Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (15)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • I understand most of what your trying to do here Ben, but I must admit a couple of points did have me confused. 1, being as someone has previously mentioned the fourteen days then 10 in brackets???? and why have you used zero $'s when we live in the uk and use £'s?????????

  • Ben, so what happened with this?

    Cheers,

    Mike

  • The most important part of the letter is when you request them to zero the account BUT you didn't specify WHICH account for them to zero (you just said "The Account"); they could easily respond by accepting to zero your current account and still request the outstanding debt to be paid off from your overdraft.

  • ok, ok, look.... if everybody profits from not telling me how to do this, then how do i do in the first place? furthermore, where would i get the forms?

  • Is this advice legal or just a hypothesis?

  • @MsCrazyCuckoo

    why does it matter. if it bothers you then don't watch it.

  • @benlowreyhimself Whoa, fella, no need to be get rude! Of course it bothers ppl if something is legal or not, or whether it's just guess work. Doesn't it bother you? Do you think ppl should just accept stuff without question?  That's why we're this bloody great mess in the first place!

  • @MsCrazyCuckoo

    ok here's your answer, it's just hypothesis

  • @benlowreyhimself Okay, thanks :-)

  • you're in britain, does this work in the u.s.?????

  • @real80smusic

    it definitly works in the US. these theories come from the US. search creditorsincommerce

  • On the Statement of Account part you have fourteen (10) days to comply. You may want to fix that.

  • did you deposit the a4v into the NI fund..through ur NI number.

    something to think about

    when the govt issues a treasury BILL i've heard that

    they can be held as collateral on F/X accounts..earning interest for the investor while he leverages the amount on the bill...

    so the BoE acts as the payment service provider/transfer agent between broker account and the bill issuer...

    so wouldnt that be the case with the NI account holder (tax department) and Govt entity (HSBC LTD) bill issuer...

  • @kdcruz75

    so i'm guessing the BoE is the payment gateway.

    one way to test this is to take the BoE promise to pay ...(SUM of )

    a4v across it and ask them to deposit into the NI account.

    then instruct the tx deprtment to issue a summary of NI account and see if they deposit it...

    this could be done to see which one turns the NI instrument into a SUM shown on the NI accounts

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more