Money
Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid
“The last few weeks have been very disruptive as well as unsettling for our colleagues,” said Rightmove chair Andrew Fisher.
The post Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid appeared first on Property Week.
Money
FCA and PRA appoint new FSCS chair
The Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) have appointed Elizabeth Passey as chair of the Financial Services Compensation Scheme’s (FSCS) board.
She succeeds Marshall Bailey, who is stepping down after two terms as FSCS chair, and will take up the role tomorrow (1 October).
Over a 30-year career, Passey has held senior positions with J Stern & Company, Investec Asset Management and Morgan Stanley.
She recently completed two terms as chair of the Rural Payments Agency and as convener of the University of Glasgow.
The appointment was made by the FCA board and the Prudential Regulation Committee (PRC) with the approval of HM Treasury.
The FCA’s senior independent director Richard Lloyd, who was on the selection panel said: “Elizabeth will bring a wealth of experience of financial services, public service and governance to the role and we look forward to working with her.
“I want to thank Marshall for his impressive leadership over the last six years, a period of significant change for the FSCS.”
FSCS embarks on operating model overhaul
Passey added: “I am delighted to be joining the FSCS as its new Chair. The FSCS provides trust in financial services, and this is arguably more important than ever.
“It is vital the organisation continues to provide a high-quality service that gives consumers the confidence to save and invest.
“Marshall and the FSCS’ board have directed the organisation through a significant change to its work, with a steep rise in complex claims over the last six years.
“I’m looking forward to working with the other directors and the executive team to help the FSCS continue its evolution as a compensation scheme, so that it can best protect consumers in the years ahead.”
Bailey said: “I have been proud to serve as chair of the FSCS over the last six and a half years, during which time we have significantly transformed the organisation.
“The levels of consumer protection have been more clearly defined, with the FSCS continuing to play an important role in UK society by providing robust protection for consumers of regulated financial services.
“The incoming chair will bring excellent experience to a group of dedicated executive leaders and board members, and I wish her every success.”
Money
We are Britain’s only full-time nomads traipsing around country in freezing cold tent patched with duct tape & plasters
BRITAIN’S only full-time nomads have told how they traipse around the country in a freezing cold tent patched with duct tape and plasters.
Mod, Tara and their German Shepherd called Dog, live full time in a “tatty” old tent all year round, picking up odd jobs to make money.
In a recent video, shared to their YouTube channel @Log Hoppers, the couple said they’ve been living “undetected” for four months.
To warn them of passers-by, the couple have set up two makeshift doorbells, covering the main in-route zones to their set-up.
Both comprise of meandering knee-high wires with mousetraps attached at the end.
Pull or cut any of the wires and a loud snap sound will be triggered.
Mod said: “Instantly we know when someone’s walked through and the dog will alert us as well.”
He continued: “Just trying to make sure that if people are coming through, we’ve got an early warning sign to jump out and not be caught in our underwear, right?”
Inside the couple’s 3Fulgear tent they have reversible sleeping mats they can flip depending on the temperature.
They also use three-season sleeping bags, ideal for cooler nights.
Plus, all of their belongings fit comfortably in their large hydration rucksacks.
Tara laughed at the amount of holes their tent has accumulated over the years – but thankfully, they have a tarp over the tent top to protect them from the rain.
Although the couple previously worked full-time, they insisted they didn’t want to die in-between four walls.
So, they switched to nomad life 10 years ago.
To afford the nomadic lifestyle, the couple rely on odd jobs, or on occasion, they barter.
One odd job, is fitting insulation in homes, others include carpet laying and tiling.
Plus, Mod trained as a horticulturist which comes in handy.
Tara explained the couples work ethic: “We don’t require much money to live on so the way we fared our business in the first place with odd jobbing is to very much be affordable for clients.”
The only bill the couple need to pay is for their phones.
However, Tara admitted: “When our budget starts to get a little bit tighter we just rely on Wi-Fi.
“It’s easy to find Wi-Fi codes because when you have got money, attend these places like cafes, libraries all these different places get the codes and then you can literally just sit outside when you’ve got nothing at all, hook up and and there you are.”
Tara said there are times when they fear their lifestyle could deter others from buying their services.
