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Bank account exclusion 'rethink'

Written By Unknown on 18 September 2012 | 19.59

Banks need to "look again" at financial inclusion after new bankrupts saw the end to a choice of bank accounts, a minister has said.

The new consumer minister, Jo Swinson, said that the Co-op's withdrawal of basic bank accounts for undischarged bankrupts was "disappointing news".

She said the government would continue discussions with the banks.

Barclays is now the only bank to offer a bank account to people in the 12 months after a bankruptcy order.

'Opportunity'

People who have been made bankrupt are generally only allowed to open a basic bank account.

These accounts do not offer overdrafts. Some have a debit card, but only with limited facilities. They do not incur a monthly fee.

On Monday, the Co-op changed its basic Cashminder basic bank account, arguing that all banks should work equally to offer help to those who have been financially excluded.

"The withdrawal of a basic bank account for undischarged bankrupts is disappointing news. Removing options, where there is already limited choice, will only harm those needing access to basic banking services," said Ms Swinson.

"This should be an opportunity for banks to look again at this issue and work with government to make some real progress."

The British Bankers' Association, which represents the UK's major banks, said that banks faced other difficulties if they decided to take on bankrupt customers.

"Banks who accept bankrupt customers open themselves to potential legal challenges from their customer's creditors, who could have a legal claim to money passing through the account," said a BBA spokesman.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19637063#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Two-speed housing market persists

House prices continued to accelerate much quicker in London than the rest of the UK, latest figures show.

UK property prices rose by 2% in the year to the end of July - lower than the rate of inflation - according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

However, prices increased by 5.7% in London over the same period, the figures show.

There were price falls in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Prices dropped by 1.1% over the year in Scotland, by 0.2% in Wales and by 10.9% in Northern Ireland, the ONS statistics show.

In England, property prices grew by 2.4%, although this was driven by the price rises seen in London.

"Equity rich and cash buyers remain the key players in today's housing market, with lending levels still historically subdued - and this is focusing the main price growth in London," said Peter Rollings, chief executive of estate agent Marsh and Parsons.

In the month from June to July, prices were unchanged in the UK as a whole, the ONS said.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19635608#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Spanish bank bad debts at record


The value of bad debts held by Spain's banks in July rose to 169.3bn euros ($221bn; £136bn), according to latest figures from the central bank.

The Bank of Spain said 9.9% of banks' total loans were in arrears, up from 9.4% a month before.
It was the highest bad loan ratio since the central bank began compiling the data in 1962.

Despite the news, Spain raised 4.6bn euros in 12- and 18-month loans on the bond markets on Tuesday.
That helped 10-year Spanish yields ease back from Monday's highs of more than 6%, dipping to 5.97% on Tuesday.

Spanish banks' bad debts have risen steadily since the property bubble burst four years ago and the country fell into recession.

Almost a quarter of Spaniards are now out of work, and many analysts believe Spain is inching closer towards seeking a full financial bailout.

The results of a final stress test on Spain's banks are due to be published on 28 September, and will provide a basis for calculations as to which banks should receive European Union funds and how much they should get.
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Lawyers face tax dodging action

Tax inspectors are to target the legal profession among others during their latest trawl for suspected tax dodging.

Solicitors and barristers in London will be examined for a suspected shortfall in tax payments of £3m, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) said.

Other sectors to be investigated include motor traders in Scotland and hair and beauty specialists in the North East of England.

HMRC investigators will visit traders and inspect their books.

"These taskforces bring together specialists from across HMRC to find people who are not paying what they should," said Mike Eland, of HMRC.

"If you have paid all your taxes you have nothing to worry about. But for those deliberately evading tax, be warned that HMRC is coming after you."

Collection target

The UK tax authority has previously launched 30 "taskforces" to make rapid inspections of various trades and professions.

These have included the rag trade - involved in the import, wholesale, marketing and sale of clothing - and the motor trade, as well as indoor and outdoor markets. Restaurants and scrap metal firms have also been put under the microscope.

HMRC said that it expected to collect £50m in unpaid tax owing to the work of existing units, as part of a wider campaign aimed at tackling tax avoidance, evasion and fraud.

The latest sectors announced to be targeted, as well as lawyers, are:

  • Grocery and retail in South and North Wales, the North West of England and the South West of England - expected to bring in £3.75m
  • Hair and beauty in the North East of England - expected to yield £3.75m
  • Restaurants in the South East of England and the Solent - expected to discover £2.5m
  • The motor trade in Scotland - expected to bring in £3m

"We have made it clear that we will not tolerate tax evasion and we are determined to crack down on the minority who choose to break the rules," said the Exchequer Secretary David Gauke.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19635051#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Digital book sales soar in the UK

A "huge increase" in the value of digital book sales in the UK has been announced by trade organisation the Publishers Association.

The value of digital fiction sales in the first half of 2012 was up 188% on the same period in 2011.

