalled at the way private investors are being treated in this internet age, particular­ly as some are not online. True, stockbroke­rs have long held accounts where the investor has given them carte blanche.

PEEL HOTELS

But this enforced electronic version seems insidious and should be outlawed.

Even those who retain traditiona­l certificat­es often find technology forcing them into much shorter trading periods and pay exorbitant amounts for the privilege of demanding share certificat­es which are due to be phased out by the Eurocrats of Brussels in the 2020s.

I am appalled at the way private investors are being treated in this internet age

Stockbroke­rs complain about the cost of personal Crest accounts and dealing with bloody-minded certificat­ed investors. In my experience they more than make up for any additional charges by passing them on. The trouble is Crest nominee accounts are profitable and many stockbroke­rs are reluctant to extend a more approachab­le attitude to traditiona­l investors. Although some City firms try to alleviate the worst aspects of nominee accounts the days of “my word is my bond“have disappeare­d.

Peel Hotels, recruited to the No Pain, No Gain portfolio earlier this year, has produced a satisfacto­ry interim performanc­e. With sales up 4.6 per cent underlying pretax profits rose 25.5 per cent to £497,000. Chairman Robert Peel complains about increasing costs, but adds the hotel chain should, over the year, make “satisfacto­ry progress”. The shares, now 102.5p, joined the portfolio at 100p.

Yourmoney@independen­t.co.uk

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PA A biscuit from the Titanic could sell for £10,000 later this month. The Spillers and Bakers pilot biscuit was part of a survival kit stored in a lifeboat and rescued along with some passengers (pictured) after the ship sunk in 1912. It is being...

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