Sabtu, 30 Desember 2023

UK property market: what will happen to house prices and mortgage rates in 2024? - The Guardian

It has been a rollercoaster year in the mortgage world, with rates moving up and down with each new piece of economic data. The housing market has been bumpy, too. In September, prices recorded the first annual fall for a decade, according to official data, but lenders say demand has been growing in recent months. Anyone looking to buy a home soon will be wondering what 2024 has in store.

This week there have been reports that the government is working on a scheme to help first-time buyers, which could have an impact on how easy it is to borrow and on property prices.

But in the meantime, what can you expect from mortgage rates and the housing market? We asked some experts for their forecasts.

Mortgages: deals below 4%

The new year “could start with a bang” on the mortgage front, says David Hollingworth from the broker firm L&C Mortgages. It has been a tough year for many homebuyers and those looking to remortgage, but a bigger-than-expected drop in UK inflation in November has intensified the downwards pressure on the cost of borrowing.

The drop fuelled money market expectations that the Bank of England could cut interest rates as early as spring 2024, and already a five-year fixed-rate mortgage deal priced at below 4% is on sale for the first time since May. Launched by a small lender called Gen H, it has a rate of 3.99%, is for loans up to 60% loan-to-value (LTV) and carries a £999 fee.

The move by Gen H should set the tone for more cuts in the new year, assuming money market swap rates – which largely determine the pricing of new fixed deals – remain at current levels, Hollingworth says. “I think we could see lenders come out swinging to get off to a good start,” he adds.

As things currently stand, homebuyers with small deposits will find that average rates are now down “considerably” from just a few months ago, according to the data provider Moneyfacts. For example, the average two-year fixed rate at 95% LTV (that is, for someone who can only raise a 5% deposit) stood at 6.21% on 21 December – down from 7.1% in August.

“Rates are already much better than they were in the summer, and there is still competition driving that,” Hollingworth says. “I think that will encourage more activity as the year progresses.”

Person holding house keys in front of a home

If you are planning to buy at a time when rates are falling, do not worry about grabbing a deal too early because you can change your mind if you see a better offer before everything is signed.

Chris Sykes, a technical director at the broker Private Finance, says some homebuyers have managed to save chunky sums by taking advantage of the cost of new mortgage deals coming down while they wait for their purchase to complete. “Some of the savings for our clients [who have been switched on to cheaper deals while their purchase goes through] are well into the tens of thousands of pounds for the whole mortgage term,” he says.

As has been the case for some time now, new five-year fixed deals are cheaper than two-year ones: the average five-year fix at 95% LTV was 5.64% on 21 December.

But despite that, says Hollingworth, “quite a substantial portion” of borrowers are still opting for two years because it means they are tied in for a shorter period. They can then review their home loan in just a couple of years and move to a cheaper deal if – as many expect – interest rates have come down by then.

Deposits: a ‘decent number’ of 95% loans

Product choice has improved, including for borrowers who do not have a large deposit to put down. Those only able to stump up a 5% deposit would, as of 21 December, find 251 mortgage deals to choose from, compared with 144 at the start of December last year, Moneyfacts says.

Sykes says he expects there to continue to be a “decent number” of 95% deals on offer and: “They will be quite competitively priced as well.”

One development that should help keep the shelves stocked with low-deposit mortgages is a decision, buried in the autumn statement documents, to extend the government’s mortgage guarantee scheme until June 2025 (it had been due to end on 31 December this year). This gives lenders the chance to buy a guarantee on the riskiest portion of the mortgage – the bit between 80% and 95% LTV. The government would cover that chunk of the lender’s losses if a home had to be repossessed in the event of a property crash.

Woman looking at ads in an estate agent’s window

If you are able to get together a deposit of 10% or even 15% – perhaps by getting some help from “the bank of mum and dad” – then that will give you access to more competitive rates.

Hollingworth gives the example of a 95% LTV two-year fixed rate offered by Leeds building society, versus a 90% one offered by Nationwide. The Leeds deal has a fixed rate of 5.72%, while the Nationwide one is priced at 5.35%.

Assuming a £200,000 mortgage debt and a 25-year term, the Leeds deal requiring only a 5% deposit would cost £1,254 a month, while the Nationwide deal where the minimum deposit is 10% would give a monthly payment of £1,210 (both products come with a £999 fee that we have not added to the loan). That’s a difference of £44 a month, or £528 over a year.

Hollingworth says that is “not perhaps as wide [a differential] as you might anticipate. But it does show there is still that price differential there. And that will continue as you go further down the LTV scale.”

More to the point, with house prices and mortgage costs as they are, many would-be buyers simply cannot afford 95% mortgage rates and will need to accumulate a bigger deposit in order to access a lower rate.

This is where the government seems keen to step in to help. One mooted scheme involves making it easier for lenders to offer long-term fixed-rate mortgages, similar to those available in other countries. Borrowers who can show they can afford the monthly repayments at the outset can be considered a good bet for the long term because the rates are not going to change, and lenders can feel comfortable offering loans on a lower deposit.

