The Bank of England held base rate again today – the fourth hold since September.

Rates have almost certainly peaked in this cycle but are stuck at 5.25 per cent, yet mortgage and savings rates have fallen substantially.

On this episode of Lunch Money, Lee Boyce and Simon Lambert look at what the base rate hold means for borrowers and savers.

They discuss whether mortgage and savings rates will keep falling and when the Bank of England may cut.

Hitting a peak: How the Bank of England's base rate rises have levelled off

Hitting a peak: How the Bank of England’s base rate rises have levelled off

A rates decision also arrived last night on the other side of the Atlantic, with the US Federal Reserve also holding rates. But for investors it is less about what the Fed did than what it said.

Victoria Scholar, of interactive investor, explains the Fed decision, the market reaction and what rate expectations mean for investors. 

And finally, it’s the first of the month, so it’s Premium Bonds day – we reveal what we know about the savers who scopped the £1million prizes in February.

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Major rent freeze for tenants across Scotland amid cost of living crisis as Nicola Sturgeon piles pressure on Liz Truss

RENTS and rail fares have been frozen in Scotland to help with…

My mother’s treasured phone number of 70 years has been lost

It was of great sentimental value, but was cut off when she…

Don’t get burnt by a sky-high mobile bill: Our guide to roaming fees

You’ve bought travel insurance with Covid cover, crammed all your belongings into…

Hit the charity shops to find great bargains when they open again next week

FROM tomorrow I can take part in my favourite hobby once again . . .…