Opening a US$ account at ASB

We have decided to open up a US$ account here in New Zealand. While our original UK accounts are still active, and based in the  UK, we really don’t need a UK£ account here. But the issue we have at the moment is that the shares we hold in IBM are in US$. And while the share price and the dividends we get are quite nice in US$ amounts, once we pay them into our NZ$ account, we really aren’t getting our moneys worth.

So by letting the money sit in a US$ account, we can wait till the rate improves and get a better deal.

For ease we have opened up the US$ account at ASB. Applying is fairly straightforward – the major hitch is that you need to put a certain amount into the account to open it (amount depends on the currency). In the case of US$ – you need $10,000. Not exactly pocket change.

Now we have managed to get that, basically because I have that money in out Tax Savings account. It’s money that really doesn’t belong to us – we will need to pay it to the tax man – but because we are self employed – we don’t have to pay it for ages. So we borrow the funds to get the account set up.

The nice thing is that you don’t have to KEEP US$10,000  in the account.

You just need to put it in there to activate the account. Then you can move it back out when you want to.

There are NO FEES to operate the account. There are some fairly hefty fees if you want to do certain things – like get a NZ$ bank draft from the account – but that is basically the same with any ASB account. And if you wanted to pay cash into the account – that would cost. But electronic transfers into the account, or paying US$ cheques in costs nothing.

Which is good.

What is not so good is that if you do pay a foreign currency cheque into ANY ASB account (whether your normal current account or a foreign currency account) ASB sit on it for 21 working days. That’s basically a month. (Usual guff about money laundering blah blah blah).

In your normal account, it just sits there, gets noted on your statement and is in the Account Balance, but doesn’t get added to the Available Balance until the 21 (working) days are up.

In a foreign Currency Account, it sits in a separate Term Deposit before being cleared and transferred to your Foreign Currency Cash account. If you transfer money from your normal NZ account into the US$ account – that is not held for 21 days and shows up as usual.

Also, its worth noting that from my parents experience, paying cheques into these accounts generates a forest worth of paperwork. So make sure you have a good filing system for it.

 

Related posts:

  1. Avalon’s Money Thread: Revolving Credit Mortgages.
  2. Avalon’s Money Thread: Moving your money to New Zealand
  3. Avalon’s Money Thread: Am I a Big Spender?

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