
Stocks and oil rise before Zelenskyy-Trump meeting in Washington, UK house prices fall in August
Date: 2025-08-18T06:56:16.000Z
Title: Colleen Babcock
Content: Rightmove's monthly survey showed that 34% of UK homes are now seeing a reduction in price during marketing. In data that goes back to 2012, this figure has only been higher at this time of year in 2023, and a two-speed market is becoming more evident.
The overall average time to find a buyer is 62 days, with the high number of homes for sale allowing buyers the time to make their choice and negotiate.
The Bank of England's third interest rate cut this year, which came on 7 August, is likely to be another boost of confidence for the market over the remaining months of the year, the property website said.
, property expert at Rightmove, said:
Buyers have the upper hand in this high-supply market, so a tempting price is vital to agree a sale. The strategy is working, with the number of sales agreed in the full month of July being the best at this time of year since 2020. At that time, the market had recently re-opened after the first pandemic lockdown, and generous stamp duty reductions had just been announced.
However, the high number of price reductions we're seeing is an indicator that some sellers are still coming to market with too high a price and then reducing it to become competitive.
Update:
Date: 2025-08-18T06:51:26.000Z
Title: Introduction: Stocks and oil rise before Ukraine meeting in Washington, UK house prices fall in August
Content: Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
Financial markets are focused on meetings at the Oval Office in Washington between Donald Trump and European leaders including Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz, and Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
After meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday, Trump has put pressure on the Ukrainian president to agree to a quick settlement, saying he could end the war 'almost immediately' if he wanted to. The US president also ruled out allowing Ukraine to join Nato or retake Russian-occupied Crimea as part of negotiations with Moscow.
Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil, has gained 0.5% to $66.16 a barrel while gold ahs risen by 0.4% to $3,348 an ounce.
Asian shares have got off to a good start to the week and European and US futures are also up, after Wall Street stocks traded near record highs last week on expectations of an interest rate cut at the Federal Reserve's September meeting, perhaps even a half-point reduction under political pressure from the White House.
Attention now turns to Fed chair Jerome Powell's appearance at the Jackson Hole symposium this week, starting on Thursday. Last week's inflation data were mixed, with the consumer prices index showing limited price pressures while the producer prices index surprised higher.
In Europe, stock markets extended gains last week to their highest levels since March, before Trump's tariff announcements.
The Shanghai exchange rose by nearly 0.7% towards a 10-year high, the Shenzhen market in China jumped 1.38% and India's Nifty 50 rose by 1.2%, snapping a downtrend that began in late June amid tense US–India trade talks.
'Hope over fears,' says Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.
Both nations would welcome any truce between Russia and the West, given their desire to maintain ties with both camps. European and US futures are also firmer.
The yen is softer, while gold demand remains strong — showing investors are cautious ahead of Trump's meeting with Zelensky. Material progress could spark further oil weakness, a rally across equities, and softer gold demand. Disappointment would bring oil bulls back, pressure equities (except defense), and lift gold.
Turning to the UK housing market, savvy summer sellers, pricing realistically, have driven the best July for sales agreed since 2020, with prices falling again in August, according to the property website Rightmove.
Lower asking prices and good buyer choice are boosting sales activity, and the number of sales being agreed is now 8% ahead of this time last year. The number of homes for sales is 10% up on this time last year.
The average price of a property coming to the market for sale dropped by a seasonal 1.3% to £368,740 in August, in line with the 10-year average, following bigger-than-usual declines in June and July. With many people on holiday, prices usually fall in August.