Hollingworth says that fixed-rate mortgages of 10 years and more have proved unpopular in the past as borrowers want the option of changing at a later date, so the government would need to consider making any new loans as flexible as possible.

He adds that rates on any long-term fixed mortgage are unlikely to be the most competitive on the market, so it’s unlikely to have an impact on the top of best-buy tables.

House prices: possible falls at the top end

You would be unwise to be too worried about the next year’s outlook for house prices when timing a purchase – you should be more concerned about how much you like a property and whether you can afford it in the long term.

But if you are hoping for a crash to make a home more affordable, you may be disappointed. Earlier this month the UK’s largest lenders, Nationwide and Halifax, predicted price falls in 2024, but Nationwide only a “low single-digit decline” and Halifax a drop between 2% and 4%. Any scheme that brings large numbers of first-time buyers back into the market is likely to prop up prices.

Neal Hudson, a housing market analyst at the consultancy BuiltPlace, steers clear of making a forecast but says he expects the market to be fragmented, with rises and falls depending on price point and location.

“[The outlook is] maybe not as negative as it was looking this time last year,” he says, thanks to falling inflation and the widening belief that interest rates have reached a peak.

“I think it will depend on local markets and what type of property you are looking for,” he says. “In the part of the market where people are after smaller homes, there is a lot of competition. For bigger, more expensive properties, there are more available. People can’t get the big mortgages that they were getting in the post-pandemic race for space and so those homes are not selling.” How much those properties cost depends on the market, he says. In London, it is homes above £5m that are not selling. In Bath, it is homes of £1m or more, and in other towns the upper limit may be much lower.

Hudson says the key driver for house prices will be the economy – if the UK goes into recession and people start to lose their jobs, then the market is likely to fall. If employment stays high, that might not happen. This, again, could play out at a local level, with areas with business investment experiencing price rises, and areas with high job losses having falls.

Houses in Wales

He points to data that shows rising interest rates have hit affordability, but not as hard as might have been expected. Figures for mortgage lenders suggest that people are able to spend 5% less than they were, rather than 15-20% as the rise in interest rates may have suggested. “Borrowers have offset that rise with a little bit of longer mortgage terms, but mainly by paying more each month.”

Currently, he says, first-time buyers are facing the problem of high house prices compounded by the highest interest rates in years, which mean the need for a large deposit.

March’s budget could, however, make life easier for some.

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2023-12-30 09:23:00Z
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'Do not travel' alert issued for New Year's Eve amid 'train crew availability' issue - Manchester Evening News

Staff shortages on trains are causing widespread disruption to rail services across Britain and will disrupt travel on New Year's Eve, operators have warned.

Northern, which is also controlled by the Government, said it would run no services on six lines on Sunday – New Year’s Eve – due to 'train crew unavailability'.

The affected routes with a 'do not travel' alert connect Manchester Victoria with Chester and Stalybridge, Manchester Piccadilly with Chester via Altrincham, and Preston with Colne. There will also be no trains between Morecambe and Lancaster, or Clitheroe and Bolton.

READ MORE: Parkruns, bad plumbing and overcrowding: A year in the life of a Greater Manchester prison

READ MORE: 'My window blew up into my face' - The Stalybridge estate left devastated by the Storm Gerrit tornado

Meanwhile services on other lines will finish earlier than usual at around 4pm. Some Northern staff only work on Sundays as voluntary paid overtime, creating the risk of not having enough available employees to run the full timetable.

It comes as Eurostar services from London have been cancelled “until the end of the day” today - Saturday - as heavy rain and strong winds threaten to spoil people’s new year plans. No high-speed services are expected to run between Ebbsfleet International and London St Pancras International today because a tunnel under the Thames is flooded.

London North Eastern Railway (LNER), whose services are controlled by the Department for Transport, cancelled at least six long-distance trains on Friday due to a lack of available staff. The same reason meant several other services were severely delayed or only ran part of the planned route.

Avanti has also cancelled several services from London

A shortage of train crew at Edinburgh meant CrossCountry cancelled a number of trains to and from the station.

Avanti West Coast axed several of it services to and from London Euston due to a staff shortage. Thameslink issued an alert warning of “major disruption” until 5am on January 1 because of “a shortage of train crew”.

It said its services between Bedford and London will be “significantly reduced” during the afternoon and night of New Year’s Eve.

There will also be “far fewer trains” than normal between London and Brighton.

Many revellers will struggle to get home after New Year’s Eve celebrations in London as there will be no overnight Thameslink trains to Bedford or Brighton. London Northwestern Railway warned passengers it is “anticipating crowding and disruption to services on New Year’s Eve”.

It said this is due to the “combined impact of recent storms damage across the network, higher than usual rates of sickness absence within our teams as well as reduced capacity within our Sunday timetable”.

The operator has cancelled all services between Stafford and Crewe, and warned that trains on other routes such as between London Euston and Northampton are “subject to alteration and possible cancellation”.

Chiltern Railways, which runs between London Marylebone and the West Midlands, said “a shortage of train crew” means there is “a high risk of short notice cancellations and disruption on the day across all routes” on Saturday and Sunday. LNER also suffered disruption on Friday due to “severe weather”, with strong winds affecting parts of the East Coast Main Line.