She explained: “We were a bit worried that if people found out the way we live that they might tarnish us with a brush that we didn’t really deserve.
“We’re very committed to giving back as much as we can.”
When the couple aren’t working, they explore and forage, unless the weather is shocking, they always keep their 545 YouTube subscribers in the loop.
They hope their channel “sheds light on the idea that you can camp lowkey and it can be comfortable”, without added luxuries.
Money
PRS REIT joins FTSE 250 in ‘significant landmark’ for firm
Company claims to have the UK’s largest build-to-rent portfolio of single-family homes.
The post PRS REIT joins FTSE 250 in ‘significant landmark’ for firm appeared first on Property Week.
Money
Royal London enters the bulk purchase annuity market
Royal London has entered the bulk purchase annuity (BPA) market.
The pensions and investment mutual will focus on working with trustees and financial advisers on BPA transactions of up to £500m.
BPA Solutions director Paul Bowker will lead a team of 40 experts. The team has been involved in hundreds of buy-ins and buyouts from small to multi-billion-pound deals, with experience across a range of bulk annuity providers and consultancies.
This move is the latest stage in the development of Royal London’s BPA proposition, which has included transacting a £250m full scheme buy-in policy with the trustee of the Royal Liver UK Pension Scheme in November 2023.
In July, Royal London transacted with its first external pension scheme, securing a £30m full scheme buy-in.
This was followed by a further £100m transaction with another external pension scheme in September.
Royal London said: “these transactions underscore its readiness for entering the BPA market and supporting trustees.”
Royal London group chief executive officer Barry O’Dwyer said: “With an increasing number of pension schemes looking to meet their de-risking objectives, it’s an important time to be providing a mutual choice.
“Royal London is the only mutual in the BPA market, and we believe that will be a very attractive proposition for many trustees.
“We’re off to a strong start as we continue to focus on establishing a reputation as an insurer of choice for trustees and their advisers.”
Bowker added: “We have invested significantly to build a compelling bulk annuity offering for trustees and their members.
“They will be able to partner with a well-known mutual brand with proven financial strength, in the confidence we only have their members’, and all our customers’ interests, at the core of our long-term decision making.
“We will be building on our strong customer service credentials and delivering our BPA administration in-house to ensure we deliver the highest standards of service.”
Money
Full list of energy freebies including electric blankets and boilers you can get NOW to help slash bills this winter
WINTER is on the way and that means energy bills going up for millions – but there are ways to get help if you’re struggling.
The new price cap is coming into effect from tomorrow, when the average household will start paying £149 more a year for their energy.
And with the colder months drawing in, most households will start using more energy to keep warm too.
But you might not be aware there are a host of freebies on offer to help you tackle your bills. Here is all the help you can get.
Free electric blankets and money-saving gadgets
Octopus Energy is offering customers free electric blankets through its £30million Octopus Assist fund.
The energy firm, which services almost seven million households, is dishing out the money-saving gadgets to the most vulnerable.
Read more on Energy Bills
This means those most likely to receive help are the elderly and those with mobility issues or other medical conditions.
You should contact Octopus to find out if you’re eligible for help.
Ovo Energy is also offering money-saving gadgets to households through a £50million customer support package.
Customers struggling to pay bills can get access to free energy-saving items like electric throws and mattress toppers.
The firms’ package also includes payment holidays for prepayment meter customers and direct financial support.
The package opens tomorrow, October 1, but Ovo’s website is already live for customers to check if they’re eligible for help.
Free boilers
Thousands of households on benefits can get help applying for free and cheap boilers through the Energy Company Obligation (ECO).
Help is offered on a case-by-case basis, but it can mean having a new boiler fitted, or loft or cavity wall insulation put in, often for free.
A number of energy companies are signed up to the scheme:
- British Gas
- E (Gas and Electricity) LTd
- E.ON
- Ecotricity
- EDF
- Octopus Energy
- Outfox the Market
- OVO
- Scottish Power
- Shell Energy
- So Energy (including ESB Energy)
- The Utility Warehouse
- Utilita Energy
You only qualify for the ECO scheme under certain circumstances, for example if you claim certain benefits.
