Tag: U.K

  • Coronavirus: UK stocks dive despite stimulus plans

    UK stocks tumbled on Wednesday as major UK and US stimulus plans failed to quell worries about the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

    The FTSE 100 index of top UK firms dived more than 5%, with aerospace firms, travel companies and housing firms leading the declines.

    The pound meanwhile hit a six-month low against the dollar to trade at $1.1966.

    It came despite the US on Tuesday outlining a $1tn (£830bn) package to support the world’s biggest economy.

    UK chancellor Rishi Sunak also revealed a £350bn stimulus package for UK firms, including £330bn of business loan guarantees.

    It also included aid to cover a business rates holiday and grants for retailers and pubs. Help for airlines is also being considered.

    Mr Sunak told a news conference: “Never in peacetime have we faced an economic fight like this one.”

    US stock market futures were also indicating a weaker open for Wall Street on Wednesday, despite the main indexes rebounding more than 5% on Tuesday.

    The stimulus measures taken globally also failed to buoy Asian stocks. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 ended Wednesday 1.7% lower, the Hang Seng in Hong Kong fell by 3.3%, and China’s Shanghai Composite lost 1.8%.

    On Tuesday, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said he supports sending money directly to Americans as part of a $1tn stimulus plan aimed at averting an economic crisis caused by the virus.

    The overall aid package would be larger than the US response to the 2008 financial crisis, amounting to nearly a quarter of what the US federal government spent last year.

    In Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is reportedly forming a panel of key economic ministers and Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda to discuss measures to prop up the economy.

    The move, which would bring Japan in line with other nations, is designed at averting an economic crisis in the country, which some fear could tip into recession.

    Big shifts in the stock market are often in the news, whether they are booms or falls owing to coronavirus or the financial crisis.

    As companies grow, they issue shares. The largest companies in the UK have shares which are bought and sold on the London Stock Exchange.

    Their collective performance is often quoted amid a blizzard of numbers that may feel confusing and irrelevant. Rarely does anyone mention during a coffee with friends that the FTSE 100 has dropped well below 7,000 points.

    But there are good reasons why this performance affects your life and finances.

    Many people’s initial reaction to “the markets” is that they are not directly affected, because they do not invest money.

    Yet there are millions of people with a pension – either private or through work – who will see their savings (in what is known as a defined contribution pension) invested by pension schemes. The value of their savings pot is influenced by the performance of these investments.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mauritius confirms first three coronavirus cases

    Mauritius has confirmed its first three cases of coronavirus.

    Two of the three cases involve cruise ship workers aged 21 and 25, while the third is a traveller from the UK aged 59.

    Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said the three have been placed in isolation.

    He said the government was tracing all the people the traveller was in contact with.

    The government has closed all schools and borders points of the Indian Ocean island nation. It has also banned commercial flights and tourists for the next two weeks beginning Thursday.

    Source: bbc.com

  • US restricting all travel from Europe over coronavirus

    The U.S. will restrict all travel from Europe with the exception of the U.K. starting later this week in an effort to curtail the spread of the new coronavirus, President Donald Trump announced Wednesday evening.

    Addressing the nation from the Oval Office, Trump said the restrictions, which will go into effect on Friday, “will be adjusted subject to conditions on the ground,” and exemptions would be made for U.S. nationals “who have undergone appropriate screenings.”

    “We made a life-saving move with early action on China. Now we must take the same action with Europe. We will not delay,” he said.

    The announcement comes on the same day the World Health Organization officially termed the spread of COVID-19 a global pandemic and as the U.S. capital declared a state of emergency.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • UK interest rates cut in emergency move

    The Bank of England has announced an emergency cut in interest rates to shore up the economy amid the coronavirus outbreak.

    Policymakers reduced rates from 0.75% to 0.25%, taking borrowing costs back down to the lowest level in history.

    The Bank said it would also free up billions of pounds of extra lending power to help banks support firms.

    It comes as the chancellor is expected to announce further measures to support growth and jobs in the Budget later.