This meant a service due to run from Aberdeen to London King’s Cross started from Newcastle. A fault with the signalling system between Newcastle and Berwick-upon-Tweed means some southbound lines are blocked.

This is affecting LNER, CrossCountry, Lumo and TransPennine Express services.

A Rail Delivery Group spokesperson, said: “We know it’s frustrating when customers can’t get the services they are expecting. As an industry we are committed to making sure train services are reliable and punctual. The majority of train operators are planning to run the published timetable between now and New Year when we expect services to be particularly busy. But, there will be some local challenges that affect some services.

"Train services may start slightly later or finish earlier than usual, so it is best to check the latest travel information with your train operator or National Rail.”

A Department for Transport spokesperson said: “While staffing is a matter for industry, we are working with them to ensure they are able to deliver the services that passengers need, making clear that we will hold them to account if they let passengers down."

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2023-12-30 09:29:00Z
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Jumat, 29 Desember 2023

Florida woman wants Hershey to pay $5m over 'misleading' Halloween sweets - Sky News

Chocolate giant Hershey is being sued by a disgruntled customer who said its Halloween-themed peanut butter treats didn't match the packaging.

Cynthia Kelly, from Florida, argues she bought them because she liked the "artistic designs" of the holiday sweeties.

She was especially fond of the "cute looking" eyes and mouth shown on the packets of the peanut butter pumpkins, prompting her to spend $4.49 (£3.52) on them at an Aldi supermarket.

When she opened the bag, she found not only were the facial features missing - there were no carvings whatsoever.

Her legal case, a class action lawsuit seeking at least $5m (£3.9m, or 1.1 million bags of peanut butter pumpkins), accuses the choccies conglomerate of being "materially misleading".

"Numerous consumers have been tricked and misled by the pictures on the products' packaging," it adds.

Read more from Sky News:
'Flamin' Hot' Doritos spark complaint
How AI planned a questionable Christmas

Ms Kelly is not only citing the Halloween treats in her case, but a football-themed peanut butter product that doesn't actually feature the laces seen on the packs.

Her case, filed in Tampa, also references several videos on YouTube.

She is seeking damages for anyone in Florida who's bought items including Reese's peanut butter pumpkins, peanut butter bats, peanut butter footballs, and a Christmas assortment of peanut butter snowmen, stockings, and bells.

Hershey has not commented on the case.

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UK house prices fall by 1.8% during year amid higher mortgage costs - The Guardian

UK house prices fell by 1.8% during 2023, according to the closely watched Nationwide house price index, with activity in the property market described as weak throughout the year.

Nationwide put the fall down to higher mortgage borrowing costs, which have remained more than three times higher than the record lows of 2021 despite recent easing.

Almost all regions of the UK registered falls, barring Northern Ireland, where prices rose by 4.5%, and Scotland, up slightly by 0.5%.

Prices fell everywhere else, with England registering a 2.9% drop and house prices down 1.9% in Wales.

The decline was greater in the south than in the north.

Across northern England, comprising the north, north-west, Yorkshire and the Humber, east Midlands and West Midlands regions, prices fell by 1.8%, with the smallest decline, of 0.5%, in Yorkshire.

However, in southern England, made up of the south-west, outer south-east, outer metropolitan, London and East Anglia regions, values fell by 3.4%.

London was the most resilient of the southern regions, with a 2.4% annual decline, but the largest decline of any region in the UK was in East Anglia, down 5.2%.

Overall, prices ended 2023 down 1.8% compared with December 2022 and are now 4.5% below their all-time high, recorded in the late summer of 2022. Nationwide expects prices to remain flat or fall slightly in 2024, compared with an estimate by the rival Halifax, which has predicted falls of up to 4%.

Separate data from HMRC underlined the picture of a weaker housing market over the past year, with residential transactions down 22% in the year to November, at 80,780.

Prices were flat month on month in December, according to Nationwide, with average house prices ending the year at £257,443.

“Housing market activity was weak throughout 2023,” said Nationwide’s chief economist, Robert Gardner.

“Even though house prices are modestly lower and incomes have been rising strongly, at least in cash terms, this hasn’t been enough to offset the impact of higher mortgage rates, which in recent months were still more than three times the record lows prevailing in 2021 in the wake of the pandemic.

“As a result, housing affordability has remained stretched.”

He said that a person on the average UK salary buying a typical first-time home with a 20% deposit would have to pay a monthly mortgage payment equivalent to 38% of their take-home pay, much higher than the long-term average of 30%.

Deposit requirements also remain “prohibitively high”, he said. The average 20% deposit on a typical first-time home equates to about 105% of average gross income, down from all-time high of 116% in 2022 but still close to the pre-financial crisis level of 108%.

Gardner said prices were unlikely to rebound strongly in 2024, with consumer confidence still weak despite easing inflation.

But he forecast that mortgage rates could come down, boosting affordability, as investors bet that the Bank of England has raised rates far enough and will reduce the base rate in years ahead.

