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MRA Take part in Kipling Ward Fundraiser!

August 31st, 2010

MRA have joined forces with KPIT and K-Tech to raise money for the Kipling Ward at the Conquest Hospital.  The Kipling Ward is our local Childrens’ Ward, covering Hastings, Bexhill, Battle and Rye.  Kipling Ward provides healthcare for young people with serious illnesses such as cancer. We hope to raise enough money to provide Kipling Ward with much needed additional funding for facilities and equipment that these children deserve to make their stay as comfortable as possible.

To do this we have decided to enter a banger rally.  But this is no ordinary rally, we will be covering a 3000 mile round trip in cars costing less than £150.  From Calais to Naples we will be crossing europe in cars that are fit for the scrapyard.  We might make it, or our cars may disintegrate 50 miles into France!

So far we have had some great support, Bartletts Seat in St Leonards have agreed to supply us with a car – a 13 year old Volkswagen no less!  With the car sorted, Mark and Keith (at KPIT and K-Tech respectively) have arranged for A&S Services to provide signwriting for the cars.

Our fundraising page is now live, so visit JustGiving to send your hard earned cash to charity.

Just Giving

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Budget Update – The Media reactions

June 24th, 2010

The Emergency Budget was always giong to cause a media frenzy, and the newspapers didnt disappoint.  In this blog post we aim to take the reactions of various news site from across the marketplace and consolidate them into one place!  The Telegraph, Times, Guardian and Daily Mail all followed their natural style of reporting, leading to some interesting viewpoints on the effectiveness of the budget.

The Telegraphs ‘Key Points’ centre around a budget that they call “exceptionally rich in measures, policies, changes in tone, figures and analysis,”.  Their Key points were:

  • VAT to go up to 20pc from 17.5pc
  • Capital gains tax for higher-rate taxpayers rises to 28pc
  • Child benefit to be frozen for next three years
  • Two-year pay freeze for public sector workers
  • Basic state pension linked to earnings once again, from April next year
  • No new tax increases on alcohol, tobacco or fuel

They also offer a budget calculator.

The Times called the budget the ‘Axe and Tax Pact”.  They offer an at-a-glance guide, where they describe give each point a number of axes to show the extent of the change.  The axes tell the story of pain: one is ouch, five is excruciating.

Their headlines follow the theme with “‘VAT rise will hit jobs and inflation” and “Stealth switch will rob benefits” among them.

They offer a Q&A on how the budget might affect you.

The Guardian lead with ‘Budget 2010: Pain now, more pain later in Osborne’s austerity budget’, while the Daily Mail headline reads ‘Middle classes WILL suffer most: They’ll be hit twice as hard as wealthy, despite Osborne’s claim that we’ll all share the pain’.

But what does this all mean?  With help from Scottish Widows we’ve compiled a short synopsis of the main points from this weeks emergency budget.

VAT

  • will rise to 20% from 04.01.2011

Income Tax

  • The basic personal allowance will increase to £7475 from 06.04.2011.
  • The basic rate limit will decrease by £2500 based on current estimates of the RPI (Retail Price Index) – exact figures to be announced in September 2010
  • The long term objective is for the basic personal allowance to reach £10,000

Capital Gains Tax

  • A new rate of 28% for individuals who’s gains and income exceed the basic rate limit.  This applies as of 23.06.2011

ISA’s

  • From 06.04.2011, ISA contribution limits will rise annually by RPI

Child Trust Funds

  • The Government plans to phase out Child Trust Funds

State Pension

  • From 06.04.2011 the basic state pension will increase by the higher of RPI, CPI or 2.5%

Tax Credits

  • From 06.04.2011 Child Tax Credit and Working Tax Credit will increase by CPI rather than RPI
  • From 06.04.2011 the Baby element of the Child Tax Credit will be removed.

Corporation Tax

  • The main rate of coporation tax will decrease by 1 percentage point per year for the next 4 years.  (down to 24%)
  • The starting rate of corporation tax will drop by 1 percentage point as of 06.04.2011

National Insurance

  • There will be an exemption from NI contributions for business start ups in certain areas of the country.

Stamp Duty

  • There will be an additional 5% rate of stamp duty for properties worth more than £1 million.
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BP oil spill: how are my finances affected?

June 15th, 2010

It is virtually impossible to avoid the news at the moment of the BP oil spill.  Much has been made of it on both sides of the Atlantic, with political figures getting increasingly involved in the situation.  But what does it mean to you?  The Telegraph published a question and answer session online recently that looks to answer a few qusestions on how your finances may be affected.

