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Transcript: Are emerging markets back?

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This is an audio transcript of the Unhedged podcast episode: ‘Are emerging markets back?

Katie Martin
While we’ve got you listeners, we are very excited to be nominated for a Signal award for our podcast. So if this is your favourite finance pod, check out the link in the show notes and vote for us online. 

Robert Armstrong
This year, the Signal. Next year, the Nobel. (Laughter)

Katie Martin
One asset class that normally just loves a drop in US interest rates is emerging markets.

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And we’re seeing a little bit of it again now. Lower US rates generally mean lower US bond yields, and that makes higher-yielding emerging market government bonds really stand out. Plus, the US economy is in pretty good shape and we have a load of stimulus that just landed from China. So today on the show we’re asking, is EM back? 

This is Unhedged, the markets and finance podcast from the Financial Times and Pushkin. I’m Katie Martin, a markets columnist here at FT towers in London, and I’m joined again down the line from New York City by that bright young thing, Aiden Reiter. 

Aiden Reiter
Good morning. 

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Katie Martin
How are you doing, Aiden? 

Aiden Reiter
I’m good. I was just home for the Jewish holidays and my mother said to me, you know, that Katie has the most lovely voice. 

Katie Martin
(Laughter) Team Aiden’s mom. I like that. So we’re Team Aiden’s mom, but we’re also Team EM, right? Like why does EM, why do emerging markets like it when the US is cutting rates? 

Aiden Reiter
Yeah. Well, the US is the standard of the world. So when you look at emerging market debt or any other government’s debt, you’re essentially looking at its yield relative to the United States. So if the US is starting to come down, that makes those emerging markets that much more special, right? They look much better in comparison because US rates are lower. Also, emerging markets tend to hike way higher, and in this cycle they’ve actually hiked faster than the US. So they had their rates come up way before the US and other large economies. 

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Katie Martin
Yeah. This is the big thing about EM, right? So as soon as we kind of came through the immediate shock of Covid and supply chains started snarling up and inflation started picking up, all the kind of big, you know, western central banks effectively looked at the Fed, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank. They were like, this is just transitory. We’re going to just sit on our hands for a little bit and see how it pans out. And the emerging markets were like, nope, we’ve seen this movie before and we are not having it. So they hiked quickly and hard. 

Aiden Reiter
And hard. Yeah. So, you know, Brazil or, you know, Mexico, they had their rates above 10 per cent as opposed to, you know, in the 3 to 5 range in the EU, the US and the UK. So that makes it really appealing if you wanna put your money there. But, you know, everybody loves the dollar. So when US rates are high, even if they’re not as high as emerging markets, it just has the effect of sucking capital out of the emerging world. 

Katie Martin
So Aiden, let’s talk about what does emerging markets mean because it’s a bit of a, sort of, it’s a bit of a squidgy term and, you know, generally people take it to mean anything that’s not kind of cool — Europe, US, Canada, Japan, which and, you know, Australia and stuff. But it’s not a terribly useful term, actually. 

Aiden Reiter
No. As you said, it’s kind of everyone except the big economies that you just named. And because of that, it’s just like this really broad index that covers economies as disparate as Brazil and South Korea. South Korea has been, quote unquote, emerging forever. And they’re kind of an advanced economy but they’re sometimes included in some of these indexes and conversations about emerging markets. So it just generally means like you are not Europe or you’re not western Europe, I should say, or the US or Canada. And at some point in the last 50 years, you are a, quote unquote, developing economy and you are not unabashedly a developed economy at this point. 

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Katie Martin
Listeners, you’re gonna have to bear with us here. There is just a bit of a kind of . . . There are grey areas all over this definition, but we’re talking about economies that are not like major developed economies, G7 economies, G10. So I pulled some numbers actually before I came to record this. And so the MSCI Emerging Markets index of stocks is up about 14, 15 per cent in the past five years, right? That’s not terrible. But you compare that to the MSCI World Index and there you’re looking at about 70 per cent. 

Aiden Reiter
Yeah. Yeah. Emerging markets can’t keep up. 

Katie Martin
Emerging markets can’t keep up. And you compare it to the S&P in the States and that’s . . . you’ve doubled your money on that thing over the same period. So it’s just kind of not worth the faff, like doing the due diligence on emerging markets when you could just park your money in US stocks and, you know, count it all rolling in. 