“This shift in view is important, as it has brought down longer-term interest rates, which underpin fixed mortgage rate pricing,” Gardner said.

Nationwide’s data for 2023 indicates that buyers are setting their sights on smaller, less expensive properties, with transactions for flats holding up more than other property types.

Flats did not increase as much during the pandemic period, when outside space became more sought-after because of lockdown restrictions.

Average prices for flats have increased by 11% since the first quarter of 2020, compared with a 22.6% increase in the price of detached properties.

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2023-12-30 02:31:00Z
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Aviva boss Amanda Blanc and retail guru Mary Portas among business figures in new year honours list - The Guardian

About 25 people have been awarded honours for services to business in the new year honours list, with others working in business cited for other elements of service in public life. Two of the main honours were handed to business people who were big donors to the Conservative party: the Wetherspoons boss, Tim Martin, and the Addison Lee founder, John Griffin.

Among the most notable recipients of honours in the business world were:

Amanda Blanc

The 56-year-old chief executive of Aviva becomes a dame commander, cited for services to gender equality and to net zero as well as business. Blanc’s three years at the helm of the insurer, after having previously led Axa, has seen the share price rise. Her interventions elsewhere have been perhaps even more notable: from being the first FTSE 100 firm to publicly withdraw from the CBI after allegations of sexual offences, blowing open attempts to cover up a bullying scandal in the Welsh Rugby Union, and then being an instrumental part of the BP board who recently ousted the disgraced boss Bernard Looney.

Stephen Hester

A knighthood goes to the executive, 63, who chairs the airline easyJet and the Nordea bank, and first became a CEO of a FTSE 100 company nearly 20 years ago at British Land. Hester’s biggest role came after the financial crisis in 2008 when he was brought in to the bailed-out Northern Rock as deputy chair, and then moved to take the helm as chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland. He was credited with stabilising the bank and readying it for a return to the private sector, leaving in 2013 to run the RSA Insurance Group.

Gerald Ronson

Gerald Ronson

One of the most well-known UK businessmen and pillars of the establishment in Thatcher’s 1980s finally gets a knighthood aged 84 – but not for business. The decade ended with Ronson, owner of the Heron property empire, being sent to prison as one of the “Guinness Four” in a share-trading scandal. The family lost a £1bn, according to Ronson, in the property crash. After serving six months in prison, Ronson embarked on a lifelong campaign to restore his name and business, making large charitable donations, and was first honoured with a CBE in 2011. His latest honour comes for services to philanthropy and the Jewish community.

Tristia Harrison

The chief executive officer of TalkTalk, Harrison, 50, is another new dame commander, for services to telecoms. Harrison led the broadband provider during the pandemic, when it worked with the Department for Work and Pensions to connect people with affordable broadband, “providing critical national infrastructure” according to the official citation, including contracts to connect the new Nightingale hospitals. Harrison is a chair of trustees at Crisis, and spent a decade on the board of Comic Relief.

Ashley Tabor-King

The 46-year-old founder and president of Global gets upgraded from an OBE to a CBE for services to media and entertainment. The group, the largest commercial radio broadcaster in Europe, owns brands including Heart, Classic FM and LBC. Tabor-King also hit the headlines for owning what is thought to be the most expensive flat in Britain, a pair of Knightsbridge penthouses with linking doors after Westminster council knocked back the original planning application.

Mary Portas

The “queen of shops”, Portas, 63, is awarded an OBE for services to business, broadcasting and charity. Working in retail from an early age, she shot to prominence as a young creative director of Harvey Nichols and as the presenter of a series of TV shows about shops and shopping. She also helped rebrand charity shops and was made a “high street tsar” under David Cameron’s government, although she has expressed regret about how that role turned out.

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Kamis, 28 Desember 2023

UK mergers and acquisitions fall 33% to hit lowest level since 2009 - The Guardian

UK takeover and tie-up dealmaking shrank by a third this year, hitting its lowest level since 2009, as rising interest rates and concerns over Britain’s economic outlook affected buyers’ appetites.

Figures compiled by London Stock Exchange Group’s Deals Intelligence team show that the total value of mergers and acquisitions deals involving UK firms fell by 33% to just $265bn (£207bn) over 2023.

That is down from $395m a year earlier, and marks a significant drop from the post-lockdown rebound that sent UK deal values to $658bn in 2021.

The drop reflects double-digit declines in domestic and cross-border deals – down 37% and 49% respectively – with both foreign and local buyers deterred by the UK’s economic prospects. While global dealmaking also cooled this year, the drop was far less dramatic than in the UK – at just 17% to $2.9tn.

That is despite a rise in the number of private equity firms buying UK businesses and striking 915 deals, the highest number of buy-ups since records began in 1980. However, the value of those deals was far smaller, at $41bn. That is down 41% compared with 2022, when private equity takeovers were worth $70.5bn.

UK firms were the target in $120bn worth of merger and acquisition deals, marking a 45% drop from 2022, while outbound deals – where the UK was buying businesses overseas – rose 12% to $104bn.