Q. I’ve read that BP is in trouble. What exactly is happening?

A. BP has been battling for more than 40 days to contain an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It began with an explosion on a drilling rig, and the company has failed to cap the leak completely despite spending over a billion pounds on the clean-up. The American government has waded in to the issue, and shares in the company have plunged on fears that Barack Obama may force the company not to pay a dividend.

Q. Why should it matter to me?

A. BP was, until this crisis, Britain’s biggest company. It made up 7pc of the FTSE All Share Index and paid out around 15pc of all the dividend income in Britain. Now the spill has wiped billions of pounds off the company’s value, which affects almost everyone in Britain with equity investments.

Q. I don’t have shares in BP, so why should that affect my money?

A. Pension funds, investment funds and even your child’s trust fund probably have some exposure to the company. Equity income funds – some of the most popular funds in the UK – tend to hold BP shares because the company is such a good dividend payer. You may well be exposed to BP without even knowing it.

Q. I have a pension through my employer. Will it be invested in BP shares?

A. Probably. Adrian Lowcock of financial information group Bestinvest has calculated that most managed funds have between 0.6pc and 1.2pc of their investments in BP. “It’s not great, but it’s not critical,” he said.

If you have a final salary pension scheme, the fall in BP shares should not affect you, as the pension you get should be guaranteed unless the company goes bankrupt. However, if you have a defined contribution scheme, the crisis will affect the value of your pension pot.

Your company pension probably invests in a tracker fund. Three-quarters of funds in money purchase pension schemes are invested in trackers, totalling £8.2bn, according to PensionDCisions, the pensions analyst. If your fund tracks the FTSE 100, BP makes up around 6pc of it, which is a little worrying.

Remember that BP is only part of your company’s holding, and that pensions are long-term investments, however.

Ian Naismith of Scottish Widows said there was “no need to panic”.

“Any fall in BP’s share price or dividend will affect the value of pension arrangements because its size means that most pension funds will hold a large number of shares,” he said. “As pensions are a long-term investment, the impact is likely to be relatively small, though, assuming that efforts to contain the oil leak are successful.”

Q. I’m just about to retire, though. What happens if I don’t have time to wait for the share price to recover?

A. Most company pensions include something called ‘lifestyling’, which means that as you get older your money is moved out of equities into perceived ‘low risk’ investments such as corporate bonds and sovereign debt.

So if you are approaching pension age now, your pension probably contains a lower proportion of BP shares than most. The fall may be more of a problem if your investments are just now undergoing the lifestyling process. “The problem is that lifestyling can move you out of something at just the wrong time,” said Laith Khalaf of financial advisers Hargreaves Lansdown.

Q. I am already retired – do BP’s problems affect my pension.

A. Not if you are drawing a state pension, or you have purchased an annuity with your pension pot from your private pension. If you have continued to leave your pension invested then you could have some exposure to BP.

Q. I have been putting my stocks and shares Isa allowance into funds that track the FTSE – will they hold BP?

A. Yes. Before the oil spill, funds tracking the FTSE 100 would have had around 8pc of their holdings in BP, and will now have nearer 6pc.

Q. I have put my money into some investment funds. How can I check whether they hold BP?

A. The Fund Factsheet, available from your fund manager, and usually online, should tell you what the company’s biggest holdings are. Most UK equity income funds hold BP, with the notable exception of Neil Woodford’s popular Invesco Perpetual Income Funds. The largest holder was S&W Munro’s fund, which had nearly 9pc of its money in BP.

Q. I own BP shares. What will happen to the income I am receiving from them?

A. At the moment, BP has not said it will not pay its dividend, but President Obama has said that the company should not pay it, in order to pay for the clean-up operation. Richard Hunter of Hargreaves Lansdown said he believed that the company could afford the clean-up and still pay its dividend, but that it might cut it because of political pressure.

“Even the most bearish estimates on the cost of the clean-up are between $5bn and $10bn and BP is well-placed to handle that,” he said. He suggested that the company may pass its dividend for one or two quarters but then make up for it with higher dividends later.

Q. Should I sell or buy BP now?

A. If you sell them now, stockbrokers say you will simply lock in the losses with no possibility of recovery. Certainly, many private investors see this as a buying opportunity. Paul Inkster of Barclays Stockbrokers said investments in BP had soared. “So far this week, BP has accounted for 14pc of total stock purchases,” he said.

