Jump to content

Keir Starmer’s Leadership Under Fire: Poll Predicts Exit Within a Year


Recommended Posts

Posted

Move along now, nothing to see here

 

Rachel from Customer Complaints has it all under control

 

Quote

British government bond prices fell sharply on Wednesday, pushing 10-year yields to their highest since October 2008, above a level that had held since October 2023, while 30-year yields hit a new 26-year high.

Thirty-year gilt yields - which leapt on Tuesday - rose by 11 basis points to strike their highest since August 1998 at 5.359% at 11:30 GMT. Benchmark 10-year yields rose as high as 4.784%, up 10 bps on the day.

 

Another School closes due to VAT
 

Quote

An independent school in Leicestershire says it plans to close due to "financial challenges", including the introduction of VAT on school fees.

Loughborough Amherst School informed parents of 284 pupils on Monday it is proposing to permanently close at the end of the academic year on 4 July.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy35w5wxd4o

Posted
1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

It wasn’t Heath’s policies unless you read the history, in particular Heath handing out significant pay rises to some while e forcing pay controls on others.

 

   It was the miners striking that caused the power cuts , the miners striking was NOT one of Heaths policies 

  • Like 1
Posted
4 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   The average mortgage rate in 1991 was 9% .

You were getting mugged of paying 15.4 %

He said 1990/1991.

 

His figure of 15.4% is accurate. I can't see where he said "average".

Posted
1 hour ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   It was the miners striking that caused the power cuts , the miners striking was NOT one of Heaths policies 

Heath’s policy of controlling wages through income freezes and anti-union legislation (the Industrial Relations Act 1971) escalated tensions with trade unions resulting in the miners striking......so it was Heath's (notice the possessive apostrophe) policies that led to power cuts.

Posted
40 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   I said average , not him , he was paying 50 % above the average rate 

He said in 1990/1991 his mortgage rate was 15.4%. The rate did reach that level during 1990.

 

You then changed the date to only 1991 and used "average" in attempt to debunk his claim.

 

His claim is correct. 

Posted
40 minutes ago, youreavinalaff said:

He said in 1990/1991 his mortgage rate was 15.4%. The rate did reach that level during 1990.

 

You then changed the date to only 1991 and used "average" in attempt to debunk his claim.

 

His claim is correct. 

 

 1991 is in 1990/1991 , the mortgage rate in 1991 was about the same as in 1990 .

  OK the mortgage rate in 1990/1991 was 9.97 % and 9.07 % respectively . 

  Although bank rates vary and you could have been paying more or less , 

Posted
11 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

 1991 is in 1990/1991 , the mortgage rate in 1991 was about the same as in 1990 .

  OK the mortgage rate in 1990/1991 was 9.97 % and 9.07 % respectively . 

  Although bank rates vary and you could have been paying more or less , 

"SVR peaked at 15.40% in 1990 — throughout the year the 'average' SVR was 14.30%, but the average fixed rate mortgage was available at a lower amount of 13.75%."

 

 

Link https://www.mpamag.com/uk/news/general/15-years-since-the-peak-of-mortgage-rates/365633#:~:text=* In October 1990%2C a month,between February and November 1990.

Posted
47 minutes ago, youreavinalaff said:

"SVR peaked at 15.40% in 1990 — throughout the year the 'average' SVR was 14.30%, but the average fixed rate mortgage was available at a lower amount of 13.75%."

 

 

Link https://www.mpamag.com/uk/news/general/15-years-since-the-peak-of-mortgage-rates/365633#:~:text=* In October 1990%2C a month,between February and November 1990.

 

   Those were for new mortgages available at the time , people on long term fixed rate mortgages would have bought the average percentage down 

Posted
12 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   Those were for new mortgages available at the time , people on long term fixed rate mortgages would have bought the average percentage down 

The original poster you quoted said his mortgage rate in 1990 was 15.4%. You said that was wrong. The link I posted shows he wasnt wrong.

 

You now say only new mortgages would pay that. The link I posted shows the rates as variable rates. So, no, not just new mortgages but those on variable rates also.

 

If you read the link fully, you'll see fixed rates were averaging over 13%. Well above your unsubstantiated figures.

 

Once again, the poster you quoted is correct. You are incorrect to question him/her. As my link proves. 

Posted
1 minute ago, youreavinalaff said:

The original poster you quoted said his mortgage rate in 1990 was 15.4%. You said that was wrong. The link I posted shows he wasnt wrong.

 

You now say only new mortgages would pay that. The link I posted shows the rates as variable rated. So, no, not just new mortgages but those on variable rates also.

 

If you read the link fully, you'll see fixed rates were averaging over 13%. Well above your unsubstantiated figures.

 

   Those on lower fixed rate mortgages (arranged a few years previously ) would have bought the average rate down , is what I meant 

Posted
16 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   Those on lower fixed rate mortgages (arranged a few years previously ) would have bought the average rate down , is what I meant 

Irrelevant to your original post.

 

You're yet to post a link showing rates around 9% for 90/91.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...