Aiden Reiter
Yeah. Which is a real shame, especially because, you know, emerging markets are ideally where there is the most room to grow and where the most amount of people could benefit from companies or stocks doing well. 

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On top of that, on the government debt side, emerging markets not getting, you know, bond buyers is really, really catastrophic. We’ve had a lot of sovereign debt defaults over the last 20 years and that essentially freezes up financing in an economy and punishes the poorest people in the world, usually. So it’s just really, really unfortunate. And that’s something that has been really concerning in the past five years. And it seems like we’re starting to come out of the woods. 

Katie Martin
Well, one not counterpoint to that, but one interesting wrinkle to that, I think, is that — and actually our colleague Robin Wigglesworth was writing about this the other day. One of the things that’s happened in emerging market government debt over the past couple of decades, actually, is that they’ve shifted out of issuing bonds in dollars and much more into issuing bonds in their own home currency. And that makes a difference, right, because in the event that they’ve issued debt in dollars and they have to pay it back in dollars, if their currencies crash because the dollar is really strong because US interest rates are really high, that effectively jacks up the cost of servicing their debt over the course of the lifetime of that bond. So to the extent that some of them have moved into a local currency, does that dull the effect maybe of the shifts in US policy here? 

Aiden Reiter
Yes, to an extent. But at the end of the day, you still have to look at the yield, you know, especially if it’s government-issue debt, and you have to look at the yield relative to how yields are doing in the US. So if yields are still better in the US, then you have better bang for your buck in the US. People still put their money there and have more trust there. Also, a lot of emerging markets have rule-of-law issues as well as corruption issues that make them less appealing to some investors. 

That being said, local currency debt is probably set to do well in the next coming months. The US and the developed world affects all emerging markets. So if the US economy is achieving its soft landing and interest rates are going down, that means that there’s going to be appreciation of local currencies. That gives these companies who have issued this debt more power to service other debts. It also results in those local currency bonds looking more appealing. So it’s actually a pretty good moment to be in local currency debt on top of the structural elements of trying to insulate from dollar fluctuation. 

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Katie Martin
Now, one thing I’ve noticed, Aiden, is that the world is quite big, quite large. And that means that there’s quite a lot of difference from one emerging market country to the next, right? It’s like we’re really bad people if we’re talking about as just one bloc. And we get that and we’re very conscious that we’re doing it. But you need a certain sort of shorthand to talk about the asset class. 

But there’s some real kind of outliers and like weird things going on across the world. So on the same day that the Federal Reserve in the US cut interest rates by half a percentage point, all very exciting, Brazil raised interest rates for the first time in two years. Like what the flip going on there? 

Aiden Reiter
Yeah, it just seems like their economy is really hot and inflation’s, you know, staging a bit of a comeback. So they’re gonna have to raise rates. Everything’s been fluctuating not as you would expect it relative to the US because they raised rates while the US was lowering rates. You know, I think it speaks to the point of, you know, there is a large world, as you said, and other economies function differently and have different internal pressures. Not everybody is kind of the tail that’s wagged by the US’s dog. 

Katie Martin
You could wonder which ones the tail and which is the dog here because, you know, maybe Brazil is like a tail of things to come for the US that, you know, if you have like a decent labour market and you’ve got a robust economy, then you’re not actually in a position to cut interest rates as hard as you might like to. The US is their kind of supertanker here, but sometimes it is worth looking at other smaller central banks to figure out is this a situation the US is gonna find itself in pretty soon? Because, you know, we don’t wanna go off on too much of this tangent. But already US markets are saying, a bit worried that the Fed might have cut a little bit too hard here and maybe inflation’s gonna make a comeback. Perhaps the Brazilian example is something to look at, right? 

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Aiden Reiter
Absolutely. If past is prologue, Brazil started hiking rates way before the Fed and way before other, you know, global north central banks. So yeah, there’s a precedent in the past couple of years of them being ahead of the curve. 

Also, you know, when we talk about exceptions, we have to talk about China, right? China forever was considered to be an emerging market. Now, not so much. So when you look at MSCI, there’s really two broad indicators of emerging market equities, which is MSCI Emerging Markets and MSCI ex China, because China is just such a large part of MSCI World. Although interestingly, recently the China stock rally, MSCI with China shot up again and shot up above MSCI without China. 

