Showing posts with label fin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fin. Show all posts

Saturday, October 23, 2021

Rishi Sunak's Budget - 6 Changes That Could Hit Your Pocket

October Budget 2021 6 Changes That Could Hit Your Pocket

UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak will set out the government's tax and spending plans on Wednesday 27 October.

The BBC is predicting six tax and budget changes at a time when Rishi Sunak has already announced a £7 billion spending spree on northern transport links and childcare help for families. There is also a possibility of extended loan support, due to end in December for businesses struggling to come out of the recession, or subject to another winter lockdown?

This will be the second Budget of the year, after one in March, and will coincide with the conclusions of the 2021 Spending Review, which will give details of how government will fund public services for the next three years.

Here are six possible things to watch out for in the Budget that could affect your personal finances.

1. VAT on energy bills

The chancellor is reportedly considering a cut to the 5% rate of value added tax on household energy bills.

The move would be popular and timely against the background of soaring energy bills this winter and is something the government is now able to do because of Brexit.

But the move could attract criticism as it would - in effect - mean subsidising fossil fuels ahead of the climate summit.

Also, a VAT cut on domestic energy bills would cost about £1.5bn a year, which may just be too much for the chancellor.

2. Alcohol tax

There are rumours the chancellor is planning to simplify the way that alcohol is taxed in the UK.

The 2019 Conservative election manifesto promised to review it, so now could be the time.

One suggestion is to reduce the premium on sparkling wine to the same level as still wine, which could knock 83p off a bottle of Champagne or Prosecco.

"The government should stop trying to favour certain parts of the industry, instead focusing on removing distortions and creating a simpler system of alcohol taxes targeted at socially costly drinking," said Kate Smith, associate director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

The drinks levies have been in place since the 1600s and raise £12bn a year for the government.

3. Capital Gains Tax rates

There are rumours that the current Capital Gains Tax rates may be tinkered with.

The tax is paid when people sell assets such as shares or a second home.

It's been suggested that rates could be aligned more closely with income tax rates, which could mean scrapping the current tax rates of 10% and 20% (or 18% and 28% for property) and instead making everyone pay income tax rates on their gains.

A report by the Office of Tax Simplification, published in November 2020, recommended that CGT rates should be increased to bring them into line with income tax.

But it would be unlikely to raise significant extra amounts of tax, as it is typically paid by only about 275,000 taxpayers and raises less than £10bn a year.

Shares can be sold quickly to avoid higher CGT, but properties can take months to sell.

4. Student loan threshold

There are reports that graduates may be asked to start paying back student loans earlier.

The chancellor could do that by lowering the threshold at which people start repaying their student loans, a move that could save the Treasury about £2bn a year.

Currently, English and Welsh students who enrolled at university after 2012 pay 9% of everything they earn above £27,295 per year. They repay the same 9% until the loan is fully repaid or until 30 years after graduating.

If the threshold were reduced to £25,000, it would cost anyone earning more than the current limit an extra £206 a year, while if it were slashed to £20,000, it would cost an extra £656 a year.

Ministers are rumoured to have proposed cutting the threshold to as low as £23,000 and giving graduates 40 years as opposed to 30 to repay their debt.

5. Minimum wage rise

In his March Budget, Mr Sunak announced that the National Living Wage (what the governments call the minimum wage) would increase for workers over the age of 23.

Since then, the government has come under pressure to help employees further - especially as younger workers have been some of the worst hit by the economic downturn.

One solution the chancellor has been reportedly looking at is to increase the National Living Wage by 5.7% to £9.42 per hour from its current rate of £8.91.

That would bring it close to the Living Wage Foundation's current recommendation of £9.50 an hour.

6. Pension higher rate allowance

The government could raise cash by cutting tax relief on pension savings for those on high salaries.

But pension experts warn such a move would not be as simple as it sounds, Steven Cameron, pensions director at Aegon, said: "A move to a flat rate of pensions tax relief, rather than the current system where relief is based on the rate of income tax paid, would be far from simple to implement."

He said it would be particularly difficult for defined-benefit schemes and could mean medium to high earners, including doctors in public sector schemes, facing big tax bills.

