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UK mortgage rates jump as lenders pull products as Iran war threatens economy – business live

about 2 hours ago
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Oof! Average UK mortgage rates have jumped this morning.Data provider Moneyfacts has reported that the average 2-year fixed residential mortgage rate has risen to 5.20% today, up from 5.10% on Friday.It was just 4.

84% on the eve of the US-Israeli war on Iran last month,The average 5-year fixed residential mortgage rate today is 5,25%, up from 5,19%,That reflects rising expectations in the City that the Bank of England will not cut interest rates this year, and is likely to raise from back to 4% (from 3.

75%) today by summer 2027.[although, as flagged earlier, Goldman Sachs still expect two rates cuts this year].Moneyfacts also shows a drop in the number of residential mortgages on the market – down to 6,972 today, from 7,106 at the end of last week.The City is losing one of its bigger names, with building materials group CRH announcing it will delist from the London Stock Exchange.The move comes two and a half years afer CRH, which is valued at £50bn, moved its primary stock market listing to the US from London.

CRH attributes the decision to the level of trading activity for its ordinary shares on the LSE as well as the additional cost, regulatory and administrative obligations arising from retaining the LSE listings,Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist at Wealth Club, says:double quotation mark“The delisting of CRH isn’t a complete surprise, given that it had already switched its main listing to New York and three quarters of its profits are reliant on its operations in North America,However, with yet another big name heading Stateside, it will still be a significant blow to the London Stock Exchange,It comes after a flurry of other companies have taken flight from the UK to seek greater fortune under a New York listing,At the same time, there has also been a trend of global giants swallowing big fish from the UK pond, with acquisitions such as Schroders by Nuveen still front of mind.

Each high-profile departure shrinks the UK’s listed market and reinforces the perception that companies are finding deeper pools of capital and higher valuations across the Atlantic.The oil price has dropped back, following reports that oil loading operations have resumed at the United Arab Emirates port of Fujairah after a drone attack.Exports from Fujairah were disrupted after the attack triggered a fire in the emirate’s petroleum industrial zone, but Reuters reports that operations have now resumed.Civil defense teams were working to control the blaze, the Fujairah government media office said in a statement, adding that no casualties were reported.Greenpeace have welcomed the UK government’s pledge of support for those on heating oil, while emphasising the need to shift off fossil fuels.

Paul Morozzo, senior climate campaigner for Greenpeace UK, says:double quotation mark“Households dependent on heating oil are at the sharp end of Trump’s chaotic war on Iran, which has rapidly pushed up the price of oil and gas.It’s vital for the government not to abandon people to the profiteering suppliers of volatile fossil fuels, but while citizens can be protected to some extent the UK will still be paying inflated prices, even if it’s on our taxes rather than our bills.The only way to achieve long-term stability in energy prices is to get off the fossil fuel rollercoaster and accelerate the transition to clean, homegrown energy sources we can control.”Sir Keir Starmer has announced £53m of support for rural communities to help with the rising cost of heating oil.At a press conference this morning, the prime minister said energy companies should not profit from price rises caused by the war, and reassured households that the planned fall in the energy price cap from April to June will take place.

And on heating fuel, he says:double quotation markThe CMA [Competition and Markets Authority] reported last week what every heating oil customer already knows.There are accounts of suppliers cancelling orders and jacking up prices.Now that kind of conduct is completely unacceptable.So if the companies have broken the law there will be legal action.Because it’s clear this market is under regulated, we’re going to put that right to ensure customers get a better deal.

But we won’t just wait for that.I’m announcing immediate support for vulnerable heating oil customers today, providing £53m for those households that are most exposed.Our Politics Live blog has full coverage of the press conference, where Starmer is being quizzed about the Iran warTwo European banking powerhouses have become embroiled in a €35bn (£30bn) takeover battle after Italy’s UniCredit stepped up its long-running pursuit of German lender Commerzbank, despite strong opposition from the German government.UniCredit first took a stake of 9% in Commerzbank in September 2024 and has since built up its holding to just under 30%.It said on Monday it was pushing to increase that holding further and push the rival lender into formal merger talks.

Under German law, a shareholder that has a more than 30% stake is required to make a takeover bid.The Milan-headquartered bank said on Monday it was planning a share swap that would imply a €30.8 price per Commerzbank share, or about €34.7bn in total.Commerzbank’s share price rose to €31.

30 on Monday in early trading,Oof! Average UK mortgage rates have jumped this morning,Data provider Moneyfacts has reported that the average 2-year fixed residential mortgage rate has risen to 5,20% today, up from 5,10% on Friday.

It was just 4.84% on the eve of the US-Israeli war on Iran last month.The average 5-year fixed residential mortgage rate today is 5.25%, up from 5.19%.

That reflects rising expectations in the City that the Bank of England will not cut interest rates this year, and is likely to raise from back to 4% (from 3.75%) today by summer 2027.[although, as flagged earlier, Goldman Sachs still expect two rates cuts this year].Moneyfacts also shows a drop in the number of residential mortgages on the market – down to 6,972 today, from 7,106 at the end of last week.Houmous, alcohol-free beer, pet grooming, motorhomes and dashboard cameras have all been added to the basket of goods used to track UK inflation.

The Office for National Statistics has decided to include these items, as part of its regular adjustment to the products it tracks to measure the cost of living,To make space in the virtual basket, bottled premium lager bought in pubs and restaurants have been ejected,The ONS will also ditch sheets of wrapping paper in favour of rolls of wrapping paper, which are easier to track,We’d like to hear from people in the UK who have seen the cost of goods or services increase or experienced delays, cancellations or other disruptions…,.