Physical book sales saw a drop in value, dipping 0.4% year on year.

Industry experts said that while the figures were healthy, other areas of the industry, such as bookshops, continued to struggle financially.

"Certainly the strong e-book growth has taken the tarnish off the otherwise tricky market," said Philip Jones, editor of The Bookseller.

"It is good news that the market is transitioning and making money from that, but it is moving to a trickier situation where there are fewer booksellers."

The figures show impressive increases across the board in a year where e-book popularity - in particular the likes of Fifty Shades of Grey - hit the headlines for racking up massive sales.

Sales of digital children's books were up 171%, while non-fiction titles increased by 128%.

'Exciting authors and titles'
Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

The latest figures from the Publishers Association make surprisingly positive reading for anyone in the book trade... The general reader is embracing e-books. "

End Quote

The total value of sales of all books - digital and non-digital - were up by 6.1% for the January-June period.

This generated revenue of £1.1bn for the first half of the year, the Publishers Association (PA) said.

"The huge increase in digital sales shows how rapidly readers and publishers are embracing e-book reading," said Richard Mollet, the trade body's chief executive.

"Whether books are enjoyed physically or electronically, publishers will continue to invest in exciting authors and titles.

"They can do this because of the stability provided by the UK's robust and flexible copyright framework.

"This is why The PA is at the forefront of calls to government to ensure that copyright is not eroded and that creators' rights are protected and supported online."

Cheap tablets
Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

There's a good deal of uncertainty about what will happen on Boxing Day 2012"

End Quote Philip Jones The Bookseller

Mr Jones, from The Bookseller, told the BBC that independent bookshops were struggling to keep up with their larger rivals such as Amazon.

Some other shops, such as Waterstones, are aiming to increase sales by entering into tie-up deals with popular e-book manufacturers.

The industry is unsure, Mr Jones said, over where exactly consumer interest will head next.

"What we don't know yet is what will happen when more bookreaders get tablet devices," he said.

"This will be the first Christmas where you get more cheap tablet devices from the likes of Barnes and Noble, Amazon and Kobo.

"There's a good deal of uncertainty about what will happen on Boxing Day 2012 when a few million people open up their tablet and think 'What am I going to buy on it?'."

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-19626076#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Inflation rate falls back to 2.5%

The annual rate of inflation in the UK, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index, fell back to 2.5% in August after a surprise rise to 2.6% in July.

The Retail Prices Index (RPI) inflation measure, which includes housing costs, fell to 2.9% in August, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.

The fall was partly due to smaller rises in furniture and gas prices.

Apart from July's rise, CPI inflation has been falling steadily since peaking at 5.2% in September last year.

The latest figures show that prices were 2.5% higher in August than they were in the same month last year.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19633582#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Benefits inflation link may end

The government is considering ending the automatic annual increase in benefits in line with inflation, sources have told BBC Newsnight.

If implemented, the move would see many benefits frozen for two years, then rising only in line with average pay.

In recent years inflation has risen at a far higher rate than average earnings - Whitehall officials say a switch since 2008/9 would have saved £14bn.

The government needs to find £10bn of extra savings in the welfare budget.

Sources stressed the detail of how to make these cuts had not yet been discussed. They would not be drawn on which policies were being looked at.

Newsnight understands that the new £14bn figure is entering into fractious government debate over how to make a further cut to the welfare budget - something occupying minds at the top of government.

Liberal Democrat resistance

The move, under which millions of claimants' benefits would eventually inch up at the same pace as average earnings, would affect a wide range of working-age benefits including jobseeker's allowance and housing benefit.

Chancellor George Osborne has told the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) it must come up with the extra £10bn reduction to allow cuts to other government departments, due to begin in 2015, to stay at the level they are now, rather than go deeper.

Mr Osborne tried to refashion the link between benefits and inflation last September when inflation came in at an unusually high level - 5.2% - but he was beaten back by an alliance of the Liberal Democrats and the Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith.

Though he was unsuccessful then, the idea has resurfaced. One Whitehall source close to the process said: "A freeze [to benefits] for a couple of years would help us get to the £10bn."

Tory strategists believe they have polling evidence which would put significant numbers in support of an end to so-called benefits uprating.

But the possibility of freezing benefits will anger Liberal Democrat activists as they prepare to gather in Brighton this weekend for their annual conference.

Many in the party believe the coalition should find the further £10bn of cuts through tax rises such as wealth taxes and there should be no further cuts to welfare.

An increasing number believe the welfare budget is already straining to bring in its current £18bn of cuts.

Historically benefits have often risen by less than wages, with inflation not typically as high as in recent years, and it is already falling this year.

Despite this, coalition sources say it is not clear wage growth will recover to its former health for a while, which will require the examination of the relative increase in benefits versus that for wages.

Benefits freeze

One option now being weighed up inside government is the freezing of 90% of benefits - which officials estimate would make savings of £7bn in one year.

