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Bank of England cuts interest rates to 4pc

Bank of England cuts interest rates to 4pc

The Bank of England (BoE) cut interest rates on Thursday but four of its nine policymakers - worried about high inflation - sought to keep borrowing costs on hold, suggesting the run of rate cuts might be nearing an end. The contrasting views of the BoE's top officials meant the Monetary Policy Committee held two votes for the first time since it was created in 1997 in order to reach a decision. With the MPC facing the conflicting risks posed by an inflation rate that the BoE forecasts will soon be double its 2pc target and a worsening of job losses, Governor Andrew Bailey and four colleagues backed lowering Bank Rate to 4pc from 4.25pc. But that was only after a first round of voting ended in a 4-4-1 split, with external MPC member Alan Taylor initially backing a half-point cut. "It remains important that we do not cut Bank Rate too quickly or by too much," Bailey told a press conference after the decision, highlighting that the rise in inflation was expected to be short-lived. "We stand ready to adjust our course if we see shifts in the balance of risk to the medium-term outlook for inflation." The four members of the MPC who backed keeping rates on hold included Clare Lombardelli, the deputy governor for monetary policy, who broke from the majority for the first time. Chief Economist Huw Pill also voted to keep Bank Rate at 4.25pc. British short-term government bond yields rose sharply and stocks fell after the announcement. Sterling jumped by about half a cent against the U.S. dollar. Investors trimmed their bets on the possibility of another BoE rate cut by the end of 2025 and were only fully pricing in a cut to 3.75pc in February next year, according to data from LSEG. "The close vote split and the minutes of the meeting underscore the division on the MPC," KPMG UK's chief economist Yael Selfin said. "The division reflects the two-sided risks to the inflation outlook and the uncertainty under which policymakers are operating." Selfin said she expected one final BoE rate cut in November. The central bank repeated its guidance about "a gradual and careful approach" to further cuts in borrowing costs but added a new line to its message on the outlook. "The restrictiveness of monetary policy had fallen as Bank Rate had been reduced," it said. It repeated that there was no pre-set path for borrowing costs. A halt to the process of cutting rates would be a blow for finance minister Rachel Reeves and Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who have struggled to meet their promise to voters to speed up Britain's slow economic growth. Bailey said rates were still on a downward path but added there was "genuine uncertainty now about the course of that direction of rates ... I think that the path has become more uncertain." James Smith, an economist with ING, said he still thought the next rate cut would come in November. "But were the next couple of inflation reports to surprise to the upside, or if the recent falls in private-sector employment start to ease off, then we'll be rethinking," he added. The BoE is being pulled in different directions, leaving analysts as well as its own policymakers divided on its most likely moves in the coming months. Britain's jobs market has weakened in recent months, in part due to a tax hike by Reeves on employers and U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war. But inflation is rising. The BoE revised up its forecast for a peak in inflation to 4pc in September from 3.7pc and said it would remain alert to the risk that rising prices - especially for food - could push up wage deals and longer-term price pressures. "Overall, the MPC judges that the upside risks around medium-term inflationary pressures have moved slightly higher since May," the summary of the meeting said. The BoE said it expected inflation to return to its 2pc target only in the second quarter of 2027, three months later than its previous forecast. By contrast, the European Central Bank expects inflation in the euro zone to hold below 2pc. It has cut borrowing costs eight times since June of last year, three more reductions than those of the BoE. Inflation has been above the BoE's 2pc target almost constantly since May 2021. It said on Thursday that it expected economic growth of 0.3pc in the July-to-September period, up from 0.1pc in the second quarter. Longer-term growth forecasts were little changed from its report in May, with annual growth of just over 1pc expected in the coming years. (Reuters)
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Small boat migrants given taxpayer-funded days out including dinghy trips & £1 Prem tickets as farcical perks exposed
Small boat migrants given taxpayer-funded days out including dinghy trips & £1 Prem tickets as farcical perks exposed

The Irish Sun

time6 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Small boat migrants given taxpayer-funded days out including dinghy trips & £1 Prem tickets as farcical perks exposed

