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Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says

about 10 hours ago
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The average cost of a UK home passed £300,000 for the first time in January, as house prices increased at the fastest rate since November 2024.Data released by Halifax showed that house prices rose 0.7% month on month last month, the fastest rate since a 1.1% increase was recorded in November 2024.On an annual measure, prices grew 1%.

Halifax, which is part of Lloyds – Britain’s biggest mortgage lender – estimates that the average price of a UK home hit a record £300,077.However, Nationwide, which also releases monthly estimates on house prices, puts the average cost of a home at a much lower £270,873.The growth marks a significant bounceback after a sluggish run-up to Christmas, when the average price of a UK home fell by 0.5% month on month.Halifax has revised this figure down from 0.

2%,“The housing market entered 2026 on a steady footing,” said Amanda Bryden, the head of mortgages at Halifax,“While [£300,000] is undoubtedly a milestone figure, and activity levels show a resilient market, affordability remains a challenge for many would-be buyers,All in all, we still think house prices are likely to edge up between 1% and 3% this year,”Last month, Nationwide predicted that the average UK house price would rise by between 2% and 4% this year.

Homebuyers have been buoyed up by a string of cuts to the base rate by the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, with the most recent coming in December.On Thursday, the bank maintained the rate at 3.75% over concerns of persistent inflation, which rose for the first time in five months in December, to 3.4%.However, the narrow 5-4 vote split has led analysts to factor in further cuts in the coming months.

The committee has cut rates six times since mid-2024.On a regional basis Northern Ireland continues to show the strongest house price in the UK, with average prices rising at 5.9% annually to £217,206.In Scotland, the rate of growth is running at 5.4%, with the average price of a property at £221,711.

In Wales, there has been only 0.5% annual growth, with the average home costing £228,415.In England, the strongest growth is in the north-west, at 2.1%, where an average home costs £244,329.“Looking ahead, much will depend on whether the expected rate cuts later this year materialise,” said Karen Noye, a mortgage expert at Quilter.

“If they do, the impact is more likely to be gradual support for affordability rather than a sudden jump in prices.“Stability has returned, but enthusiasm has not and that is likely to keep price growth contained over the months ahead.”Anthony Codling, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said: “While housing affordability is stretched for many, rising wages, falling mortgage rates and the easing of mortgage lending limits have all contributed to rising house prices at a national level.”While the average price of a UK property has topped the £300,000 mark for the first time, in part fuelled by sharp rises during the Covid pandemic, growth in recent years has been modest.Property prices have risen by 5.

7%, or about £16,000, over the last three years as higher interest rates and affordability issues have contributed to slower growth,However, between 2020 and 2023 house prices climbed almost 19%, over £44,000, as ultra-low borrowing costs and the pandemic-driven “race for space” led to homeowners looking to relocate,There are a number of factors that contribute to the difference in average UK house price estimates produced by Nationwide and Halifax,Both produce the estimates based on their own mortgage approvals, about 15,000 a month for Halifax and 12,000 for Nationwide,Cash transactions are also not included, with 30% to 40% of sales in cash.

Nationwide also does not include buy-to-let transactions.e
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Bald eagles and Lynyrd Skynyrd: is Budweiser’s all-American Super Bowl ad serious?

Featuring an unlikely animal friendship, the commercial boasts enough patriotic iconography to verge on self-parodyThree years after its sister brand, Bud Light, faced a rightwing boycott over a transgender spokesperson, Budweiser’s new Super Bowl ad, American Icons, contains absolutely nothing that could be mistaken for social progress. Instead, it features an unlikely friendship between two animals whose blood runs red, white and blue: a bald eagle and a Clydesdale horse, the Budweiser icon. An adorable foal trots out of a barn, and the viewer is injected with a single minute of American iconography so pure that it would make Lee Greenwood nauseous.The horse meets a struggling baby bird who gets caught in the rain, prompting the horse to stand over the bird as a roof. The pair become pals and grow up together, the bird riding on the horse’s back as it grows larger

about 20 hours ago
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Barclays reportedly cuts ties with lobbying firm co-founded by Peter Mandelson

