Ady87
Full Member
Should I be bothered about when I change £1400 to dollars between now and 20th August or is it just going to be shit all round and at this point, a few quid here or there?
Its odd isn't it? Must be in part due to global QE. Too much money chasing too few assets.It really is crazy times when you have stock markets at record highs and sovereign bond yields at record lows. Something's got to give.
Bad luck mate!Should I be bothered about when I change £1400 to dollars between now and 20th August or is it just going to be shit all round and at this point, a few quid here or there?
Pretty much entirely down to QE and prolonged artificially low interest rates. Feck knows how they can unravel it painlessly without a magical growth burst appearing from nowhere.Its odd isn't it? Must be in part due to global QE. Too much money chasing too few assets.
Pretty much entirely down to QE and prolonged artificially low interest rates. Feck knows how they can unravel it painlessly without a magical growth burst appearing from nowhere.
I was just wondering if someone could explain the last 15 pages to me?
Maybe I'm a hopeless romantic but that would work for me.Summary: Brexit was like setting fire to your pants to make you look hotter to girls.
Pfft, stupid goddam Obama and his record breaking period of private sector job growth.US jobs report out tomorrow...if it's a shocker then USD will get trounced as well. If it's good then you're fecked. Cross your fingers and hope the US didn't hire anyone last month.
if now all those bartenders would just unionize and push for higher wages....Pfft, stupid goddam Obama and his record breaking period of private sector job growth.
They'll need to make up for the tips I won't be giving them anymore!if now all those bartenders would just unionize and push for higher wages....![]()
Can't see the point in lowering interest rates when there is so little room for manoeuvre. 0.5%, 0.25%, how much difference is it going to make? £10, £20/month on your mortgage, big deal. You get no interest on deposits, you'll still get no interest. Personal loans are really cheap anyway. The only thing that really pisses me off are credit card interest rates, how can the 'mainstream' cards justify rates of 15%-18%, they have not changed since interest rates were at 5%, even so, even if they did reduce credit card rates, it would only be by a fraction.
When rates were in the 5s, 6s, 7s and higher, then reducing it by a % or 2 can make a real difference, but that was already done to the max 7 years ago.
All seems a bit pointless to me.
25bps could mean the world to a business' bottomline. Mortgages and sb accts are almost never the consideration of a rate decrease/increase.
50bps is a significant room to manoeuvre around and they can go into negative as well (though we would need to be really fecked for that to happen).
Summary: Brexit was like setting fire to your pants to make you look hotter to girls.
Only the cafMaybe I'm a hopeless romantic but that would work for me.
Unnecessarily dismissive.
25bps could mean the world to a business' bottomline. Mortgages and sb accts are almost never the consideration of a rate decrease/increase.
50bps is a significant room to manoeuvre around and they can go into negative as well (though we would need to be really fecked for that to happen).
Can't see the point in lowering interest rates when there is so little room for manoeuvre. 0.5%, 0.25%, how much difference is it going to make? £10, £20/month on your mortgage, big deal. You get no interest on deposits, you'll still get no interest. Personal loans are really cheap anyway. The only thing that really pisses me off are credit card interest rates, how can the 'mainstream' cards justify rates of 15%-18%, they have not changed since interest rates were at 5%, even so, even if they did reduce credit card rates, it would only be by a fraction.
When rates were in the 5s, 6s, 7s and higher, then reducing it by a % or 2 can make a real difference, but that was already done to the max 7 years ago.
All seems a bit pointless to me.
You really dont have a clue as to how businesses (in particular capital and profits) work.Not really, it's a little bit less, but it's not going to mean 'the World'.
Let's face it, it's £2.5K per million per annum. If your business lives or dies on that, your already fecked.
Most mortgages are fixed rate, right? Unless people have chosen to go the variable route, very few mortgage benefits can be felt from this...but then they are not really the target here. Small and Medium industries will benefit greatly. Getting a big loan will be more attractive and banks are being forced to pass on the savings to the borrower. this is just a stimulus or a kick in the backside for economy to recover...not a end benefit of it's own.
Not necessarily actually; the more immediate impact of rate cuts is to boost consumption. Lower interest rates means more people take fresh mortgages, buy more houses; take personal loans for repairs, cars, gadgets and travel.
Yes, businesses also do get tempted to take new loans but in a dead economy you would be anyways be sitting on overcapacity on the production side. So its not like new companies will start popping up.
@Sassy Colin - you're right to the extent that 25bps is a small amount; but it is a small amount in the context of high-interest rate economies. Think about it this way - reduction of your interest rate from 0.5% to 0.25% will effectively halve your interest costs each year. Ie, if you could not afford that GBP1mn house because the mortgage was out of your range, its now atleast 25-50% cheaper
Admittedly. But even then it makes a big difference. For instance, if you were borrowing at 3% and now it is 2.75%, it is 8% cheaper. That's a reasonably large sum of amount. Think of your mortgage coming down from GBP2K to GBP 1.8K. Moreover, on the flipside, like you said, saving becomes useless and therefore you're more inclined to spend more rather than store it up in investments.It wouldn't be that much cheaper though. Business loans are not set at base + a percentage, not at base.
I just did a biggie more than x10 that figure and went ahead with it. I reckon that it could get worse before it get better. just my personal gut-feel, instincts.Should I be bothered about when I change £1400 to dollars between now and 20th August or is it just going to be shit all round and at this point, a few quid here or there?
It makes almost no difference at all for the SME sector.Most mortgages are fixed rate, right? Unless people have chosen to go the variable route, very few mortgage benefits can be felt from this...but then they are not really the target here. Small and Medium industries will benefit greatly. Getting a big loan will be more attractive and banks are being forced to pass on the savings to the borrower. this is just a stimulus or a kick in the backside for economy to recover...not a end benefit of it's own.