Other perks given to migrants include half-price discounts on e-bikes — when Army veterans only get a fifth off TAKEN FOR A RIDE Small boat migrants given taxpayer-funded days out including dinghy trips & £1 Prem tickets as farcical perks exposed A HOST of generous perks are being offered to small-boat arrivals — including discounts on martial arts classes and dinghy days out plus £1 Aston Villa match tickets for kids. They are among dozens of farcical asylum deals uncovered in a Sun investigation. Advertisement 4 Motorised dinghies can be hired at Rother Valley country park in South Yorkshire Credit: Alamy 4 A host of generous perks are being offered to small-boat arrivals Credit: PA Others include half-price on e-bikes — when Army veterans and pensioners only get a fifth off. Among those dishing out deals is Labour-run Rotherham Council — which gives asylum seekers access to the Rothercard, aimed at helping low-earning families with bills. Around 500 in asylum accommodation in the South Yorkshire town are believed to be eligible. At Rother Valley Country Park's three lakes they get a 30 per cent discount, slashing the cost of a 90-minute double-handed dinghy or sailing boat rental from £20.70 to £14.80. Advertisement A single-handed dinghy is £12.70, a third down from £16.40. The park also offers discounted watersports including windsurfing. The authority, where one in six live in poverty, raised council tax by three per cent this year. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'It's shocking that yet another Labour Council has been offering illegal immigrants freebies – this time offering discounts for water sports and boat hires. Advertisement 'You could not make it up. Hard-working Brits are subsidising perks for illegal immigrants crossing the Channel, while at the same time seeing local services cut. 'This has got to stop. The British people have had enough. Loophole in PM's swap plan means the more bogus an asylum seeker is, the less chance we have of kicking them out 'Families are struggling to make ends meet and being slapped by huge Labour tax rises, all to pay for handouts to illegal immigrants who have flouted our border laws and never paid a penny in tax.' Meanwhile Birmingham City Council offers £1 kids' tickets to Aston Villa with a paying adult. Advertisement It subsidises swimming, martial arts plus courses on trampolining, golf, gymnastics and football. And in Calderdale, West Yorks, migrants are offered £15 off a ­massage and discounted tickets at Bradford's IMAX cinema. Those living in publicly-funded accommodation can also use the Passport to Leisure card to get weekend yoga sessions and £1 off theatre tickets. Also available is physiotherapy in Halifax, with the card scheme's page saying migrants get £15 off an initial assessment, then a 'further £5 saving for each treatment and one-hour massage'. Advertisement 4 Chris Philp said: 'It's shocking that yet another Labour Council has been offering illegal immigrants freebies' Credit: PA Ex-Tory minister Sir Alec Shelbrooke said: 'I'm shocked and appalled at the blatant waste of hard-pushed taxpayers' money when councils are declaring poverty. 'This blatant waste will appal families who, quite frankly, cannot afford to take these perks even with a discount. 'While everyone else has their benefits cut, asylum seekers are being pampered with perks at taxpayers' expense.' Advertisement Nationwide, we can reveal an e-scooter firm offers boat migrants a 50 per cent discount — while only giving Army veterans, NHS nurses and firefighters a fifth off. Voi scooters, which operates in cities including London and Bristol, gave migrants half-price access to passes under an 'equitable access' scheme. Users can apply online and if accepted pay as ­little as £7 a week. At least one asylum hotel resident this year has been charged with dangerously driving an e-scooter. Advertisement Tory MP Sir John Hayes said: 'If they are going to offer a discount scheme, surely UK veterans and pensioners should come first? 'I know what my priority would be — people who served this country and worked hard for this country all their lives.' Swedish firm Voi has had over 21million rides on its 1,400 scooters since launching here in 2020. The company claims to have replaced nine million car journeys with eco-friendly electric options. Advertisement Yet Voi does not offer the same 50 per cent deal to asylum seekers in France and Belgium, where thousands wait to cross to soft-touch Britain. 4 Perks include discounts on martial arts classes and dinghy days out plus £1 Aston Villa match tickets for kids Credit: Getty In the capital, Richmond council gives asylum seekers free swimming and cheaper Spanish or French lessons via a discount card. Nearby Kingston Council has 50 per cent off leisure activities. Advertisement And Wandsworth Council, South London, has 50 per cent off e-bikes plus half-price weddings and civil partnership ceremonies at its town hall. Our probe comes a month after French President Emmanuel Macron slammed PM Sir Keir Starmer for the migrant crisis. He warned the UK must address 'pull factors' including freebies, luxury ­accommodation and easy access to black market work on Just Eat or Deliveroo. The Home Office operates around 210 migrant hotels at a cost of more than £3billion a year. Advertisement The Government has pledged to close them all by 2029 — but has opened new hotels this year. Rotherham Borough Council said: 'The Rothercard scheme offers support to all residents on low incomes. We would not generally expect asylum seekers to be accessing sports facilities like Rother Valley Country Park. 'Rothercard also helps with the costs of services like pest control and waste disposal, which we would want to ensure were available to everyone who lives here.' Danielle Durrans, at Calderdale Council, said: 'The Passport to Leisure scheme offers discounted access to sport, cultural and leisure facilities.' Advertisement She said some discounts were offered by private firms. Voi was invited to comment.

