PRESS DIGEST - Financial Times - Feb 8
The Financial Times
MINISTER WARNS ON NON-DOMS TAX PURGE
Trade and Investment Minister Digby Jones has warned that plans for a tax crackdown on non-domiciled foreigners living in the UK threaten London's role as a world finance centre. The former CBI director-general broke ranks with the official government line in an interview with the Financial Times. He said the tax changes made it harder for him to sell Britain as a destination for skilled foreign workers and inward investment. Jones said he was not consulted on the change and that a lot of people from the City had told him it was a serious issue for the financial services industry.
INVESTORS EXPECT INTEREST RATE FALL TO 4.5 PERCENT BY END OF YEAR
Further to the quarter-point rate cut announced by the Bank of England on Thursday, bringing interest rates down to 5.25 percent, investors are predicting the rates to fall further to 4.5 percent by the end of 2008. While warning of the potential need to keep rates high to counter possible sharp increases in inflation, the bank explained the latest reduction in interest rates by referring to the deteriorating outlook for global growth and the credit crunch. BNP Paribas's Alan Clarke said: "For now the bank is trapped between plunging growth prospects and sharply rising inflation."
NEW HOMEBUYERS MAY NOT REAP BENEFIT
Despite the speed with which banks and building societies moved to pass on the reduction in interest rates to existing mortgage borrowers, brokers expressed doubt as to whether the reductions would benefit new home buyers, with new fixed-rate deals staying above the 5.25 percent base rate. "In the current climate, where there is a chronic lack of supply of mortgage funding, there is a very real danger that new borrowers will see much less of a cut than many of them were hoping for," said Jonathan Cornell, managing director of Hamptons. While expecting fixed rate deals not to experience a reduction, Julia Harris of Moneyfacts.co.uk comparison site said: "Lenders are becoming more proactive about moving existing borrowers on to new cheap deals rather than revert to the standard variable rate."
LENDERS RESPOND TO EARLY WARNINGS OF BAD DEBT
As a confirmation of the increasing vigilance of banks and credit card providers against signs of financial difficulties experienced by customers, Egg withdrew the credit cards of 161,000 customers the bank considered to be high risk. Egg's move came following a review of its businesses in May 2007. Callcredit, a credit reference agency, monitors the customer accounts of at least 10 credit card providers for any activity that could instigate a change in their capacity to service debt. Continued...