Source – Telegraph 10.06.10

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Are we in for a Double-dip?

May 27th, 2010

The The Telegraph reported on growing concerns that we could be facing a ‘double-dip’ yesterday.

The Telegraph said;

The global credit system is flashing the most serious warning signals in almost a year on triple fears of a Spanish banking crisis, escalating political risk in Asia, and a second leg to the US housing slump.

Flight to safety drove yields on 10-year German Bunds to 2.56pc, below the levels touched in the depths of the Great Depression. The spreads over peripheral European debt rose sharply again, jumping to 137 basis points for Italy, 157 for Spain and 220 for Ireland.

The strains in Europe’s sovereign debt markets are nearing levels that forced EU leaders to launch their “shock and awe” rescue package. “If a $1 trillion (£700bn) bail-out did not finally turn sentiment, I struggle to see what can,” said Tim Ash, an economist at RBS.

Dollar Libor rates gauging stress within the interbank lending market have jumped to a 10-month high of 0.5363pc, with credit contagion spreading to every area. The iTraxx Senior financials index – banks’ “fear gauge” – rose 20 basis points on Tuesday to 184. “It turns out we weren’t seeing the light at the end of the tunnel after all, but a train with a big light on it coming towards us of double-dip,” said Dr Suki Mann, at Societe Generale.

While the Libor rate is still far below peaks reached during the Lehman crisis, the pattern has ominous echoes of credit market strains before the two big “pulses” of the credit crisis in August 2007 and September 2008. In each case a breakdown of trust in the interbank market was a harbinger of violent moves in equities and the real economy weeks later.

RBS’s credit team said Libor strains were worse than they looked since most banks in Europe were paying much higher spreads, especially in Spain. The “implied” forward spreads were nearer 1.1pc.

The damage has spilt over to corporate bonds, effectively shutting the market for new issues. May will be the worst single month for debt issues since December 1999, with seven deals being cancelled in recent days. Volume has collapsed to $47bn from $183bn in April, according to Bloomberg.

Mr Ash said North Korea’s decision to cut all ties with the South and abrogate its non-aggression pact – coming days after Thailand sent tanks into Bangkok to crush the Red Shirts – has played into the chemistry of angst gripping markets, adding it was a reminder that Asia has “political/social stress points”. This risk was overlooked during the honeymoon phase of emerging markets when investors were intoxicated by the China story.

Fears that America may slip back into a double-dip recession are returning. Larry Summers, the White House economic tsar, has called for a second stimulus package to keep the recovery on track, warning that the US economy is still in a “very deep valley”.

The S&P Case-Shiller index of home prices is declining again as incentives for homebuyers expire and the slow-burn effect of rising delinquencies exacts its toll. Prices fell 3.2pc in the first quarter of this year. “There are signs of some renewed weakening in home prices”, said David Blitzer from S&P.

The epicentre of the credit crisis is moving to Spain where the seizure by the central bank of CajaSur over the weekend has torn away the veil on credit damage from Spain’s property crash.

Bank stocks fell 6pc in Madrid in early trading on Tuesday on fears that funding will dry up for the cajas – or the savings banks – setting off a broader credit crunch. The cajas hold the lion’s share of loans to property companies and developers, estimated at €445bn (£380bn) or 45pc of GDP by Goldman Sachs.

Spanish construction reached 17pc of GDP at the height of the bubble as real interest rates of minus 2pc set by the European Central Bank for German needs played havoc with the Spanish economy. This was almost double the level in the US during the sub-prime booms. The result is an overhang of unsold Spanish properties equal to four years’ demand.

Markets have been rattled by reports in the German media that the Greek rescue deal contains two secret clauses. The package will be “immediately and irrevocably cancelled” if it is found to breach the EU Treaty’s “no bail-out” clause, either in a ruling by the European court or the constitutional courts of any eurozone state. While such an event is unlikely, it is not impossible. There are two cases already pending at Germany’s top court in Karlsruhe, perhaps Europe’s most “eurosceptic” tribunal.

The second clause said that if any country finds it cannot raise funding for the rescue at interest rates below the 5pc charge agreed for Greece, it may opt out of the bail-out. BNP Paribas said this would escalate quickly into a systemic crisis if Spain were in such a position, because the other countries cannot carry an ever-rising burden. The bank warned the euro project itself may start to disintegrate rapidly if these rescue provisions are ever seriously put to the test.

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