4thekids Junior ISA

4thekids Junior ISA

Invest up 50 £3,600 per year in a self-select or ethically managed stocks & shares Junior ISA from 4thekids.

Self-Invested Personal Pensions

Self-Invested Personal Pensions

With a Reyker SIPP you can hold as many different securities as you like. Our no-fuss dealing service may be used for any existing SSAS or SIPP you may have.

Personal Share Dealing

Personal Share Dealing

With Reyker, you make the decisions. Buying and selling stocks through our personal dealing accounts is as simple as a phone call.

Self-Select Stocks and Shares ISA

Self-Select Stocks and Shares ISA

A stocks and shares ISA allows you to subscribe up to £10,680 in each tax year. With Reyker's self-select ISA, you make the decisions.

Discretionary Management Service

Discretionary Management Service

An accessible wealth management service, with an exceptional promise: if we don't make money for you, we'll waive out management fee.

4thekids Child Trust Funds

4thekids Child Trust Funds

Invest up to £3,600 a year in a self-select or ethically managed stocks & shares CTF from 4thekids.

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Our Services for Individuals

Reyker offers a wide range of services to private investors, from online execution only dealing right through to tailored investment management services. We pride ourselves on our impeccable regulatory history and our straight talking service. 

With dedicated client money bank accounts, safe and secure holding of both virtual and tangible securities, and fraud prevention history that is second to none, you know your investments are safe with us.

We're on the phone to answer any questions you may have, we won't blind you with jargon, we won't pass the buck. However large or small your portfolio you'll know you're getting the best possible service.

We are real people, not robots. Call us on 020 7397 2580, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , or fill out the form on the right to request a callback.

  • The Daily Roundup: 22 February 2012

    Reuters

    Chancellor George Osborne should focus on implementing the growth-boosting measures he unveiled last year in the budget due on March 21, Britain's biggest business lobby group said on Wednesday.

  • The Daily Roundup: 21 February 2012

    BBC

    Eurozone finance ministers have agreed a second bailout for Greece after marathon talks in Brussels. Greece is to receive loans worth more than 130bn euros (£110bn; $170bn).

  • The Daily Roundup: 20 February 2012

    Bloomberg

    European officials attempting to fend off the euro area’s first sovereign default will try to settle remaining disputes today as they close in on a 130 billion-euro ($170 billion) Greek bailout. Finance ministers meet in Brussels at 3:30 p.m., joining Greece’s prime minister, Lucas Papademos, who arrived on the eve of the gathering. Their talks on his country’s second bailout in two years will aim to reconcile demands made on Greek leaders, a debt swap among private creditors, the role of the European Central Bank and concerns the measures won’t bear fruit.

  • Investor scepticism overwhelms response to second Greek bail-out.
    After marathon negotiations between Greece and their international lenders terms were agreed for the second €130 billion bail-out to be approved. Nevertheless, markets muted response was hardly a vote of confidence. Details highlighted that the agreement remains underpinned on nonsensical assumptions that are unlikely to be achieved by the accident-prone Greeks. Even the engineers of the deal remain sceptical; Wolfgang Schauble, German financial minister summed it up: the assumptions the deal is built upon hold a significant level of uncertainty.
  • Featured
    Greek fantasy or tragedy?

    The markets have been calmed by the news of the latest Greek bail out. Politicians are clapping themselves on the back and the Euro as we know it lives to fight on in the international currency markets. We all like a bit of fantasy accounting don't we?

  • Uncertainty blights European markets as US stocks hit multi-month highs.

    The FTSE 100 continued a similar trend on Thursday, slipping marginally down 6 points to 5,885 as investor took caution over Greece.