You can find out more about the scheme via Ofgem‘s website.
Energy grants
Several energy firms have grant schemes available to customers struggling to cover their bills.
But eligibility criteria varies depending on the supplier and the amount you can get depends on your financial circumstances.
For example, British Gas customers struggling to pay their energy bills can get grants worth up to £2,000.
Ovo Energy, E.ON, Octopus and Scottish Power all have their own schemes where you can get money towards the cost of bills too.
It’s worth speaking to your supplier to see what help is at hand.
Free solar panels
Some councils offer low-income households money towards making their home greener.
And some offer grants to install solar panels, which could save you around £6,000.
The Sun spoke to pensioner Gareth Hodgson, who applied for tens of thousands of pounds of free home improvements that have nearly halved his bills.
The help you can get from your local council varies depending on several factors including your personal circumstances.
In most areas, homeowners must have a total income of less than £30,000 to get the help.
Your home must have an EPC rating of D, E, F or G for you to be eligible too.
Free energy-efficient showerheads
A number of water companies offer households free water and energy-saving gadgets like regulated shower heads worth £20.
The Energy Saving Trust says switching to a water-efficient shower head can save a family of four on a water meter £195 a year on bills.
This is because less energy is needed to pump, heat and treat the water. The amount you’ll save depends on your circumstances.
To get hold of the money-saving showerheads, you just have to visit the Save Money Save Water website where you have to fill in a short survey about your water usage.
You are then redirected to your water supplier’s website to claim any freebies.
Not all water companies offer the freebies though, including Anglian, Essex and Suffolk, Northumbrian or Thames Water.
That said, you can sometimes get the freebies by heading direct to their websites.
Household Support Fund
The latest round of Household Support Fund is worth £421million and has been shared between councils in England.
They then decide how to distribute that share, although in most cases help is offered to those on a low income or benefits such as Universal Credit.
In any case, you have to apply through your local council, which you can find by using the Government’s council locator tool online.
Some local authorities are handing out energy vouchers while others are making bank transfers.
Councils have until March 31 next year to allocate their share of the latest fund.
Cold weather payment
Cold weather payments are made to hard-up households when there is a seven-day period of sub zero temperatures.
The money is paid by the Department for Work and Pensions and designed to cover extra costs incurred by colder weather.
The scheme runs between November 1 and March 31, although eligible households don’t have to apply as money is paid automatically if you qualify.
However, it’s worth taking note of who qualifies, which is anyone on one of the following benefits:
You may have to meet other criteria too, including:
- Having a disability or be in receipt of pension premium
- Having a child who is disabled
- Receiving child tax credit that includes a disability or severe disability element
- Having a severe or enhanced disability premium
- Being in receipt of a limited capability for work amount
- Having a child under five living with you
You can read more about eligibility on the Government’s website.
Winter heating payment
The winter heating payment replaces the cold weather payment for households in Scotland and is worth £58.75.
To get the payment you must get one of the following benefits during the qualifying week:
- Universal Credit
- Pension Credit
- Income Support
- Income based Jobseeker’s Allowance
- Income Related Employment Support Allowance
- Support for Mortgage Interest
This year’s qualifying week was November 4 to November 10, 2024.
You also have to meet one other specific requirement of your qualifying benefits.
For example, you will receive a payment if you are on income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance or Income Support and have any of the following:
- a disability premium
- a severe disability premium
- a pensioner premium
- the disability element of Child Tax Credit
- a child under five
The major difference between the winter heating payment and cold weather payment is that you receive the £58.75 regardless of the weather.
Warm home discount
Millions of households in England, Wales and Scotland can get £150 deducted off their energy bills through the Warm Home Discount.
This winter the money will be taken off your bill between October and March 2025.
You’ll need to receive one or more of the following benefits to qualify:
Eligible households in England and Wales don’t have to apply for the discount, although some in Scotland do.
Scottish residents should check with their energy supplier directly to see if they qualify for the discount.
Winter Fuel Payment
The Winter Fuel Payment is worth up to £300 every winter and paid to those on certain benefits.
It used to be available to those of state pension age and older, but has now been made means-tested by the Government.
Most of those eligible for the payment are paid automatically and don’t need to apply.
