Uncle Spielberg
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #101
My clients saved £ 11250 today they were expecting to pay as of yesterday, near exchange and completion
Many thanksHuge thanks to @Uncle Spielberg for his endeavours in getting our offer over the line. Nearly 4 months of graft.
Great service!
The independent Bank Of England raised interest rates, they say to control inflation. This is running rampant throughout the world due to pandemic-created supply issues and Putin. US mortgage rates have now hit 7%, for the very same reasons, as The Fed also tries to tackle inflation.I bought a house 2 weeks ago. Even more reason to hate the Tories!
My sister is the same - the bottom of the chain is waiting for probate. She has her offer extended until mid November but I doubt they will extend it again.My Lil Bro (and I ) are waiting . . .waiting . .for probate . . . . Painful . . . All of a sudden its a moving target. I just hope he gets his deal over the line before it all goes tits up
Today is going to bite back hard at some point IMO.
It's only going to get worse. BoE saying we're in the shit for two years at least.Rates up to 3%
The question is now, to fix or not to fix?
What is interesting about this is both the US and UK has seen an increasing of the gap between the poorest and wealthiest in the economy leaving them both fragile to a cost of living crisis. Economies that have a more progressive approach to narrowing the gap ride pressures on the economy better, because the poorest maintain a standard of living that keeps the economy going - trickle up economics if you like.
BOE indicated today that they expect interest to peak at 4.5% next autumn, less than the 6% widely assumed last month.Rates up to 3%
The question is now, to fix or not to fix?
We still have a Labour shortage which is helping make inflation embedded. Who knows where things will peak, 4.5% base is already priced into 5 year fixes.BOE indicated today that they expect interest to peak at 4.5% next autumn, less than the 6% widely assumed last month.
Terrible time financially for anybody born / brought up in this neck of the woods. Or most other necks of other woods really. How on earth do you avoid being priced out of your own town other than continuing to live in your childhood bedroom well into middle age or being forced to join forces with complete strangers in an HMO to pay eye-watering levels of rent to pay off your landlord's mortgage? And all this while job security constantly erodes and food and energy suppliers all demand their pound of flesh. At what point does it all reach breaking point? What a shit state of affairsAs an old git, whose race is effectively run, can I ask the question to the NSC massive, on how is this situation going to pan out?
I bought my first house in 1992, 3 bedroom mid terrace in a nice part of Worthing (most of it is) for £48,500 when I was earning £14,000 PA, those houses now go for between £375/400k but wages clearly havent moved at the same rate.
Will we end up a nation of predominantly 'renters' with large numbers of landlords owning hundreds possibly thousands of properties, or is there still a yet unrolled out policy of whatever government to let the young people of this country have the opprinuty to own their own, affordable, homes?
Apparently, and no doubt I will be corrected if wrong, both Brighton and Hove and Worthing are two of the top provincal towns and cities were the average property price has the biggest percentage gap from the average wage.
If it were me, I wouldn't fix after this higher rate rise ( I suppose you could always re-fix though if rates come down ? ). My view is the fixing boat has sailed and the time to fix has gone.Rates up to 3%
The question is now, to fix or not to fix?