Katie Martin
Now, this rally that we’ve had in China, since you mention it, like we spoke about this the other week. Listeners, if you look back a little bit in your list of pods that we’ve done, you’ll find we had a good chat about China. But the markets responded really kind of favourably to this, right? Just an enormous rally in Chinese stocks. It hit a bit of a wall, but nonetheless, you cannot argue with the size of that rally. 

And partly as a result of that, there’s been a huge inflow into emerging market funds. So if you look at the numbers that come out from EPFR, they so they’re getting the longest inflow streak into EM bond funds since the first half of last year and an especially big push into Chinese equity funds, which has just helped to lift the whole EM investment fund space up to a new level. So it certainly looks like investors are sort of sitting up and taking notice here. 

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Aiden Reiter
Absolutely. But, you know, as we’ve said last time, without proper stimulus of the economy, that might not hold for Chinese equities when they’re already, you know, been sliding the past couple of days. So it could be that if there was any frenzy for EMs, including China, that might step off. 

But I do think there’s going to continue to be interest in emerging markets beyond Brazil. Brazil is definitely heterodox. There’s other economies that might have to raise rates. Nigeria has had a lot of funky things going on with their currency and their economy. 

Also, Turkey. Turkey has inflation that was catastrophically high for years and years. And recently in the past two years, they’ve adopted a very, very, you know, stringent central bank policy — I think policy rates around 50 per cent. So it doesn’t look like they’re going to be lowering anytime soon because while some parts of inflation are coming down as a result of these high rates, not all sectors of inflation are coming down. 

So while it’s good broadly for emerging markets, there are still some emerging markets that are these weird examples that don’t really follow the same rules. 

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Katie Martin
Yeah. And Turkey always falls into that camp. It always does its own thing. Fascinating market, that one. 

Aiden Reiter
EMs are looking better. EM local currency debt is looking better and EM equities are looking better. But there’s still a really big chance and risk of default. So for the past four years, because of issues in Ukraine and then as well as, you know, the US rate hiking cycle, it looked like a lot of economies were going to default on their outstanding debt, which as we said before, is just catastrophic. 

We’ve actually kind of come out of that. The IMF have been, you know, ringing the alarm bells and saying, this is bad, this is bad. We’ve come out with very few defaults, partially because some got rescued. You had, you know, Pakistan was bailed out by the IMF, as was Kenya. Maldives was bailed out by India. So we’ve managed to avoid the worst outcome. 

But just the other day, S&P Global said that the risk of default is going to be even higher going forward. And that’s because while, you know, economic conditions have improved, we still have some big structural hurdles for a lot of these economies to jump through. Also, a lot of these economies were able to avoid default by taking some less than ideal payouts and less than ideal loans. And that’s resulted in going to be harder for them to access financing in the future. 

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So, for example, Kenya — Kenya got an IMF, you know, bailout, which was really helpful to stop it from defaulting. But as we’ve seen with the local turmoil and unrest, they did so by, you know, slashing budgets in a way that people weren’t super thrilled with. And on top of that, now they can’t access the market in general because they still have to deal with that large loan and that large bailout they got from IMF. So while we avoided the worst, you know, by doing so, by dancing around default, we may have just prolonged the problem and we could see more defaults going forward, especially if the economic outlook turns on the US or any other economy. 

Katie Martin
Yeah, for sure. Not super thrilled is my descriptive phrase of choice from now on around IMF programmes, which are generally considered to be pretty tough gruel.

OK, so you got lower US rates and if they stick to what they’ve previously indicated then they’re gonna head lower still. You’ve got general kind of animal spirits around a pretty robust US economy, and that’s good. You’ve still got the risk of some defaults. You still got some slightly ugly, idiosyncratic stories. And I’m led to believe that you Americans have got some sort of election coming up. Register to vote, listeners. We just don’t know how that’s gonna pan out, particularly with regards to China around all the talk about tariffs and the two candidates have got quite different stances there. 

Aiden Reiter
If Trump enacts tariffs across the board, which he said he will do, that will really hurt EMs, right, who have, you know, trading relationships with the United States. And those are countries that don’t really have a lot of margin for error and a lot of margin for change on their relationships with other economies, right? If they lose foreign inflows, especially dollar inflows, that’ll make it harder to service their debt and will make it harder for their countries. You know, they could get more business from China. But there’s also, you know, some issues between China and EMs as well. 

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Also, you know, a new administration in the White House or, you know, conflict between the US and China might also result in the US taking a less active role in dealing with IMF and helping with organisations like the International Development Association, which help economies deal with their large outstanding debt loans. So, you know, this election will be incredibly consequential for emerging markets.