Overall, the total number of UK deals fell by nearly a fifth, to about 5,500, with the largest being the $6.1bn takeover of Dechra Pharmaceuticals, the UK veterinary pharmaceuticals company, by Swedish buyout group EQT.

Lucille Jones, a senior manager at LSEG Deals Intelligence, said the UK’s dealmaking decline was due in part to economic woes, with disappointing forecasts driving away potential buyers. “Steeply rising interest rates and a concerning outlook for the UK economy, combined with stricter antitrust enforcement and ongoing geopolitical tensions curbed the appetite for dealmaking in 2023,” she said.

UK economic growth has nearly flatlined, due in part to persistent inflation that started the year at more than 10%. It has forced the Bank of England to continue raising rates into the summer, to 5.25%, affecting the corporate sector and household spending.

Recently released figures showed that gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 0.1% in the third quarter, worse than originally thought, while second-quarter figures were revised down to zero from a previous estimate of 0.2%.

An economy is considered to be in a technical recession after two consecutive quarters of contraction in GDP, and a further contraction in the fourth quarter would push the UK into that category.

Businesses have also been concerned about the more aggressive stance taken by the UK’s competition regulator. Even attempts to block deals between US companies, including Microsoft and Call of Duty video game publisher Activision Blizzard, and the software developers Adobe and Figma, have led to accusations that the UK is “closed for business”.

However, there may be hope on the horizon for UK dealmaking, which ended the year more strongly than it began. While the value of deals announced during the first quarter of the year fell to the lowest quarterly level since the end of 2009, deals hit their highest quarterly total since mid-2022, in the final three months of the year.

“With inflation coming down and rates normalising, it could give CEOs and boards a little more confidence with which to plan their moves in 2024,” Jones said.

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2023-12-28 21:00:00Z
CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS9idXNpbmVzcy8yMDIzL2RlYy8yOC91ay1tZXJnZXJzLWFuZC1hY3F1aXNpdGlvbnMtZmFsbC0zMy10by1oaXQtbG93ZXN0LWxldmVsLXNpbmNlLTIwMDnSAXNodHRwczovL2FtcC50aGVndWFyZGlhbi5jb20vYnVzaW5lc3MvMjAyMy9kZWMvMjgvdWstbWVyZ2Vycy1hbmQtYWNxdWlzaXRpb25zLWZhbGwtMzMtdG8taGl0LWxvd2VzdC1sZXZlbC1zaW5jZS0yMDA5

Amazon Prime users hit with £2.99 charge in major streaming shake-up - Chronicle Live

Amazon's Prime Video streaming service will start showing adverts for all UK subscribers as of February 5, unless you fork out an extra £2.99 a month.

The package currently sets back users £5.99 per month, and it means that if you want to continue an advert-free experience, this would rise to £8.98.

That's the equivalent of 50% more. Meanwhile, if you're a full Amazon Prime member, you currently pay £8.99 per month - or £95 per year upfront - but this would increase to £11.98 per month or £103.88 up front should you want to avoid the ads.

While Amazon is yet to reveal how frequent the adverts will be, they admitted that the service will have 'meaningfully fewer ads than ad-supported TV channels and other streaming TV providers'. The company said in an email to customers that the change will allow them to 'continue investing in compelling content and keep increasing that investment over a long period of time'.

The Mirror reports meanwhile that US Prime Video users will start seeing adverts as of January 29. Meanwhile, live events like sports and content offered through the Freevee service already include advertisements. Those who are unhappy about the changes can cancel their Prime Video membership free of charge.

To do this, you simply go to 'Accounts and Lists' then click 'Prime' to manage your subscription. Members who haven't used any Prime services should receive a full refund, while those who have only used delivery benefits may be eligible to receive a partial refund.

You won't get a refund at all however, if you've used the likes of Prime Music, Prime Video or Prime Gaming. Netflix has recently rolled out a cheaper package with adverts which sets users back £4.99 per month compared to the £10.99 per month price tag of its standard ad-free tier.

Disney+ meanwhile charges £4.99 per month for its advert-inclusive package which launched back in August, while the ad-free tier is £7.99 per month. The latest Amazon shake-up comes after the Jeff Bezos-founded giant announced a new charge for Prime members on some same-day delivery orders.

The new £1.99 fee applies if your same-day order is less than £20, and was introduced back in September.

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2023-12-28 13:35:00Z
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Recycling electrical goods could be done at kerbside and drop-off points in shops - BBC

Discarded electrical itemsGetty Images

Kerbside collections for small electrical goods such as toasters and hairdryers could be rolled out across the UK from 2026 under government proposals to boost recycling.

Ministers are also considering drop-off points in shops where households can recycle unwanted items for free.

Retailers would also be made to collect unwanted larger electrical items when delivering replacements.

Customers would no longer be charged for collection on delivery services.

Many retailers, such as B&Q, John Lewis and Currys, currently offer a paid-for collection service for large electrical appliances when customers buy a similar item.

The reforms are part of the government's plans to boost recycling, as it found 155,000 tonnes of smaller household electricals such as cables, toasters, kettles and power tools are wrongly thrown away each year.

About 500 tonnes of fairy lights are discarded at Christmas in the UK, the government estimates.