    ‘Maximum Impact’

    Mark Carney, the outgoing governor of the Bank of England, said policymakers had seen a “sharp fall in trading conditions”, including spending on non-essential goods.

    “The Bank of England’s role is to help UK businesses and households manage through an economic shock that could prove large and sharp, but should be temporary,” he said.

    He said the Bank’s co-ordinated action on Budget day was designed to have “maximum impact”.

    Mr Carney stressed that the economic damage caused by the coronavirus remained unclear. However, he suggested that the UK economy could shrink in the coming months.

    He said early evidence from China suggested that the world’s second-largest economy was on course to contract in the first quarter.

    Other nations were experiencing a “similar shift”, he said.

    “I would emphasize the direction is clear, though the orders of magnitude are still to be determined.”

    While the Bank’s last emergency rate cut was in October 2008, Mr Carney said the virus was unlikely to inflict the damage seen during the financial crisis.

    “There is no reason for it to be as bad as 2008 if we act as we have, and if there is that targeted support,” he said.
    Virus spread

    The emergency rate cut comes as a sixth person who died from the virus in the UK, which has a total of 382 cases.

    The latest person to die was a man in his early 80s who had underlying health conditions.

    Meanwhile, Manchester City’s Premier League match against Arsenal on Wednesday has been postponed as “a precautionary measure” because of the outbreak.

    A number of Arsenal players are in self-isolation after coming into contact with Olympiakos owner Evangelos Marinakis, who tested positive for the virus..

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak has pledged to help the UK battle the impact of the coronavirus, saying the NHS will get “whatever resources it needs” during the crisis, while he is also expected to unveil measures to boost the self-employed and small businesses who are left out of pocket.

    Meanwhile, NHS England said it was scaling up its capacity for testing people for the infection, with the number of cases set to rise.

    How will the rate cut affect your finances?

    The sudden cut in the Bank rate will immediately reduce the mortgage bill of a minority of homeowners. Others will have to wait to see how their home loan provider reacts at a time when mortgage rates are already at very low levels.

    Little will change for savers, who have had to endure years of low returns anyway. They may take heart from the fact this is a temporary measure from the Bank.

    Most people are, of course, savers and borrowers.

    As well as concern over their physical health from coronavirus, their financial health will primarily depend on their job.

    This emergency action is clearly designed to help protect businesses, particularly small and medium-sized ones, and in turn the employment of millions of people.

    Extra lending

    The interest rate cut was part of a package of measures introduced by the Bank to support the economy.

    It also announced a new £100bn scheme to help ensure households and businesses – particularly small and medium-sized firms – benefit from the reduction in interest rates.

    The Bank of England said other changes would free up an additional £190bn for banks to lend.

    It said the package of measures would “help UK businesses and households bridge across the economic disruption that is likely to be associated with Covid-19”.

    The Bank said it expected UK economic activity to “weaken materially” over the coming months, but it was ready to take “all further necessary steps to support the UK economy”.

    “These measures will help to keep firms in business and people in jobs and help prevent a temporary disruption from causing longer-lasting economic harm.”

    Initially, the pound fell against both the euro and the dollar in reaction to the rate cut, but then rebounded.

    Share markets reacted positively, with the FTSE 100 rising more than 2% in early trading.

    Separate data published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed the UK economy stagnated in the three months to January.

    The dramatic emergency rate cut will dominate the headlines, but it is the overall package of measures which the departing Bank of England governor Mark Carney will stress as a support for the economy in this extraordinary coronavirus crisis.

    The key target of this move is the cash flow of small and medium-sized businesses, which could be hit by a combination of slumping demand, trade difficulties and staff absence.

    The Bank and Treasury agree that this will be a temporary shock. The aim, therefore, is to prevent unnecessary permanent economic scars. Alongside Budget measures, it is designed as a bridge beyond the virus.

    So the Bank’s base rate is slashed to its record low, first reached in the aftermath of the EU referendum. But as important is the new TFSME – the “Term Funding scheme with additional incentives for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises”.