And, you know, we don’t wanna see more defaults because they enact a lot of pain both on the people in those economies but also on the broader global economy. It’s really not fun for everybody to get in line as creditors and deal with the various IMF and agencies and China and everybody who has to help them come to a deal on restructuring their loan. That’s a really complicated, costly process. The global community is trying to improve it, but that is a really, really slow process. 

Katie Martin
Yeah. It’s complicated, it’s costly and it’s a massive pain in the ass. So all of that having been said, what do you think on EM? Do you think this is the start of a bit of a renaissance or do you think this is all just a little bit of a flash in the pan because you have had the cut from the US? 

Aiden Reiter
Yeah. I think if you look at EMs where they are today versus where they are two years ago when everybody thought there were imminent defaults around the corner, they’re looking great and they’ve actually started to return way better and they’ve navigated these crises quite well considering, you know, all the things ahead of them. 

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And also, as you said before, with US interest rates coming down, it only is starting to look better for them. So hopefully this is a moment that will be sustained if the international community can make sure some of the sovereign debt infrastructure and architecture is resolved in case they do default down the line and if the US economy and the global economy continues to achieve the soft landing. What do you think? 

Katie Martin
I’m in team this is gonna be OK because EM has been so underowned and so just this little waft of kind of supportive news from all these different places all at once has gotta be a good thing for the asset class. I’m prepared to be proven wrong, but I hope that I’m right because it has just been off people’s radar, like I say, for so long. Aiden, we’re gonna have to wrap it up there but I have exciting news. 

Aiden Reiter
Oh. Do tell. 

Katie Martin
Unhedged, listeners, is going on the road. We are gonna be recording a live version of the show with an audience at the Kilkenomics Festival in Ireland on November the 9th. It’s free, but it’s sold out and I am, as a result, terrified. But we’d absolutely love to see you there. And if you’re heading to the festival, which is a good laugh, and you should head to the Kilkenomics Festival, it might be worth seeing if there are any spaces that come free at the back on the day. 

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So yeah, listen up to see what I manage to come up with and it should be fun.

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So we’re gonna be back in a minute with Long/Short.

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Okiedokie, it’s time for Long/Short, that part of the show where we go long a thing we love or short a thing we hate. Aiden, what you got? 

Aiden Reiter
I’m short Netflix’s research department. There’s the show that everyone is talking about called Nobody Wants This and it’s about a Jewish man, a rabbi, dating a non-Jewish woman. And there were so many inaccuracies about Judaism in the first two episodes that I had to stop it. Just as a very quick example, they had services at the synagogue on a Friday night and at night you don’t wear the tallit, which is, you know, the ceremonial cloth. And they were all wearing them. It was like it’s literally every Jew could have told you that. Like, there are so many Jewish people in the United States who particularly work in Hollywood. You couldn’t have asked anybody some of these very simple questions? (Katie laughs) Like, I got so heated, just . . . I was like, there’s so many inaccuracies in episode one. Like, where is this going? 

Katie Martin
That sounds really annoying. And I would have been the same if there was something about like, Scousers or something. 

Aiden Reiter
What is your long or short, Katie? 

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Katie Martin
I am long swagger. So there’s a whole lot of like swagger going on in the UK at the moment. So we just had this big like investment symposium. The government has been meeting with the great and the good from asset management, from industry and talking about, you know, the UK is open for business. And, you know, it always has been, but you know, nonetheless, there’s kind of this big kind of push. 

And so Poppy Gustafsson, who was formerly the CEO of Darktrace, which is a cyber security company, she’s very much part of this big initiative to get London and get the UK back on the map. And she said — and I agree with her — when you’re marketing into the US, you have to say, this is the best technology that has ever existed in the world, whereas British marketing tends to be, terribly sorry, if you have a minute can you possibly having a look. (Laughter) And I kind of agree with her. So we’re not very good at swagger in the UK so I’m gonna go long swagger. I’m gonna swagger for the rest of the week. 

Aiden Reiter
You gotta say, this is the greatest stock of all time and we’re gonna list it on the FTSE.

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Katie Martin
This is the greatest podcast ever and you should vote for it in awards and all that sort of thing. Anyway, I digress. Listeners, we’re gonna be back on Thursday with a very special episode. No spoilers. Back in your ears then, so listen up. 