Ministers will engage with manufacturers, retailers and small businesses throughout a 10-week consultation, which opened on Thursday.

Recycling minister Robbie Moore said the plans would ensure goods avoid being needlessly thrown away.

"Every year millions of household electricals across the UK end up in the bin rather than being correctly recycled or reused," he said.

"This is a sheer waste of our natural resources and has to stop."

He added the level of household waste produced over the Christmas period highlighted the need for change.

The government will also consult on ensuring vape suppliers fund collections of single-use products to avoid them ending up in landfill, although this will not necessarily see them entirely recycled.

Nearly five million vapes are now thrown away every week - almost four times higher than last year, it said.

A recent study on public attitudes found more than 77% of householders would view a retailer as more environmentally responsible if they knew they offered an electrical recycling service.

The Environmental Services Association's executive director welcomed the plans, saying it could make it "simpler and more convenient" for households to recycle electrical items at home.

Jacob Hayler added: "On behalf of those operating recycling centres and kerbside collection services, we welcome the opportunity to contribute through consultation and help create an effective system that delivers on its intended outcomes and works, not just for householders, but for obligated producers and retailers too."

The range of measures are proposed within the joint UK government, Scottish government, Welsh government and Northern Ireland Executive consultation.

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2023-12-28 09:38:03Z
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Rabu, 27 Desember 2023

US court puts Apple Watch US sales ban on hold - Financial Times

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2023-12-27 18:13:54Z
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FTSE higher as Spring budget 2024 date confirmed but Wall Street flat - Yahoo Finance UK

FTSE  REVIEW OF THE YEAR 2023 File photo dated 15/03/23 - Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt leaves 11 Downing Street, London, with his ministerial box before, before delivering his Budget at the Houses of Parliament. Issue date: Friday December 22, 2023.

FTSE higher as Treasury says 2024 Budget to be held on 6 March. (Victoria Jones, PA Images)

European stocks and FTSE 100 finished mostly higher on Wednesday as chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced the date for the Spring budget but in Wall Street stocks were little changed.

The FTSE 100 (^FTSE) rose 0.2% to close at 7,715 points during afternoon trading, while the CAC 40 (^FCHI) in Paris finished flat at 7,565 points. In Germany, the DAX (^GDAXI) gained 0.1% to 16,722. Europe’s Stoxx 600 (^STOXX) advanced 0.1% after a flat start.

"Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has commissioned the Office for Budget Responsibility to prepare an economic and fiscal forecast to be presented to Parliament alongside his Spring budget on 6 March 2024," the Treasury said.

This should be the final budget before the next election, which must take place by January 2025.

Read more: FTSE top trending tickers of 2023

Across the pond, US stocks were largely unchanged amid a shortened week of trading as few major catalysts drove the market action.

The Dow Jones (^DJI) rose 0.1% to 37,579 points. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.1% to 4,772 points - nearing an all-time high record close of 4,796 - and the tech-heavy NASDAQ (^IXIC) hovered just below the flatline at 15,060.

Trading volumes are expected to be thin during the last three days of the trading year, with fewer data points on the economic calendar and all major central bank meetings out of the way.

In Asia, Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 (^N225) gained 1.1% to 33,681 points, while the Hang Seng (^HSI) in Hong Kong rose 1.75% to 16,625 points. The Shanghai Composite (000001.SS) climbed 0.6% to 2,914 points.

Chinese online gaming stocks rose in Hong Kong trading after Beijing’s top gaming regulator said it would “carefully study” the concerns of all stakeholders on draft rules aimed at curbing excessive gaming and spending.

Read more: Trending tickers: Intel | Tencent | RayzeBio | Astrazeneca

The pound’s (GBPUSD=X) was stronger against the dollar, with sterling trading at $1.2800. The sterling (GBPEUR=X) was lower against the euro, trading at €1.1506.

Meanwhile, Brent crude (BZ=F) slipped but is still trading at over $80/barrel amid investor jitters amid attacks in the Red Sea and escalating tensions in the Middle East.

Watch: Investors will face choppy trading in 2024: Strategist

Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android.

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2023-12-27 08:50:13Z
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Apple to appeal ban on US sales of Apple watch - BBC

Apple Watch 9 displays the blood-oxygen level detection settings.Getty Images

Apple says it will appeal after sales of its newest smart watches were halted in the US over a patent row.

It comes after the White House declined to overturn a ban on sales and imports of the Series 9 and Ultra 2 watches which came into effect this week.

The US International Trade Commission took the action to protect device maker Masimo, which accuses Apple of poaching its staff and technology.

Apple said it "strongly disagrees" with the ruling.

Earlier this month, Apple "pre-emptively" removed the devices from its US site and from stores in the country. Sales elsewhere have not been affected.

The US International Trade Commission (USITC) order, issued in October, was subject to a 60-day review by the president, who has the power to veto the decision. That review period ended on Christmas Day.

The office of the United States Trade Representative Ambassador, Katherine Tai, said on Tuesday that it had decided not to reverse the USITC's decision after "careful consultations".