Ex-Kinahan Cartel associate expands coffee business with new venture in Dublin 8
Ex-Kinahan Cartel associate expands coffee business with new venture in Dublin 8

Sunday World

time8 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Ex-Kinahan Cartel associate expands coffee business with new venture in Dublin 8

Dean Howe last year opened up coffee outlet Gulliver's in the Liberties alongside former prison pal and senior Cartel figure Liam Brannigan The address of Howe and Brannigan's new business Ex-Kinahan Cartel crim Dean Howe has expanded his city centre coffee business – registering a new venture operating at an address in Dublin 8. Howe – who last year opened up coffee outlet Gulliver's in the Liberties alongside former prison pal and senior Cartel figure Liam Brannigan – has registered the name of a second coffee business with the Companies Registration Office (CRO). Both Howe and Brannigan were released from prison in 2023 after serving sentences for a thwarted plot to murder a Hutch associate, who cannot be named for legal reasons. Documents obtained by the Sunday World show Howe has registered 'Coffee Filtrtation (sic) Solutions' as operating out of a property in Oakfield Place on the South Circular Road in Dublin 8 on July 2. The address of Howe and Brannigan's new business When the Sunday World visited the address this week, there was no sign of any commercial activity at what appeared to be a private residence. Howe listed the business's activities as 'beverage serving activities.' Registering a business name rather than setting up a company means there is no obligation on Howe to file accounts for either business. An expert in company law told the Sunday World, as long as earnings are disclosed to Revenue, this is a wholly legitimate way to structure a business. Dean Howe at his coffee shop in Dublin's Liberties News in 90 seconds - 10th August 2025 Howe's move to register a second business title with the CRO comes nine months after this newspaper revealed how he and Brannigan had gone into business together pushing high-quality imported Colombian product on the streets of Dublin. Gulliver's, which opened over the summer, operates out of a hatch beside a bicycle shop on Patrick Street, near St Patrick's Cathedral. Advertising the shop, they said there was 'nothing better than a coffee and a pastry after a good ride'. They described their business as a 'giant amongst others' and offer coffees, teas, soft drinks and food including crepes, protein balls and sandwiches. They also offer a delivery service. The Sunday World photographed Howe smiling and serving customers through the hatch in the stall last November, with many of those unlikely to be aware their barista has links to Ireland's most notorious Cartel. However, another visitor was probably more acquainted with the owners. British boxer Sunny Edwards, who was signed to Cartel boss Daniel Kinahan's and Matthew Macklin's boxing stable MTK and has staunchly defended him in the past, dropped by for a coffee in August. Howe and Brannigan's current coffee shop The former IBF flyweight champion was one of several fighters to publicly back Kinahan's MTK gym 'as a legitimate business' and describe the Cartel boss as an 'old friend' before later cutting ties. Howe was released from prison in 2023 after serving four-and-a -half years for conspiracy to murder a Hutch associate in 2017. The Hutch associate cannot be named as he is currently before the courts on serious charges. Howe pleaded guilty after being caught on secret Garda recordings helping to plan the hit. Howe's role was to carry out surveillance on the target and tracked his movements before passing on the information to a separate team of would-be assassins, which included known hitmen Alan and Luke Wilson. Howe was previously arrested over the shooting of notorious Dublin gangster Martin 'The Viper' Foley on the orders of the Cartel in 2008 but was never charged. Foley was hit six times but survived the attack. Howe was also quizzed by gardaí about a hit attempt on John Hutch – a brother of Gerry Hutch – but was released without charge. Liam Brannigan is a cousin of senior Cartel figures, including 'Fat Freddie' Thompson and Liam Byrne, who was jailed in the UK for a weapons plot designed to get Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh a lesser sentence on organised crime offences. In 2020, the Special Criminal Court found Brannigan, of Bride Street, Dublin, guilty of being at the 'centre of the wheel' of the Kinahan Cartel plot to gun down the Hutch associate. Mr Justice Paul Coffey said the evidence against Brannigan derived from four areas, including covert audio recordings from several cars bugged by gardaí. Armed officers intercepted a Volkswagen Caddy van just 500 yards from the target's home on the night of November 6, 2017, when two men, Joseph Kelly and Luke Wilson, were found with a loaded semi-automatic pistol.​ According to local sources, Gulliver's has proven a hit with staff with local businesses in the Liberties and enjoys a healthy passing trade.