Barclays has reportedly cut ties with the lobbying firm co-founded by Peter Mandelson, after intense scrutiny of the founders’ dealings with the late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Vodafone has also said it is reviewing its contract for public affairs services with Global Counsel, which Mandelson co-founded in 2010 after Labour lost the general election.Mandelson has tried to distance himself from the lobbying firm after the revelations of the extent of his relationship with Epstein sparked a major political scandal. Mandelson resigned from the Labour party on Sunday.The former minister was sacked as ambassador to the US in September after the emergence of emails that suggested he had a close relationship with Epstein, who died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial over child sex-trafficking charges

about 23 hours ago
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Shell will consider fossil fuel investment in Venezuela, says chief executive

Shell is considering fossil fuel investments in Venezuela worth billions of dollars, according to its chief executive.Wael Sawan said Europe’s largest oil company is weighing plans for production projects off the Venezuelan coast that could begin yielding gas in the next couple of years. “These are opportunities that could potentially be activated within months,” he told CNBC, adding that the company was now awaiting approvals.Shell’s fresh interest in the South American country has emerged a week after Venezuela passed sweeping reforms to its hydrocarbon laws to encourage increases in oil and gas production and foreign investment, in line with calls from the US president, Donald Trump, to revive the industry.Trump called for America’s biggest oil companies to reignite Venezuela’s struggling oil industry after removing the former president Nicolás Maduro last month, but the suggestion received a tepid response from executives, including the chief executive of ExxonMobil, Darren Woods, who said that political stability was vital before investments could take place

1 day ago
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Rio Tinto and Glencore abandon revived $260bn merger plan

Rio Tinto and Glencore have abandoned plans for a $260bn merger, walking away from a deal that would have created the world’s largest mining company.Rio Tinto said it was no longer considering a “merger or other business combination” with Glencore after it “determined that it could not reach an agreement that would deliver value to its shareholders”.Glencore said the key terms of the potential offer, which would have seen Rio keep both the chair and chief executive roles, “significantly undervalued Glencore’s underlying relative value contribution to the combined group”.The company added the deal did not adequately value its copper business and growth pipeline, and concluded that the merger was not in the best interests of its shareholders.It marks the third time that talks to combine the two commodities giants have collapsed, after discussions were revived last month

1 day ago
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US job openings dropped to a five-year low in December 2025, report shows

US job openings dropped to the lowest level in more than five years in December and data for the prior month was revised lower amid a softening in labor market conditions at the end of 2025.Job openings, a measure of labor demand, decreased by 386,000 to 6.542m by the last day of December, the lowest level since September 2020, the labor department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or Jolts report, on Thursday.Data for November was revised down to show 6.928m job openings instead of the previously reported 7

1 day ago
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Bank of England holds interest rates and ‘shocked’ over Mandelson; Rio-Glencore merger talks collapse – as it happened

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has added his voice to those condemning Peter Mandelson for leaking market-sensitive information at the time of the global financial crisis, our economics editor Heather Stewart writes.“I am shocked by what we are hearing,” Bailey said (see earlier post), when asked about the revelations at a Bank press conference.We do learn from that that there are times when … lobbying happens which has ethics attached to it which I do find shocking, frankly.Asked again about his personal feelings, Bailey, who worked with the Treasury on the response to the 2008 financial crisis, appeared to become emotional as he compared the actions of Mandelson to those of the late chancellor, Alistair Darling.Bailey reminds journalists at the Bank that he and his colleagues at the press conference, Clare Lombardelli and Dave Ramsden, all knew Darling (who died in 2023)

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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‘One of the most stunning sights in the country’: your picks for UK town of culture

1 day ago
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‘It’s an opportunity for bonding’ – my quest to become a Black dad who can do his daughters’ hair

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘We are now at the women-should-smile-more stage of his presidency’

2 days ago
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The Guide #228: Against ​my ​better ​judgment​,​ A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms ​has ​me ​back in Westeros

2 days ago
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Randa Abdel-Fattah and Louise Adler to headline alternative to cancelled Adelaide writers’ week

3 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Epstein files: ‘I’m just not sure anybody is going to be held accountable’

3 days ago