Browsing Posts tagged UK Economy

Economic Recovery in the UK beggining the end of this year?

According to a recent article in the Financial Times the UK economy should begin to recover by the end of this year. The huge monetary and fiscal provisions, combined with sharp falls in commodity prices, will help boost household and business spending, a senior Bank of England official predicted.

Spencer Dale, chief economist at the Bank and a member of its rate-setting monetary policy committee, made the remarks at a meeting of the Association of British Insurers, a group whose members have been hit by the sharp fall in stock markets and the crunch in credit markets.

“As we go through 2009, I believe it is most likely that the pace at which output is contracting will ease and that we will see some signs of recovery by around the turn of this year,” Mr Dale told the group.

He went on to say that the causes of the current recession were different from previous recessions and that its actual path was not known. “There is huge uncertainty about the precise form and timing of the recovery and so this central path should be treated with a healthy degree of scepticism.”

Mr Dale said the Bank would keep in place its unconventional exercise of monetary policy (known as quantitative easing) until it became apparent that it had succeeded in bringing inflation back to its annual 2 per cent medium-term target.

Inflation figures for the UK economy are out and inflation is currently per the CPI index (Consumer Price Index) at 3.1% more than one point above the governments target of Inflation at 2.0%. This is what has helped the pound rise against the dollar to its 15 year high of $2 to £1…however the exchange rate was trading yesterday within half a cent of a thirty year high!

However this growth in the UK economy makes a further exchange rate rise in the Bank of England Base rate more than just likely…

What does this mean for Florida property and mortgages? well…quite simply now is the time to buy, this could be the last good opportunity to buy or refinance a Florida property. This is coupled with figures released today saying that the current buyers market in the area is looking like it is coming to an end, the number of new builds is up and the number of building permits has increased for the second month in a row.

So, with a good exchange rate, a good fixed rate mortgage and the market at the bottom possibly on the cusp of a good level of capital growth, it looks like now is the best time yet for Brits to buy in Florida.


None of the information contained in this blog/blog post constitutes, nor should be construed as Financial Advice.