Unhedged is produced by Jake Harper and edited by Bryant Urstadt. Our executive producer is Jacob Goldstein. We had additional help from Topher Forhecz. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio. Special thanks to Laura Clarke, Alastair Mackie, Gretta Cohn and Natalie Sadler.

FT premium subscribers can get the Unhedged newsletter for free. A 30-day free trial is available to everyone else. Just go to ft.com/unhedgedoffer. 

I’m Katie Martin. Thanks for listening.

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Italian court rejects Meloni plan to hold asylum-seekers in Albania

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Italian court rejects Meloni plan to hold asylum-seekers in Albania

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Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s controversial plan to send asylum seekers rescued from the Mediterranean Sea to Albania has suffered a serious setback after a Rome immigration court rejected the offshore detention of the first group of migrants.

In its verdict, the Rome court’s immigration section ruled that 12 male migrants held in Albania — who originally come from Bangladesh and Egypt — “have the right to be taken to Italy” due to the “impossibility of recognising the states of origin of the detained persons as ‘safe countries’.”

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The decision was founded on a recent verdict by the European Court of Justice, which ruled this month that countries cannot be deemed “partially safe” for the purpose of deciding on deportations.

An Italian official confirmed the 12 would be brought to Italy for further processing.

The verdict is an embarrassing political setback for Meloni, who has touted her scheme for holding would-be asylum seekers in centres in Albania as a means of fulfilling her pledge to reduce inflows of irregular migrants from across the Mediterranean.

Her plan — and its promise of processing asylum claims offshore — has attracted strong international interest, with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen describing it as an example from which to draw lessons, and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer recently asking Meloni in Rome for more details.

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Meloni expressed dismay at the ruling but insisted it would only be a temporary setback.

“Italians have asked me to stop illegal immigration and I will do my best, she said during an official trip to Lebanon. “I’m sorry that at a time when all of Europe is looking at something that Italy is trying to do, we’re trying, as always, to put spokes in the wheels.”

Meloni said she was convening an emergency cabinet meeting on Monday to discuss how to overcome the new legal obstacles. “I don’t think it’s the judges’ competence to determine which countries are safe and which are not; it’s the government’s competence,” she said. “Maybe the government needs to clarify better what is meant by a safe country.”

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni says the ruling is only a temporary setback © Marwan Naamani/dpa

Italy has so far spent at least an estimated €60mn to build and equip the Albanian centres, which formally started operating on Wednesday with the arrival of an initial 16 migrants. 

Of that first group, selected from among hundreds of people rescued in the Mediterranean by Italian authorities in recent days, four were immediately deemed ineligible to be held in Albania and were taken onwards to Italy — two who were thought to be minors and two for medical reasons. 

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Senator Lucio Malan, a member of Meloni’s rightwing Brothers of Italy party, called the court’s order to send the remaining 12 migrants back to Italy “scandalous”.

“Some politicised magistrates have decided there are no safe countries of origin,” the senator, who sits on the senate’s foreign relations committee, wrote on X. “It is impossible to detain those who enter illegally; it is forbidden to repatriate illegal immigrants.

“They would like to abolish the borders of Italy: we will not allow it,” he added.

The far-right League, the party of Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, called the court order “unacceptable”. 

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Interior minister Matteo Piantedosi told a press conference on Friday afternoon that the government would appeal against the ruling with a higher court.

Lawyer Lorenzo Trucco, president of the Association for the Study of Immigration Law, hailed Friday’s decision, saying “the rule of law had prevailed over the illegitimate acts” of the government, and had exposed the “absurdity and unfairness” of the Italy-Albania deal.

The deal reached between Meloni and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama last year allowed Italy to build two migrant detention centres in Albania to hold up to 3,000 migrants while Italian authorities processed their asylum claims.

The deal specified that the centres would only hold healthy adult men from countries that Italy had already deemed “safe” for potential return. Those found to have valid asylum claims would be granted refuge in Italy, while those deemed to be illegal immigrants would be returned to their countries of origin through an expedited process

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To prepare for the centres’ opening, Italy earlier this year designated 22 countries — including Bangladesh and Egypt — as safe for returns with some exceptions, such as for political dissidents from Egypt and LGBT+ people from Tunisia.

The EU court ruled that European law does not permit countries to be categorised as partially safe, which shaped the Rome court’s verdict. New EU rules due to come into force in 2026, however, will allow countries to be described as safe with exceptions for some regions or some categories of people.

