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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Respite for homeowners as interest rates slashed

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Published Date: 08 October 2008
HOMEOWNERS and businesses were given an unexpected boost today after interest rates were slashed 24 hours before a decision was due.
The Bank of England's monetary policy committee started its two-day meeting this morning and was due to announce its decision at midday tomorrow.

But it has acted quickly to slash 0.5 per cent off interest rates, taking them down to 4.5 per cent,
in a bid to boost the economy.

It comes after the Government's announcement this morning that it has created a package of measures worth £250 billion to tackle the financial crisis, including £50bn that it will invest in shares in leading banks.

The cut will mean a saving of £47 a month on a £150,000 mortgage if the reduction is passed on in full by lenders

The Bank's half-point cut is the first such move since the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks in November 2001.

It is acting to cut rates alongside the European Central Bank, the US Federal Reserve and central banks in Canada, Sweden and Switzerland.

Capital Economics' Julian Jessop said: "Today's co-ordinated half-point rate cuts from all the major central banks will provide at least a temporary boost to confidence but we fear that there is still a lot more work to do.

"For a start, the fact that the central banks have had to take such extreme measures underlines how bad market conditions have become."

The Bank welcomed the Government's rescue scheme today, adding that a "significant increase" in bank capital was also needed alongside lower rates to tackle the current problems in financial markets.




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  • Last Updated: 08 October 2008 1:20 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Interest rates
 
1

Skip McClendon,

08/10/2008 14:28:50
"Which it won't be"...
2

neds-r-us,

Edinburgh 08/10/2008 14:43:05
A rate cut is very bad news for those who rely on interest on their savings and will result in a drastic decrease in their income.

A very bad decision by the bank of England which will impact greatly on those who need income from their savings.

3

Brian Ferrari,

08/10/2008 15:54:43
Good for those on trackers though.

Like me.
4

Jambo 3,

EDINBURGH 08/10/2008 16:08:01
# 4 I SEE The Genuine Mario Antoinette STILL CANNOT SPELL. FOR GODS SAKE LOOK UP A DICTIONARY OR DO A SPELL CHECK BEFORE YOU WITTER ON WITH YOUR NONSENSE, OR BETTER STILL GIVE UP WITH YOUR STUPID COMMENTS
5

Decent,

08/10/2008 16:11:10
God's should actually have an apostrophe.
6

,

08/10/2008 16:35:58
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

Goody2Shoes,

EDINBURGH 08/10/2008 17:17:44
In the 1980's interest rates were 17% when we were first time buyers. 4.5% is nothing to get upset about
8

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

08/10/2008 21:24:05
Mortgage rates are controlled more by bondholders now than they are by central banks. The rate cut is a sop to the deadbeat banks more than anything.

#3 is correct. The people who will have scarce money just now are not the debtors but those who have saved their cash through the bubble. Cutting their income now will reduce spending in the economy and make things worse.

So the total taxpayer cash at risk on B&B, Northern Rock and the "Taxpayer cash for your dodgy mortgages scheme" at the Bank of England was somewhere over 200 billion before today. The evening news says that today's package is worth 400 billion of taxpayer cash.

600 billion total, for maybe 20 million taxpayers, is 30,000 Pounds each at risk just to save a few bankers.

If they just left us the money, we could all buy a house for cash at the end of this.

 

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