"Removing higher-rate relief would be a direct attack on middle Britain, leading to people who do the right thing and save for their future being hit with extra tax costs," said Tom Selby, head of retirement policy at AJ Bell. Source BBC

Financial education in investing is the key to building and keeping wealth. Never stop learning!

Keep watching or listening to my free podcasts on iTunes and subscribe to my YouTube channel for regular financial news and updates.

If you would like to learn more about investing and managing your money, become a professional property investor, or would like to be financially free without working any harder, watch this free on demand training.

I will give a special free gift which can help you to immediately transform your finances when you attend the online training.

Click on this link to watch the free training now https://bit.ly/3wLWqx2


Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Green UK Offer Heat Pump Grants To Phase Out Gas Boilers While Interest ...

Green UK Offer Heat Pump Grants To Phase Out Gas Boilers While Interest Rates Will Rise In November

The Bank of England will increase base interest rates to 0.25% next month, the market is betting.

The historically low rates of 0.1% will be raised to combat rising inflation, which is expected to reach 4% this winter.

Up to 90,000 UK households will be offered grants of £5,000 over the next three years to install heat pump systems to replace gas boilers.

Ahead of Glasgow’s COP26 climate change conference, the UK government has commited spending almost £4 billion of taxpayer’s money as part of the ‘Net Zero Strategy’ green agenda plan to create more electric charging points and all new heating systems to use low-carbon technology or fuel such as hydrogen by 2035.

The policies are expected to create 400,000 new jobs by 2030, although much of the technology will be imported. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, sitting next to Bill Gates, has pointed to £10 billion inward investment into the UK.

There is a risk that the upheaval of green policies being introduced too quickly could wipe out older industries and millions of jobs. Rishi Sunak has already announced plans to imposed environmental tariffs on large firms at a time when post-brexit Britain needs to encourage more manufacturing to narrow the widening trade gap.

Mortgage lending could become harder on ‘non-green’ properties, although details have yet to be thrashed out.

Stock Markets could fall 10%, the Bank Of England has warned, and property prices could follow.

Financial markets and stocks and shares could see a “sharp downturn” with lower expectation of an early economic recovery from the lockdown the Bank of England predicted last week.

The QE money printing party, which have artificially fuelled property and stock markets to record highs, must eventually end.

How can you protect yourself and profit from a stock market or property crash when the bubble bursts?

Fortunes have always been lost and made during a stock and property market downturn.

Even if you do not directly invest in the stock market or property your pension fund manager may be doing so on your behalf. Check with your administrator or financial adviser.

The answer is to learn about investing and become more financially aware.

Financial education in investing is the key to building and keeping wealth. Never stop learning!

Keep watching or listening to my free podcasts on iTunes and subscribe to my YouTube channel for regular financial news and updates.

If you would like to learn more about investing and managing your money, become a professional property investor, or would like to be financially free without working any harder, watch this free on demand training.

I will give a special free gift which can help you to immediately transform your finances when you attend the online training.

Click on this link to watch the free training now https://bit.ly/3wLWqx2

Book now as spaces fill up fast...

#interestrates #realestatebubble #property #stockmarketcrash #inflation #financialeducation #freetraining #bankofengland #COP26 #heatpumpgrants #mortgages #billgates #propertyinvestment


Monday, October 18, 2021

How Will Interest Rate Rise And Stock Market Fall Hit You?

How Will Interest Rate Rise Hit You?

As inflation soars around the world, interest rates are set to rise this year. How will this impact you?

Stock Markets could fall 10%, the Bank Of England has warned

Financial markets and stocks and shares could see a “sharp downturn” with lower expectation of an early economic recovery from the lockdown the Bank of England predicted this week.

How can you protect yourself and profit from a stock market or property crash?

More property companies in China are following Evergrande’s default on interest payments, but the government is desperately propping up the market.

Even if you do not directly invest in the stock market or property your pension fund manager may be doing so on your behalf. Check with your administrator or financial adviser.

The answer is to learn about investing and become more financially aware.

Financial education is the key to building and keeping wealth. Never stop learning!

Keep watching or listening to my free podcasts on iTunes and subscribe to my YouTube channel for regular financial news and updates.