    This proved rather successful after the EU referendum, and the aim is to get the banks to pass on the rate cut in full to businesses, particularly small and medium-sized firms, which face the greatest pressure to cut staff or hours in a crisis.

    Cutting the amount of money that banks are required to squirrel away when the sun is shining so they can spend the cash during this sort of rainy day should provide the firepower for banks to boost lending well above current lending levels.

    To be clear, coronavirus is unique and highly unpredictable. There is a fundamental problem of people and businesses not being able to function because of the measures to contain the virus. The message from the Bank is that the banking system is fully padded up to help businesses get through this.

    Source: bbc.com

  • US, UK troops among 3 dead in rocket attack in Iraq – US official

    Multiple rockets hit an Iraqi base housing United States and coalition troops on Wednesday, and an assessment of the incident is under way, said a senior official from the administration of US President Donald Trump.

    “We are closely following the situation at Camp Taji,” the official said. “We are not going to get ahead of the assessment and investigation, which are ongoing.”

    Earlier US media, citing official sources, said that one US soldier and one British soldier were among the three dead. They also said an US contractor was also killed. Those reports have not been confirmed.

    The rocket attack was the 22nd against US military interests in the country since late October, an Iraqi military commander said.

    US Army Colonel Myles Caggins, a US military spokesman in Iraq, said on Twitter more than 15 small rockets hit the base but provided no further details.

    One American official, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity, said more information would be given later in an official announcement.

    Camp Taji, located just north of Baghdad, has been used as a training base for a number of years. There are as many as 6,000 US troops in Iraq, training and advising Iraqi forces and conducting counterterrorism missions.

    Previous rocket attacks targeting US soldiers, diplomats and facilities in Iraq killed one US contractor and an Iraqi soldier. None of the attacks has been claimed, but Washington accuses pro-Iran factions of being responsible.

    Two days after the death of an American in rockets fired on an Iraqi military base in Kirkuk at the end of last year, the US army hit five bases in Iraq and Syria used by the pro-Iran armed faction Kataib Hezbollah.

    Kataib Hezbollah was designated a “foreign terrorist organization” by the US Department of State in 2009.

    Tensions then rose further between foes Washington and Tehran after a US drone strike killed the powerful Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani and an Iraqi paramilitary commander in Baghdad on January 3.

    The assassination brought the two countries to the brink of war.

    The US leads an international coalition – comprised of dozens of countries and thousands of soldiers – formed in Iraq in 2014 to confront the armed group ISIL (ISIS).

    While ISIL has lost the vast territory it once held in Iraq and Syria, sleeper cells remain capable of carrying out attacks.

    The Iraqi parliament voted to expel all foreign soldiers from the country in the wake of the killing of Soleimani, a decision that has still not been acted on by the government.

    The outgoing government, which resigned in December in the face of mass protests, has yet to be replaced because of a lack of agreement in parliament – one of the most divided in Iraq’s recent history.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • UK health minister contracts novel coronavirus

    The U.K.’s health minister confirmed Tuesday that she has contracted the novel coronavirus.

    “I can confirm I have tested positive for the coronavirus. As soon as I was informed, I took all the advised precautions and have been self-isolating at home,” Nadine Dorries said in a statement.

    Dorries, 62, has served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social Care since 2019.

    “Really sorry to hear Nadine has tested positive for coronavirus. She has done the right thing by self-isolating at home. We all wish her well as she recovers,” Secretary of State for Health Matt Hancock said on Twitter.

    Dorries was at a recent reception attended by Prime Minister Boris Johnson and was together with hundreds of parliamentarians in parliament last week.

    The number of cases of the coronavirus in the U.K. has risen to 373, while the country has confirmed its sixth death.

    The novel coronavirus, officially known also COVID-19, was first detected last December in Wuhan, China.

    The global death toll from the virus is now over 4,260, with more than 118,100 confirmed cases, according to Johns Hopkins University in the U.S.

    The virus has since spread to six continents and more than 100 countries.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr