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• #77802
Estimated number of mortgages reaching end of fixed rate period by initial fixed rate
- lots of caveats but suggests around 300,000 per quarter at the moment, peaking at around 375,000 in Q2 next year
This is nightmare for most of middle class - someone with a £250k mortgage currently paying 3% would see their interest rate rise to 6.5% or simple terms annual interest bill rise from £7,500 to £16,250 They would need to find over £700 extra per month to not lose their house
- lots of caveats but suggests around 300,000 per quarter at the moment, peaking at around 375,000 in Q2 next year
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• #77803
Pie on the case:
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• #77804
Truss and kwasi are outperforming already. Cool "gamble" guys.
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• #77805
Boris Johnson is going to be the next Prime Minister.
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• #77806
depends what happens with the Commons Partygate inquiry though right?
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• #77807
If the economy tanks further Boris would be voted back in by the Tory faithful even if he did his campaign while dancing on Betty’s grave.
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• #77808
Not if he's no longer an MP, I assume he wouldn't get re-elected as part of a big Boris out campaign.
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• #77809
2 weeks in and the idiots have already broken the economy.
12 years in.
Their track record is pretty good on trashing the economy, trade, relationships with other countries, health system, transport, etc.
The last 2 weeks is just a continuance of the regard they've been showing to country over the last 12 years.
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• #77810
Woke UBS economists
Idk why they're always talking us down. If only they believed harder we'd all be fine.
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• #77811
Absolutely not a supporter of Johnson in any way shape or form, and I totally recognise that he basically says anything to everyone.
But his overall vision was so different from this lot. Whether you believed the chat or not, his pitch both in Brexit and at the GE was spend, growth, and distribution.
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• #77812
He had a vision? Beyond saying whatever necessary to ensure he remained in power?
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• #77813
The thing is, this isn't fiscal conservatism is it? Well it is, but its decades out of date probably ineffective fiscal conservatism. AFAIK, no other conservative government in Europe has needed or would want to take this approach.
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• #77814
Handcuffed by the EU aren't they lol
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• #77815
Is it a bad thing that this is a nightmare for most of the middle class?
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• #77816
It's not just the middle class though is it, it's anyone who has a mortgage or rents from someone with a mortgage, they will all suffer, I don't know why he singled out the middle class
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• #77817
Nah.
History shows that when the middle classes get hit by catastrophic events wiping out their savings nothing bad comes of it.
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• #77818
I know, I know. But the overall tennor of the message, what he was selling, was very much not "moar bankers bonuses and borrowing to prevent energy companies getting slightly less massive profits".
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• #77819
We are at the "Boris wasn't all bad" stage already. Oh no.
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• #77820
Genuinely starting to get a bit nervous about the future.
The news cycle is continuously reading like a GCSE essay on considering the factors that lead to WWIII.
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• #77821
The rise of populist Far Right parties in particular
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• #77822
I would like to think a nuclear meltdown which destroys London would be worse than 2 more weeks of Truss et al in charge. But. Well.
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• #77823
I suppose this is the closest that a central bank gets to throwing shade. Looks like no emergency hike?
I welcome the Government’s commitment to ... the role of the Office for Budget Responsibility in its assessment of prospects for the economy and public finances.
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• #77824
FX market is puking on cock again as a result
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• #77825
This will help calm things and only 8 weeks to go by which point we’ll need wheelbarrows of GBP for our weekly shops.
1 Attachment
Woke UBS economists
https://www.ubs.com/global/en/wealth-management/insights/chief-investment-office/market-insights/paul-donovan/2022/mmt-takes-a-pounding.html/global/en/wealth-management/insights/chief-investment-office/market-insights/paul-donovan/2022/mmt-takes-a-pounding.html