Apple had asked for a stay on the ban until Customs and Border Protection (CBP) could consider whether the redesigned versions of its watches, which do not include the disputed technology, violated Masimo's patents.

CBP is due to make its decision on 12 January, according to an Apple spokesperson.

The USITC found in October that Apple infringed two patents owned by medical device maker Masimo Corporation.

The California-based company had accused Apple of poaching key staff and taking other steps to steal technology it developed to measure oxygen levels in the blood.

Most versions of Apple's smart watches have included the disputed blood oxygen feature since 2020. Its lower cost SE model do not. Previously sold watches will also not be affected by the ban.

Apple also says it has filed an emergency request to the US Court of Appeals to lift the ban.

"We strongly disagree with the USITC decision and resulting exclusion order, and are taking all measures to return Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 to customers in the US as soon as possible," the tech giant said in a statement on Tuesday.

Masimo said the White House's decision marks a significant moment.

"This is a win for the integrity of the US patent system, and ultimately American consumers, who will benefit from an ecosystem that rewards true innovation," according to company spokesperson.

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2023-12-27 07:08:44Z
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6 savings challenges to start in 2024 where you could put away up to £6,890 - The Mirror

A New Year resolution for millions is to put away a bit of cash - so why not take on one of these savings challenges to give your finances a boost in 2024?

Finances have been - and will continue to be - tight over the next 12 months and many of us would like to try and put money aside for a range of different reasons. You could be looking to boost your emergency fund, prepare for a big life milestone such as getting married or saving towards a house deposit. Whatever your reason, it is hard to do - particularly over the recent years as our monthly budgets have further tightened.

One way many have managed to build a cash pot is by committing to a savings challenge. These give you a map of how much you should be putting away, and when in order to build a cash pot. The reason they often help is because it tells you exactly what to do which can take away the decision-making on your end such as "Have I got enough to put money away this month?" or "How much should I put away?". Alongside this, it gives you a target to work toward.

Here we have listed a range of different savings challenges you could take on this New Year.

Monday to Friday savings challenge - £780

This one requires you to put some cash away five days each week. You start by saving £1 on Monday then increase this amount by £1 a day until Friday - so £2 on Tuesday, £3 on Wednesday, £4 on Thursday and £5 on Friday. In total, you would save £15 a week and over the year, this adds up to an impressive £780. If you only do half of this challenge or do it every other week, you would still save £390 by the end of the year.

Monday to Sunday savings challenge - £1,456

This one is a harder version of the Monday to Friday challenge, as it includes every single day of the week.

The principle is the same, so you save £1 on Monday and then increase this amount by £1 a day - but this time, you go all the way through to Sunday when you save £7. You would save £28 each week through this challenge, which would add up to £1,456 by the end of the year. If you complete half of it, you would put away £728.

365 Day Savings Challenge - save £366

This likely is the simplest challenge to take on as it requires you to put away some money every single day of the year. You can choose how much you can save each day and repeat that throughout the year. So if you choose to put away £1 a day then you will come out with £365 by the end of the year - however, 2024 is a leap year with the extra date of February 29 - so this year you could save £366.

If you wanna go big or go home and you choose to put away £5 a day then you could end up with a cash pot worth £1,80 by the end of the year.

1p savings challenge - £671

This challenge is another daily savings challenge but this one starts with putting away 1p and adding an extra penny each day throughout the year. So on January 1, you put away a single penny into a savings account - you can always put it into a jar if you want to be a little old school - and then on January 2 you put away 2p, and on January 3 it's 3p and so on.

Finally, on the final day of the year, you would transfer over £3.65 which will give you an eventual total of £667.95. However, in 2024, the leap year makes it a little as on the final day of the year you will be putting £3.66 into your savings pot. Due to this extra day, your savings total will be £671.61.

You can also do this one in reverse too - so on January 1, you put away £3.66 and do down from there. This approach means you will be putting less money away at the end of the year in December when you may need it most.

52 week savings challenge - save £1,378

With this challenge, you increase the amount you save by £1 each week. So the first week in January you would save £1, then the second week you put away £2, all the way to the final week of December where you save £52.

The most you could potentially save is £1,378 if you complete the challenge - this doesn't change with the leap year in 2024. If you don't make it all the way, you could potentially build up a savings pot worth £351 if you commit for six months.

You can also adapt this challenge and make it 26 weeks instead. This would be ideal for someone who is paid fortnightly. The end saving outcome is the same but how it works is a little more complicated.

The idea is that you start on week two and save £3 (so that’s the £1 from week one, and the £2 from week two), and then in week four, you’ll save £7 (week three and four). This may make it harder to follow, but it can help spread out your savings. If you are going to do this one you may want to make a plan of how much you need to put away each time to help you stick to it.

£5 savings challenge - save £6,890

The fiver challenge is an ambitious one and may suit someone who is saving for a milestone. The £5 saving challenge involves increasing the amount you put away by £5 each week. So on the first week of January, you'll save £5, on the second you put away £10, on the third week it'll be £15 - all the way up to week 52 at £260. If you complete this challenge, you could save an impressive £6,890 by the end of the year. If you make it halfway you still would put away a sizable cash pot worth £1,755.