The Agenda
10am BST: Eurozone trade for June
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
5 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Ukraine war briefing: ‘Coalition of the willing' talks held as Russia stalls
Work is under way on the military component of security guarantees for Ukraine that European leaders and Donald Trump have committed to if there is a peace deal. A small group of military leaders held discussions in Washington to work out options, a western official told Reuters on Wednesday, shortly after a bigger virtual meeting wrapped up. Gen Dan Caine, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, held the talks which also involved around half a dozen other Nato defence chiefs. The chair of the Nato military committee, Adm Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, called it a 'great, candid discussion … Priority continues to be a just, credible and durable peace.' As the 'coalition of the willing' began to take on a preliminary shape, Andriy Yermak, chief of staff to Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said Ukraine was also working on a plan with its allies on how to proceed 'in case the Russian side continues to prolong the war and disrupt agreements on bilateral and trilateral formats of leaders' meetings.' Yermak also said that 'our teams, above all the military, have already begun active work on the military component of security guarantees'. Russia meanwhile continued to display its apparent intention to delay a possible meeting between Vladimir Putin and Zelenskyy, writes Pjotr Sauer. Sergei Lavrov, Putin's foreign minister, complained on Wednesday that Moscow should be included in any talks on Ukraine's security guarantees: 'To discuss security guarantees seriously without Russia is a road to nowhere.' Russia gave Ukraine a supposed 'security guarantee' under the Budapest memorandum of 1994, which Putin has long since comprehensively violated by attacking Ukraine. Lavrov avoided any direct reference to a possible Putin-Zelenskyy summit and said China, Russia's ally in the war, should be among Ukraine's security guarantors. Kyiv is likely to view that with deep scepticism given that Russia uses equipment and materials from China to attack Ukraine, and that the two countries have vowed to pursue a 'no-limits' partnership. Analysts suggested Putin would probably only meet Zelenskyy to accept a complete Ukrainian capitulation. Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, said: 'He has repeatedly stated that such a meeting would only be possible if there were well-prepared grounds, which in practice means Zelenskyy's acceptance of Russia's terms for ending the war.' Drones attacked Kyiv over Wednesday night into Thursday morning as the Ukrainian air force issued a national alert for missile attacks after Russian warplanes took off. Earlier, on Wednesday, at least three people were killed in a Russian artillery attack on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kostiantynivka, local officials said. Another four were wounded. The governor, Vadym Filashkin, said it involved eight strikes from a multiple rocket launch system and targeted a local market. At least 14 people, including a family with three children, were wounded in a Russian attack on Ukraine's northern region of Sumy. A 'massive drone strike' on the southern Ukrainian region of Odesa injured one person and caused a large fire at a fuel and energy facility, Ukraine's state emergency service said on Wednesday. Ukrainian drone forces meanwhile scored a major hit on the Novoshakhtinsk oil refinery in Russia's Rostov region where fires and explosions were captured on video. A Russian military drone exploded in Polish farmland on Wednesday, blowing the windows out of houses and igniting a furious response from authorities. 'Once again, we are facing a provocation from the Russian Federation, with a Russian drone,' said Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, the Polish defence minister. The explosion was in a cornfield near the village of Osiny about 100km (60 miles) from Warsaw and near the borders with Ukraine and Russian-allied Belarus. Poland's foreign minister, Radoslaw Sikorski, condemned 'a new violation of our airspace from the east … The foreign ministry will protest to the perpetrator of this violation.' It was believed to be a Russian drone type called Gerbera, which is often used as a decoy in attacks against Ukraine. Poland's Gen Dariusz Malinowski said the aircraft 'was a decoy drone, which was not armed but carried a self-destruct warhead'. Russian drones and missiles have crossed into the airspace of Nato members Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania several times in the three and a half years since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine. The latest incident comes less than a month after a Russian military drone flew into Lithuania from Belarus.


Daily Mail
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
New analysis shows which political party faces 'registration crisis' in battleground states that could change elections forever
A new analysis of Americans' voter registration habits points to potential long-term trouble for the Democratic Party. Data analyzed by the New York Times has revealed that the number of registered Democrats has declined in every state that tracks voter affiliation by party—a group that includes 30 of America's 50 states. The remaining 20 states do not register voters by party. This trend was consistent between swing states, red states, and blue states. The New York Times notes that explicitly, 'fewer and fewer Americans are choosing to be Democrats.' The Times attributes Trump's sweeping 2024 victory—including wins in every swing state and the national popular vote—to this very trend. For veteran political activists and observers, this shift comes as no surprise. In recent cycles, states that have shifted from Democrat to GOP have almost always seen Republican gains in voter registration precede electoral flips. Republican presidential nominee, former U.S. President Donald Trump participates in a roundtable discussion at the Latino Summit held at Trump National Doral Golf Club on October 22, 2024 in Doral, Florida Florida, once the