The up to £300 payment is usually made in November or December.
What is the Winter Fuel Payment?
Consumer reporter Sam Walker explains all you need to know about the payment.
The Winter Fuel Payment is an annual tax-free benefit designed to help cover the cost of heating through the colder months.
Most who are eligible receive the payment automatically.
Those who qualify are usually told via a letter sent in October or November each year.
If you do meet the criteria but don’t automatically get the Winter Fuel Payment, you will have to apply on the government’s website.
You’ll qualify for a Winter Fuel Payment this winter if:
- you were born on or before September 23, 1958
- you lived in the UK for at least one day during the week of September 16 to 22, 2024, known as the “qualifying week”
- you receive Pension Credit, Universal Credit, ESA, JSA, Income Support, Child Tax Credit or Working Tax Credit
If you did not live in the UK during the qualifying week, you might still get the payment if both the following apply:
- you live in Switzerland or a EEA country
- you have a “genuine and sufficient” link with the UK social security system, such as having lived or worked in the UK and having a family in the UK
But there are exclusions – you can’t get the payment if you live in Cyprus, France, Gibraltar, Greece, Malta, Portugal or Spain.
This is because the average winter temperature is higher than the warmest region of the UK.
You will also not qualify if you:
- are in hospital getting free treatment for more than a year
- need permission to enter the UK and your granted leave states that you can not claim public funds
- were in prison for the whole “qualifying week”
- lived in a care home for the whole time between 26 June to 24 September 2023, and got Pension Credit, Income Support, income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance or income-related Employment and Support Allowance
Payments are usually made between November and December, with some made up until the end of January the following year.
Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.
Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories
Money
Laurene Powell Jobs bets on AI startups
Laurene Powell Jobs speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2017. (Photo by Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch)
Steve Jennings
A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.
News that Laurene Powell Jobs is investing in a new artificial intelligence “computing device” highlights her growing appetite for AI startups, according to fresh data.
The Emerson Collective, Powell Jobs’ family office, investment company and philanthropy, has invested in at least 11 AI-related startups since 2022, according to data provided exclusively to CNBC by Fintrx, the private wealth intelligence platform.
Emerson’s AI bets span the globe and the industry, including a New York-based AI medical company, a San Jose, California-based image analyzer, a French developer of large language models and a Norwegian creator of AI presentations used by teachers.
The dollar amounts of Emerson’s AI investments aren’t disclosed. According to Fintrx, the Emerson Collective has participated in AI funding rounds totaling more than $1 billion.
A representative for the Emerson Collective declined to comment.
Emerson doesn’t disclose its total assets under management. Powell Jobs, the philanthropist, investor and widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has a net worth of $11.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Emerson is mainly focused on education, the environment and health care. According to Finxtrx, Emerson has made over 130 investments in total, with more than half in technology, 48 in health care and life sciences, and the rest in energy, agriculture, education and human services, media, and other categories. Raffi Krikorian, former executive at Uber and Twitter, is Emerson’s chief technology officer.
The New York Times reported this week that Jony Ive, the celebrated Apple designer who worked closely with Steve Jobs and left the company in 2019, is teaming up with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to create a new “computing device” for using AI. Their venture aims to raise up to $1 billion by the end of the year, and the Emerson Collective is one of its founding investors along with Ive, according to the report.
AI has become the most popular investment theme for family offices in 2024. According to the UBS Global Family Office Report, 78% of family offices surveyed plan to invest in AI in the next two to three years — the most for any investment category.
Powell Jobs started investing in AI even before OpenAI launched ChatGPT, which kicked off the current AI investment and consumer craze. In June 2022, Emerson invested in an $80 million C-round investment in Proximie, a health tech company whose platform is used to connect operating rooms. In August 2022, it invested in a $14 million Series A round for Atropos Health, which provides physicians with clinical data.
Emerson went on to invest in AI startups around the world, including a $4.6 million seed round for Norway’s Curipod, which helps teachers create interactive lessons, and a $415 million Series A round for Mistral, the French maker of large language models.
Emerson’s two most recent AI investments are Formation Bio, an AI pharma company, which raised $372 million in June, and a $33 million follow-on round for Atropos.
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