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News on personal loans, mortgages and debt management Latest |
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20 Nov 2008
Mortgage lending rose by 7% in October, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML)... read more...
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13 Nov 2008
Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) should not be sold to a customer within 14 days of being sold a loan, the Competition Commission says... read more...
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12 Nov 2008
Credit cards have become more expensive in the past few months, despite the recent reductions in bank rate... read more...
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6 Nov 2008
The Bank of England has made a shock one-and-a-half percentage point cut in UK interest rates to 3%, the lowest level since 1955... read more...
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30 Oct 2008
Professor David Blanchflower says big interest rate cuts are needed to avoid a deep recession... read more...
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24 Oct 2008
The UK economy shrank for the first time in 16 years between July and September... read more...
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20 Oct 2008
The slump in mortgage lending continued in September, according to the latest figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML)... read more...
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15 Oct 2008
OFT says consumers need better protection with statutory regulation... read more...
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8 Oct 2008
At a special meeting, the Bank of England in conjunction with other central banks cut interest rates by 0.5% read more...
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3 Oct 2008
UK homeowners have stopped cashing in on the value of their homes, according to figures from the Bank of England... read more...
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24 Jun 2008
The average cost of a two-year fixed-rate mortgage has broken through the 7% barrier. Homeowners wanting to take out a two-year deal can now expect to pay an average of 7.02% - the highest level for more than a decade. The move follows last week's steep increase in swap rates, upon which fixed-rate mortgages are based. The news comes as Barclays' lending arm, the Woolwich, announced it was raising rates on its residential and buy-to-let mortgages by up to 0.6%. The average rate of a two-year fixed-rate mortgage has increased from 6.75% at the beginning of last week and from 6.61% at the start of the year, according to Moneyfacts.co.uk. The latest increase pushes the average cost of a two-year fix up to the same level as the average rate for a standard variable loan. Standard variable mortgages are traditionally seen as poor value, as they are typically around 2% higher than the Bank of England base rate, and are generally only used as a rate people revert to after a deal has ended before they remortgage to a new one. But with most lenders not charging a product fee to people who move to their standard variable rate, compared with arrangement fees of around £1,000 for best-buy fixed-rate deals, the loans are becoming increasingly competitive.
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