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Share Price: 55.64
Bid: 55.60
Ask: 55.62
Change: 0.90 (1.64%)
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Open: 54.66
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UPDATE 1-Bank of England plans to limit future property booms

Mon, 14th Jan 2013 14:26

* BoE says to target rapid growth in mortgages or loans * Slow lending market suggests any action a long way off * Mortgage industry reacts cautiously to announcement By Huw Jones and David Milliken LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) - British banks offering large homeloans that risk fuelling a future housing boom will have to holdextra capital to keep the financial system safe, the Bank ofEngland said on Monday. Britain's weak economy makes a credit boom look a distantprospect for now, but the central bank and the country'slawmakers are already putting in place new rules to stop lendingdestabilising the economy in future. Prior to the crash, many British lenders offered mortgagescovering almost all the value of the property, while in somecases borrowers were not required to provide evidence of theirability to replay the loans. These practices catered for an almost obsessive demand byBritons to own their own homes. The FPC stopped short of asking for powers to directlyregulate how much of a deposit home buyers should put down,saying more debate was needed on this politically sensitivestep. Starting in April, the central bank's Financial PolicyCommittee (FPC) will get broad powers to regulate how muchcredit is flowing into the economy and to clamp down onpotentially destabilising hotspots in sectors such as property. On Monday the FPC said more about how these powers wouldwork in practice, and what warning signs it would look forbefore it orders banks to top up capital buffers so that theyhave enough reserves to mop up losses on soured loans in future. The tougher rules might slow growth during a future creditexpansion, the FPC said, but it insisted they would bringlong-term benefits by reducing the chance of another financialcrisis which could require taxpayers to shore up banks. Britain's economy shrank more than 6 percent in a 2008-09financial crisis and has yet to make up the lost ground, whileits national debt has ballooned by tens of billions of pounds asa result of the cost of bank bailouts and a shrunken economy. "If these tools are successful in reducing the likelihoodand severity of financial crises, their use is likely to boostthe expected level of UK GDP," the Bank of England said. "Thebest available studies point... towards only a modest negativeimpact on near-term growth if (capital rules) are tightened." The impact on growth would be lessened by the fact thattighter credit conditions would bear down on inflation, allowingthe BoE's Monetary Policy Committee to keep interest rates lowerthan they would be otherwise, the FPC said. Britain's Council of Mortgage Lenders, a trade body forfirms offering home loans, reacted cautiously to theannouncement and said it would examine the plans to make surethey did not create any inadvertent barriers to home purchase. REGULATORY SHAKE-UP The FPC is part of a wider shake-up of Britain's financialsupervisory system which is being formally launched in April,when the committee's power to require banks to hold extracapital to cover specific sectors like property takes effect. The power to force banks to top up their capital because oftoo much credit in general will not be available until a newEuropean Union law on bank capital requirements comes intoforce. Negotiations on the law point to a 2014 start. It may be some time before the FPC feels a need to tightenrules, however. Current mortgage approval levels are far below those seenbefore the financial crisis unfolded in 2007-2008, and in Augustthe BoE launched a Funding for Lending Scheme aimed at boostinglending to home-buyers and businesses. Nonetheless, property booms and busts have been behind manyof Britain's economic downturns in past decades, andpolicymakers have warned that it would be politically untenablefor Britons to have to bail out their banks again. The FPC set it would keep tabs on ratios of house prices andcommercial property prices to rents, how large a deposit newborrowers needed as well as broader measures of how rapidlybanks were increasing credit to other areas such as derivatives. However Mat Oakley, director of commercial research atproperty broker Savills, said the FPC might not spotwarning signs early enough if it looks mostly at indicators likeproperty prices, rents and yields. "It's going in the right direction, though... I don't thinkit will ever be possible to rule out a future property boom,"Oakley said. All banks, building societies and large investment firms whoare based or operate subsidiaries in Britain will come under theFPC's scope, but some foreign bank branches will not be covered. The FPC said it would monitor for "leakages" and recommendgovernment action to close loopholes if needed. But EU law maylimit Britain's ability to act in some cases.
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(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were lower heading into Friday afternoon, as a poor week for equities continued, with investors fretting over the prospect of central banks keeping interest rates higher for longer.

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22 Jun 2023 07:00

UK banks to ramp up data sharing in dirty money crackdown

Lloyds, NatWest among major banks involved in trials -sources

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21 Jun 2023 17:18

London stocks fall after inflation data shock, homebuilders slump

UK's stubborn inflation fails to fall in May

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21 Jun 2023 11:57

UK's Hunt says banks must honour commitments on mortgage help

LONDON, June 21 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said on Wednesday that mortgage lenders had to live up to their commitments to help borrowers struggling with higher interest rates.

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20 Jun 2023 12:28

UK's Hunt to meet lenders to discuss mortgage forbearance

LONDON, June 20 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt on Tuesday said he would meet major lenders later this week to ask them to show forbearance towards households who struggle to pay rising mortgage bills.

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9 Jun 2023 14:02

Broker tips: Hammerson, Lloyds, British Land, Landsec

(Sharecast News) - Barclays upgraded Hammerson on Friday to 'overweight' from 'underweight' and lifted the price target to 30p from 25p.

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9 Jun 2023 09:45

Citi removes Lloyds from 'EMEA Focus List', keeps at 'buy'

(Sharecast News) - Citi removed Lloyds Banking Group from its 'EMEA Focus List' on Friday as it pointed to headwinds in the second quarter.

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9 Jun 2023 09:38

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Stifel thinks B&M shares offer value

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Friday morning and Thursday:

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8 Jun 2023 14:56

Broker tips; NatWest, Lloyds, Rio Tinto

(Sharecast News) - JP Morgan sees better risk reward in NatWest Group relative to Lloyds Banking Group, it said in a note published on Thursday on UK banks.

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8 Jun 2023 13:09

JP Morgan backs NatWest over Lloyds

(Sharecast News) - JP Morgan sees better risk reward in NatWest Group relative to Lloyds Banking Group, in a note published on Thursday on UK banks.

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8 Jun 2023 09:16

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Citi likes Rio Tinto; JPMorgan raises Clarkson

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Thursday morning and Wednesday:

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8 Jun 2023 07:53

LONDON BRIEFING: Wizz Air expects return to profit in financial 2024

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London were set to open flat on Thursday, with market sentiment cautious amid fears that interest rates have further to rise across the globe.

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7 Jun 2023 10:41

UPDATE: Telegraph owners deny business poised for administration

(Alliance News) - The billionaire owners of the Telegraph newspapers have denied the business is on the brink of being put into administration amid reports that talks with lenders over long-standing debts have broken down.

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7 Jun 2023 07:52

LONDON BRIEFING: UK house prices fall; Diageo CEO Ivan Menezes dies

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called to open flat on Wednesday, as Chinese trade data raised concerns about a global economic slowdown.

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7 Jun 2023 06:10

PRESS: Lloyds to launch GBP600 million Telegraph auction - Sky News

(Alliance News) - Lloyds Banking Group PLC will hire bankers within days to launch a GBP600 million auction of the Telegraph newspapers and The Spectator magazine, according to a report by Sky News late Tuesday.

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