Goldman Sachs are still predicting the Bank of England will cut interest rates this year.In their baseline forecast, Goldman economists see the next rate cut in July, followed by further quarter-point cuts in November and February, bringing Bank rate down to 3%.That’s at odds with the money markets, which are indicating rates will rise back to 4%, from 3.75% today, next year.Like pretty much everyone else in the City, it seems, Goldman also expect the Bank of England to hold Bank Rate unchanged at Thursday’s meeting.

They predict a 7-2 vote split – with policymakers Swati Dhingra and Alan Taylor preferring a 25bp rate reduction,Goldman predict:double quotation markThe minutes will probably acknowledge that the latest energy futures prices suggest that headline inflation is likely to remain above target for longer than previously expected, while stressing that the path ahead is highly unpredictable,We think that the Committee will indicate that it is alert to the possibility of second-round effects and will likely assess that the risk of persistence in underlying inflation has increased,That said, we expect the minutes to reiterate that risks remain two-sided given continued labour market weakness,We expect the Committee to refrain from offering a strong steer on the near-term policy outlook, noting that in the current context of elevated uncertainty it will decide the appropriate degree of restriction at each meeting.

But we think that the guidance will indicate that additional policy easing remains likely if energy prices fall back.
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Thames Water lenders float new £10bn rescue plan

Thames Water’s lenders have put forward a £10bn rescue plan that would involve paying off the troubled water company’s hundreds of millions of pounds-worth of fines for leaks and pollution, as part of an effort to stave off financial collapse.A group of private equity firms and investment groups said they would inject about £3.35bn of cash into Thames Water and raise £6.65bn in debt, in exchange for the company not falling into a government-handled administration, in effect a temporary nationalisation.Bills for Thames Water’s 16 million customers in south-east England are already due to rise steeply until 2030 but the rescue plan would, at least, hold them at that level rather than pushing them even higher

about 5 hours ago
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Taxpayer bill for saving Scunthorpe steel furnaces could top £1.5bn by 2028, auditor says

The cost of keeping the UK’s last remaining blast furnaces going at British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant could exceed £1.5bn by 2028 if it continues at its current rate, according to the government’s spending watchdog.Ministers took the plant into public control in April last year, after its Chinese owner – industrial firm Jingye – threatened to shut down the loss-making site.The National Audit Office (NAO), which monitors state spending, said the intervention saved thousands of jobs at Scunthorpe and prevented a “serious impact” on UK industry, including Network Rail, which buys steel for the railways from the plant.Shutting the plant would also have ended Britain’s “primary” steel-making ability because blast furnaces allow steel to be made from scratch, rather than relying on scrap metal

about 14 hours ago
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AI has exposed age-old problems with university coursework | Letter

The frustration many academics are expressing about artificial intelligence and critical thinking is understandable (‘I wish I could push ChatGPT off a cliff’: professors scramble to save critical thinking in an age of AI, 10 March). But from my experience working with students on academic writing, blaming AI risks masking a problem that universities have lived with for years.In my work with students, I have long seen the ways in which thinking can be outsourced when assessment allows it: essay mills, shared past papers, model essays passed between cohorts, or heavy reliance on tutors and friends to structure assignments. Artificial intelligence did not invent this behaviour. It has simply industrialised a shortcut that already existed

about 21 hours ago
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Trump administration reportedly set to be paid $10bn for brokering TikTok deal

Donald Trump’s administration is reportedly poised to be paid $10bn by investors as part of a deal to create a US-controlled version of TikTok.The $10bn, considered by the US government as a sort of transaction fee, will be paid by the administration-friendly investors who took control of TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, according to reporting that first appeared in the Wall Street Journal.The investors in the popular social media app include software company Oracle; MGX, an investment firm based in the United Arab Emirates; and private equity business Silver Lake. These entities, along with other backers, paid $2.5bn to the US treasury when the deal closed in January and are set to make further payments in the unusual arrangement until the total hits $10bn

2 days ago
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Sydney Swans admit to altering Bondi attack tribute to omit mention of Jewish community

The Sydney Swans have again apologised for the club’s “error of judgment” that resulted in the Jewish community not being mentioned in the AFL’s opening round pre-match tribute to victims of the Bondi terror attack.In a statement on Monday, the club attempted to absolve the AFL of any blame after the league was referred to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion by Liberal senator James Paterson.Before the Swans’ season-opening game against Carlton at the SCG, Sydney’s chief executive, Matthew Pavlich, led a tribute to victims of the Bondi attack and first responders, some of whom joined the teams on the field.The club has now apologised multiple times, after journalist and former player Gerard Healy revealed Pavlich’s speech had been edited to remove references to the Jewish community.“There was no directive or instruction from the AFL to remove or change the reference to the Jewish Community in the script,” the club said in a statement

about 6 hours ago
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Cheltenham raised a cheer – but fatalities and fallouts tainted bounce-back festival

Attendance: up. British winners: up. Bookies’ profits: through the roof. Punters will wince at the last of those after a ferociously difficult four days at Cheltenham, with winners at 66-1, 50-1, 40-1 and 33-1 among the biggest skinners for the books. The Paddy Power client in Ireland who was paid €558,000 (£484,000) after putting Friday’s first six winners into a 50 cent each-way Lucky 63 would be a very worthy inductee into the Cheltenham Hall of Fame

about 6 hours ago
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Fewer Britons giving to charity, study says, with donations down by £1.4bn

about 8 hours ago
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Care leavers given one-off £2,000 more likely to find housing, UK pilot finds

about 9 hours ago
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Three-quarters of nine-month-olds in England have ‘daily screen time’

about 9 hours ago
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Little liars: babies younger than one practise deceit, study suggests

about 14 hours ago
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Two dead and 11 seriously ill in meningitis outbreak at University of Kent

about 15 hours ago
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Sharp rise in young Britons saying ill health is reason they are jobless, study finds

about 15 hours ago