If you would like to learn more about investing and managing your money, become a professional property investor, or would like to be financially free without working any harder, watch this free on demand training.

I will give a special free gift which can help you to immediately transform your finances when you attend the online training.

Click on this link to watch the free training now https://bit.ly/3wLWqx2

Book now as spaces fill up fast...

#interestrates #evergrande #chinacrisis #realestatebubble #property #stockmarketcrash #inflation #financialeducation #freetraining #evergrande #chinapropertybubble #bankofengland


Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Interest Rates Set To Rise By December Economists Predict

Interest Rates Set To Rise By December Economists Predict

As prices, wages and inflation soars, the market is pricing a rise in interest rates before Christmas.

The Times reports that economists at Bank of America expect a modest 0.15 percentage point rise in December taking base rates up to .25%.

Base lending rates have not increased since 2018 and in March 2020 during the pandemic the Bank of England slashed rates to an historical low of 0.1%.

Central banks are between a rock and a hard place where they will be forced to raise rates to curb inflation but will pay billions more on their own borrowing. A rise of just 1% will cost the UK an additional £10 billion a year. The cost will be billions more for the US.

Homeowners and buy-to-let investors will be protected whilst they hold a fixed rate mortgage but will suffer higher repayments when the rate expires. In the UK, most mortgages are fixed for two to five years. Mortgage rates actually went up when base rates were reduced, but lenders have recently entered into a mini-price war on buy-to-let deals.

Cheap borrowing has been blamed for increasing house prices despite the country experiencing the worst economic downturn on record!

1.1 million job vacancies

Job vacancies in the UK have reached a 20-year high, which will slow economic recovery.

The ONS reports that the number of employees on payrolls showed another monthly increase, rising 207,000 to a record 29.2 million in September.

The Institute for Employment Studies (IES) said labour shortages were "affecting the whole economy, and where likely between a quarter and a third is explained by lower migration".

Tony Wilson, director of the IES, told the BBC there were now fewer unemployed people per vacancy than at any time in at least 40 years. This is down to fewer older people in work and more young people in education he said.

The number of vacancies hit another record high of 1.1 million and average weekly earnings, including bonuses, are 7.2% higher than this time last year. Wage rises, which have reach 15-20% in some sectors, are normally followed by higher inflation and consumer prices for all.

Business leaders want to be allowed to import the workers they need to fill labour shortages. However, the government wants an end to low-skilled and low-wage immigration.

The energy crisis is threatening to shut down manufacturing production in the UK within days unless the government takes urgent action. Businesses want the government to protect them from huge increases in energy costs as well as reducing or removing ‘green tariffs’, which puts them at a disadvantage compared to countries like China.

The UK is sitting on a gold mine of natural shale gas that the government will not exploit due to environmental concerns. The US takes advantage of its shale gas which is why prices are one sixth of UK gas.

While China powers industry with coal fired stations, the UK refuses to reopen new coal mines in order to meet environmental targets which Asian competitors ignore.

China’s debt and real estate bubble has not gone away, with Evergrande and two other Chinese property companies defaulting on foreign owned bond interest payments.

Stock Markets could fall 10%, the Bank Of England has warned

Financial markets and stocks and shares could see a “sharp downturn” with lower expectation of an early economic recovery from the lockdown the Bank of England predicted this week.

How can you protect yourself and profit from a stock market or property crash?

Even if you do not directly invest in the stock market or property your pension fund manager may be doing so on your behalf. Check with your administrator or financial adviser.

The answer is to learn about investing and become more financially aware.

Financial education is the key to building and keeping wealth. Never stop learning!

Keep watching or listening to my free podcasts on iTunes and subscribe to my YouTube channel for regular financial news and updates.

If you would like to learn more about investing and managing your money, become a professional property investor, or would like to be financially free without working any harder, watch this free on demand training.

I will give a special free gift which can help you to immediately transform your finances when you attend the online training.

Click on this link to watch the free training now https://bit.ly/3wLWqx2

Book now as spaces fill up fast...

#interestrates #evergrande #chinacrisis #realestatebubble #property #stockmarketcrash #inflation #financialeducation #freetraining #evergrande #chinapropertybubble #bankofengland