We are aware that there is the effect on poverty to be considered but we believe that benefits have risen by so much over the last few years that a freeze for a couple of years would help people deal with the transfer. When you see the savings possible, it is simply mind boggling"

End Quote Whitehall source

However, coalition sources suggest this is likely to be discounted as too harsh, since it would include disability benefits.

Instead, other options are being discussed which coalition sources believe would be "fairer".

Senior figures are proposing a two-step change to the payment of benefits. At first there would be a freeze to a wide range of working-age benefits to last for two years. After that a new link would be introduced between benefit payments and increases in wages.

Officials said they did not want a huge increase in benefits should wages start to climb very sharply, so work was being done on the exact linking mechanism.

The IPPR think tank has estimated that had benefits been linked to earnings, not inflation, over the last few years, jobseeker's allowance would be a weekly £66.81 rather than £71.

Sources said they were mindful of the risk of pushing benefit claimants into poverty, but that there was potential for massive savings.

"Benefits are rising faster than earnings; this does not encourage people to go to work. Benefits were never meant to be a salary replacement," one told the BBC.

"We are aware that there is the effect on poverty to be considered but we believe that benefits have risen by so much over the last few years that a freeze for a couple of years would help people deal with the transfer. When you see the savings possible, it is simply mind-boggling," the informant added.

Sources believe the change would not be implemented quickly, but could be in place by 2014, suggesting it is being eyed as pre-election challenge to Labour and the Lib Dems.

One benefit which will not be affected is the state pension. Pensions are now protected by a "triple lock" which means they will go up annually by either inflation, earnings, or 2.5%, whichever is higher.

Having introduced this measure, the coalition will not touch it. But all other benefits are not protected in this way.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-19629997#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Debenhams sales rise bucks market

Department store Debenhams has reported a rise in sales despite what it calls "extremely challenging market conditions".

Like-for-like sales, which strip out the impact of new stores, rose by 3.3% in the six months to 1 September.

The company said it expected full-year pre-tax profits to be ahead of last year.

Rival John Lewis has also performed well in recent months, a time when many retailers across the UK have struggled.

"I am delighted with our strong performance and the progress we have made in 2012," said Debenhams chief executive Michael Sharp.

"To deliver like-for-like sales growth in these extremely challenging market conditions is highly creditable. We do not anticipate a significant change in the economic environment in the near future but we expect to continue to make progress in 2013."

The company said online sales had risen by 40% in the past 12 months, well ahead of the market as a whole. International sales were also growing, it added.

Neil Saunders, managing director of retail analysts Conlumino, said promotions and store refurbishments had helped Debenhams to "buck the market this summer and gain market share across a number of clothing categories".

Debenhams is continuing to expand in emerging markets, and has recently opened two stores in the Philippines and one in Iran.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19632791#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Fortescue shares up on debt deal

Shares in Fortescue Metals Group have surged after the Australian miner secured a $4.5bn (£2.8bn) credit facility to pay down debts and boost liquidity.

The credit facility extends the company's repayment deadline for its debts to November 2015.

Earlier this month Fortescue put its expansion plans on hold and announced job cuts amid slowing demand and falling iron ore prices.

Shares in the miner were up 17%.

Chief executive Nev Power said Fortescue had "moved quickly to ensure its capital structure can withstand prolonged market volatility".

The financing, underwritten by JP Morgan and Credit Suisse, will be used to pay off Fortescue's existing debts, believed to be about $3.6bn, leaving it with some $900m headroom.

The company, which was founded by billionaire Andrew Forrest, also said it was in talks to sell some of its assets.

"Strong interest has been expressed to Fortescue by a range of parties interested in partnering with Fortescue in certain of its assets. Fortescue is currently evaluating these approaches," it said in a statement.

But it added that any such deals would only be pursued if they "clearly add shareholder value".

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19632603#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Blacks knocks JD Sports profits

Sports fashion retailer JD Sports has announced a sharp fall in profits due to losses at its newly-acquired Blacks Leisure chain and the cost of moving warehouses.

Pre-tax profits for the six months to 28 July were £2.88m, down from £20.1m a year earlier. However, revenue was up 26% at £556m.

The retailer had already warned that Blacks would knock profits this year.

The company said it was on course to meet its annual profit targets.

JD said it had incurred an initial loss of £10m on Blacks, which it bought in January this year, due to a lack of stock and high costs.

Costs from acquisitions last year and from moving across to its new warehouse in Kingsway, Rochdale, also knocked profits, it said.

"I stated in April that the recent expansion activity in the group, the relocation of distribution facilities and the resolution of the stock and property issues in the Blacks business would impact results in the short term," said JD executive chairman Peter Cowgill.

"As expected, this has proven to be the case but it does provide the group with a very positive platform for future development."

Mr Cowgill added that the company had increased its presence overseas during the period.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19632789#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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