quintessential swing state—from the infamous 2000 Bush-Gore recount to the razor-thin Trump-Clinton contest in 2016—has trended solidly Republican over the past decade. Republican gains with Hispanic and Latino voters have been pointed to as one reason for the shift. A major milestone came in March, when Republican registrations surpassed Democrats in Miami-Dade County—a longtime Democratic stronghold and Florida's most populous county. Republicans now hold 34 percent of registered voters there, edging out both Democrats (32 percent) and Independents (33 percent.) These trends in voter registration and party loyalty suggest that political realignments in key states may be more durable than previously thought. Evan Power, chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, expressed in a statement to the Florida Phoenix that the flip was 'a total repudiation of the Democrats' failed agenda. Miami-Dade is no longer their safe haven — it's the beating heart of the Republican revolution.' Iowa is another state where Republicans have recently made major gains. After the 2018 midterm cycle, three of the state's four congressional seats were held by Democrats. Republicans subsequently made voter registration a top priority in the 2020 presidential election, and made gains not only in swing seats but statewide before Trump's second victory in the state. After the 2020 election, Republicans held three of the four congressional seats in the state and flipped the fourth into their column after the 2022 midterm election. Conservative activist Scott Presler is the Founder and Executive Director of Early Vote Action and has travelled across the country registering voters in swing states and districts for the past half-decade. Presler told the Daily Mail that he often gets asked if registering more GOP voters in a location means an automatic win. He points to his efforts in flipping Bucks County, Pennsylvania for Trump last year as one indication that the proof is in the pudding. The county is one specifically mentioned in the New York Times analysis, as Republicans flipped the voter registration there last summer in part due to Presler's activism ahead of Trump's win in November. The Daily Mail spoke to Presler via a phone call while he was back in Pennsylvania, this time as part of an effort to flip the swingiest of all swing counties, Erie County, which is '5,900 voters away from flipping blue to red.' Presler said that recent conversations with individuals he's gotten to change their party registration indicate that the data analyzed by the New York Times is 'emblematic of the fact that voters overwhelmingly approve of Trump's policies.' While both parties have had their fair share of infighting, Democrats seem to be losing the most in the eyes of voters. After Trump's decisive defeat of Kamala Harris last year, the party is searching for a new leader. The likes of California Governor Gavin Newsom and Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy are putting themselves forward as figureheads of the anti-Trump resistance, but looking at registration numbers, no one has yet broken through to the average voter to get them to switch back into the Democratic column. Democrat strategist and DNC member Maria Cardona told the New York Times that her party 'fell asleep at the switch' also adding that young Hispanic and Latino voters are no longer default supporters of her party.


South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
UK military chief meets US counterparts for Ukraine talks
Admiral Sir Tony Radakin met senior US defence officials alongside other European military chiefs in Washington DC on Wednesday to discuss military options to secure peace in Ukraine. He later attended a virtual meeting of Nato's military committee, described by its chairman Italian Admiral Giuseppe Cavo Dragone as 'candid'. On Tuesday evening, Admiral Radakin, the chief of the defence staff, had dined with his US counterpart General Dan Caine. The meetings come amid renewed planning for a 'coalition of the willing', led by the UK and France, that would guarantee Kyiv's security in the event of a ceasefire. Earlier in the week, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron co-chaired a meeting of the coalition, in which members of the group also discussed the possibility of further sanctions on Russia. Western security guarantees, strongly resisted by Moscow, are one of the central issues for any peace deal for Ukraine, which fears Russia could otherwise use a ceasefire to regroup and launch a renewed invasion. So far, only the UK and France have indicated they could commit troops to a peacekeeping force in Ukraine. In an interview on Tuesday Donald Trump ruled out an American ground contribution but suggested the US could be willing to provide some form of air support. His special envoy, Steve Witkoff, had earlier suggested the US could offer Ukraine a mutual defence agreement similar to Nato's Article 5, without Kyiv formally joining the alliance. Renewed talks among the 'coalition of the willing' follow last week's summit between Mr Trump and Vladimir Putin in Alaska as the US president continued to push for an end to a conflict he had promised he could finish on his first day in office. Those talks appeared to result in little progress towards a deal, but sparked concern among some in Europe that Mr Trump could seek to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky into accepting a deal without sufficient security guarantees. On Monday, Sir Keir and Mr Macron joined other European leaders in travelling to Washington in a show of support for Mr Zelensky during a meeting with Mr Trump. Meanwhile, the UK and Russia traded sanctions as London sought to increase the pressure on Moscow to end its invasion. Europe minister Stephen Doughty unveiled sanctions on a series of organisations linked to Kyrgyzstan's financial services sector, saying they had been involved in Kremlin attempts to 'soften the blow of our sanctions by laundering transactions through dodgy crypto networks'. Russia in turn sanctioned 21 individuals, including former Labour MP Denis MacShane, several journalists, and the Government-appointed independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, Jonathan Hall.