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2023-12-27 07:00:12Z
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Selasa, 26 Desember 2023

Boy, 6, put on wrong plane and flown hundreds of miles away on traumatic first unaccompanied flight - GB News

A six-year-old boy flying alone for the first time ended up on the wrong plane and landed hundreds of miles away from his intended destination.

Casper was supposed to fly on a Spirit Airlines plane to visit his grandmother in Fort Myers, south-west Florida, on December 21.


However, his grandmother, Maria Ramos, was gobsmacked when she was told that her grandson was not on the intended flight.

The child ended up in Florida, whilst his bag arrived in Fort Myers, in a plot that could be mistaken for the Christmas classic film Home Alone.

Orlando Airport

The 6-year-old ended up in Orlando Airport mistakenly

Getty

She told a local news outlet: “They told me, 'No, he's not on this flight. He missed his flight.' I said, 'No, he could not miss his flight because I have the check-in tag.’”

“I ran inside the plane to the flight attendant, and I asked her, ‘where’s my grandson? He was handed over to you at Philadelphia’. She said, ‘No, I had no kids with me’.”

The young child had ended up on a plane to Orlando, 160 miles from his intended destination.

Ramos only learned that her grandson was in Florida when he phoned her himself to tell her.

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She described the experience as one of the scariest of her life.

Fortunately, her grandson was safe in Orlando, and she made the long drive to pick him up.

Spirit Airlines has offered to reimburse her for the cost of the petrol, however, Ramos wants more than that.

The grandmother is adamant for an explanation of how this could have happened.

Child looking out of window on plane

It was the first time the six-year-old had travelled alone (not pictured)

Getty

“I want them to call me,” Ramos told WINK-TV.

“Let me know how my grandson ended up in Orlando. How did that happen? Did they get him off the plane? The flight attendant – after mom handed him with paperwork – did she let him go by himself? He jumped in the wrong plane by himself?”

Spirit Airlines said in a statement that they “take the safety and responsibility of transporting all of our Guests seriously and are conducting an internal investigation. We apologize to the family for this experience.”

They said that Casper was “always under the care and supervision of a Spirit team member and as soon as we discovered the error, we took immediate steps to communicate with the family and reconnect them”.

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2023-12-26 17:34:23Z
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Boxing Day sales: Spending predicted to fall - BBC

Shoppers queueing outside Selfridges on Boxing DayPA Media

The post-Christmas sales may be getting into full swing, but research suggests shoppers will be spending less than they did last year.

Consumers are forecast to spend £3.7bn on Boxing Day, according to research for the VoucherCodes website, which is down 2.9% on a year earlier.

Early indications are that the number of shoppers visiting stores on Boxing Day is up slightly on last year.

However, Boxing Day sales are no longer seen as the major event they once were.

That is largely because of pre-Christmas events such as Black Friday, as well as the availability of early discounts online.

This year, major retailers such M&S, Next and John Lewis are not reopening their stores until 27 December.

Analysts say the rise in prices over the past year - which has squeezed households' incomes - means people are likely to be cautious in the sales.

"The Boxing Day sales provide shoppers with a last-chance opportunity to splurge on themselves for the year," said Anita Naik from VoucherCodes.

"However, this is now a luxury many people are currently refraining from as the nation continues to contend with inflated prices amidst the cost-of-living crisis, therefore it's no surprise that this year, fewer of us will be splashing out in the sales."

The VoucherCodes report, produced using research from GlobalData, predicts that the amount spent on every day from Christmas Day through to New Year's Eve will be lower than last year.

Overall, £13.5bn is expected to be spent over the week, down 3.8% from the year earlier.

By midday on Boxing Day, footfall among shoppers was up 1.4% compared with a year earlier, according to data from retail research firm MRI Software. This was largely driven by more people visiting High Streets and retail parks.

However, compared with 2019 levels, footfall was still down by about 30%.

"This suggests the continued rise of online shopping as many consumers may have started yesterday evening, and with Black Friday only a few weeks ago many will have grabbed their bargains back then," the company said.

Separate data from Mastercard indicated that spending between 1 November and Christmas Eve was up 2.6% from a year earlier.

However, Kien Tan, a senior retail adviser at PwC, told the BBC that many retailers still have "a lot more stock on their hands".

"The good news for you and me is there'll be bigger discounts post-Christmas," he said.

The popularity of the Boxing Day sales has been waning for some time, with Black Friday starting to become the bigger sales event. People are also more likely to spread their spending over the post-Christmas period.

"The changes in consumer behaviour over the Christmas shopping period that we've seen for the last decade will continue this year, with demand from shoppers steadily shifting away from Boxing Day to the three days between 27th and 29th December," said Diane Wehrle, chief executive at Rendle Intelligence and Insights.

Given the increase in shopping online, Ms Wherle says "it's no surprise that Boxing Day is less of an iconic day than in the past".

"For many consumers that do venture out, it is much more of a leisure trip, with the focus on dining out and the top up being the opportunity to browse the shops."

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2023-12-26 15:33:11Z
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