Darwin Nunez leaves Liverpool
Darwin Nunez leaves Liverpool

The 42

timea day ago

  • The 42

Darwin Nunez leaves Liverpool

LIVERPOOL SOLD striker Darwin Nunez to Saudi side Al-Hilal, both clubs confirmed on Saturday, in a move that could allow the Premier League champions to make a fresh bid for Newcastle's Alexander Isak. Nunez joined the Reds for an initial €75 million from Benfica three years ago but has failed to live up to that price tag. The Uruguayan scored 40 goals in 143 appearances but slipped down the pecking order at Anfield under both Jurgen Klopp and Arne Slot. According to reports in the British media, Al-Hilal will pay an initial €53 million for the 26-year-old. 'Al-Hilal Club Company is pleased to announce the signing of Uruguayan striker Darwin Nunez from Liverpool FC on a three-year contract,' Al-Hilal said in a statement. Nunez was likely to play even less this season after Liverpool signed Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz as part of a €300 million spending spree that also includes full-backs Milos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong. However, the club could still break the British transfer record by signing Isak. Liverpool reportedly had a first bid of £110 million (€127 million) rejected, with Newcastle demanding a fee of up to £150 million (€173 million) for the Swedish striker. The sale of Nunez would take Liverpool's income for transfer sales this window to nearly €200 million after the departures of Luis Diaz, Jarell Quansah, Caoimhin Kelleher, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Tyler Morton. Nunez is the latest big name to join Al-Hilal, who shocked Manchester City to reach the quarter-finals of the recent Club World Cup. Coached by former Inter Milan boss Simone Inzaghi, the Saudi club's squad includes Portuguese internationals Ruben Neves and Joao Cancelo, Senegal captain Kalidou Koulibaly and former Fulham striker Aleksandar Mitrovic. Advertisement Lucas Chevalier (file pic). Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Elsewhere, Paris Saint-Germain signed French goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier from Lille for a reported €40 million. 'Paris Saint-Germain are delighted to welcome Lucas Chevalier into our family,' club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said on the club's website, which added that the 23-year-old had signed until 2030. 'I'm a kid who is living his dream,' Chevalier said. Chevalier has been a member of several France squads but has yet to win a senior cap. He shone as Lille reached the last 16 of last season's Champions League, particularly in a 1-0 win at home over Real Madrid and a 3-1 victory away to Atletico Madrid. PSG, meanwhile, won the Champions League, Ligue 1 and French Cup with Italian star Gianluigi Donnarumma in goal, backed up by Russian Matvey Safonov and Spaniard Arnau Tenas, who are still in the squad. Chevalier is the second goalkeeper the club have signed this summer, after Italian-Brazilian teenager Renato Marin. Sources close to the club said PSG sporting director Luis Campos had assured Chevalier he would be the first-choice goalkeeper. Chevalier is expected to be available as early as Wednesday when PSG face Tottenham in the European Super Cup in Udine, Italy. Inigo Martinez. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Barcelona announced that centre-back Inigo Martinez will leave the La Liga champions, as Spanish media reported he would join Saudi side Al-Nassr. The 34-year-old made 71 appearances in all competitions for Barca after joining from Athletic Bilbao in 2023, helping them win the Spanish title last season. Martinez previously spent seven seasons with Real Sociedad after coming through their academy, before a six-year spell at Bilbao. He won 21 caps for Spain between 2013 and 2023. Al Nassr finished third in the Saudi Pro League last term, with Cristiano Ronaldo finishing as top scorer with 25 goals. Martinez's departure will free up space on cash-strapped Barca's wage bill. Mads Hermansen. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Finally, West Ham have signed Leicester goalkeeper Mads Hermansen on a five-year deal, the Premier League club announced. No fee was disclosed, but British media reported that West Ham were paying around £20 million (€23 million) for the 25-year-old Denmark international. Hermansen made 72 appearances for Leicester, winning the Championship title in 2024. He impressed last season as the Foxes were relegated from the Premier League. West Ham were in the hunt for a new goalkeeper after Poland's Lukasz Fabianski left at the end of last season. Hermansen will compete with Alphonse Areola, 32, who played 26 times in the Premier League last season. Casper Ankergren, who worked with Hermansen at Brondby, is West Ham's goalkeeping coach under manager Graham Potter. 'I've heard a lot of great things about the club,' Hermansen told the Hammers' website. 'I played West Ham twice last season and playing at London Stadium was a great experience. It's an amazing stadium with loud, passionate fans. It's what you dream of as a footballer and I can't wait to play in front of 62,500 fans as a West Ham player.' 'The fans can expect me to be brave and bring good energy to help the team in the best way I can. This is a great step in my career.' Potter welcomed Hermasen to east London: 'Mads has proved his quality at Leicester City with two impressive campaigns on a personal level over the last couple of years and the exciting thing is that we feel his best years are still ahead of him.'

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