Italy is seeking to advance implementation of that part of the bloc’s migration and asylum pact, said an EU diplomat. Von der Leyen, in a letter to the bloc’s leaders this week, committed to bringing the revision of the safe countries concept forward to 2025.

Additional reporting by Paola Tamma in Brussels 

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Are tulips just too much trouble?

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A group of flowers have cream petals with bright-red markings

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The ground is soft and easily planted with bulbs. The last spring flowering bulbs that should go in are tulips, readily plantable until late November. Tulips and I have had a rollercoaster ride in recent years, but I am checking in for another turn.

In the 2010s, when we started to have hotter temperatures in spring, I went off tulips. They flowered weeks early and dropped their petals after a few days of sunshine. For our Oxford college gardens I choose tulips predicted to flower in May when the undergraduates will be in residence to enjoy them. In accelerated spring times they flower in early April when the college is shut for Easter. For a few days I enjoy them, feeling spoilt and guilty that their target audience cannot.

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Are they worth the cost and trouble, I began to wonder three years ago? Still wondering, I planted midseason Triumph tulips for this year’s spring as I needed a display on April 14, the date of the ceremonial inauguration of a newly built college quadrangle and its series of borders and flowerbeds. Mid-season Triumphs are billed as flowering in late April to May but, in a warmer season, I thought mid-April would be nearer the mark. As late as December 6 we planted our chosen varieties. We did not combine them first into a multicoloured mixture. We spaced them out in segregated groups of 20. The rain poured down our necks as we trowelled each one in, leaving four inches of soil above its tip and scattering a pinch of bone meal, a good trick, under its base. It seemed unlikely they would survive the wet and justify their name.

After a continuously mild and damp winter, they began to flower on March 6. A display for the inauguration seemed a lost cause, but the days and nights remained cold and to my amazement the tulips held their flowers for six weeks as if in an outdoor fridge. The mainstays were Flaming Agrass, a lovely blend of white and mid-yellow; blood red Hollandia, a great choice; and the excellent Grand Perfection whose cream and yellow flowers are feathered with dark red, like tulips in an old Dutch painting. I recommend them all, whatever the weather throws at them.

A group of flowers have cream petals with bright-red markings
Tulipa Grand Perfection © GAP Photos/Hanneke Reijbroek

At home, I planted premixed assortments of Triumph tulips instead. I had high hopes, but they were planted within sight of wildlife in open country. Two setbacks destroyed them. First, the leaves on many of them began to turn brown and wrinkle: they were victims of the fungal condition called tulip fire. A frequent cause of it is excessive wet, just what last winter gave by the bucketful. There is no ready spray to kill it off. Worse, it persists in the soil for at least three years.

A few of my tulips avoided it and set promising buds. They advanced no further because in one night of murder a visiting muntjac bit off all the buds, eating some, scattering others uselessly on the ground. So much for wildlife in the garden, that indiscriminate mantra. It bites off more than it can chew.

This year I will try a different tactic, one that will bring my plantings closer to many of yours. I will plant the tulips in big clay pots and space the pots in the gaps in flowerbeds where dahlias have been sulking in the recent wet weather. Out come the dahlias to be stored away from frost until late May. In their place will go clay pots wide enough to take about 10 tulips each. I will buy cheap pots from supermarkets and keep the tulips out of reach of animals at ground level. Between the pots I will mix blue forget-me-nots and double pink and white bellis, known as bachelor’s buttons. In pots, the tulips will be in fresh soil, free of fungal tulip fire. Except for the menace of wildlife, the pots could be black plastic, sunk into the surrounding soil but shielded from its diseases. If so, they need to be watered in a dry spring.

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In urban courtyards or on balconies you may be potting tulips too: in a range that can seem bewildering, which are good choices? Tulips span months from March to May, so make use of the full season. I begin with Water Lily tulips, which usually in flower in March. Their flower stems are less than a foot tall so they are excellent choices for window boxes, yellow and red Giuseppe Verdi and cream and red Johann Strauss being my favourites. In window boxes lily-flowered tulips are no good as they are too tall and flop badly. The fosteriana group is much better — lovely white Purissima and vivid scarlet Madame Lefevre being the best in early April.

A terracotta pot is tightly planted with tulips, their green stalks topped with yellow and green blooms
Yellow Spring Green: ‘a tulip that opens prettily and holds itself well’ © Marianne Majerus

For mid-May, Tulip Queen of the Night is a top-seller: a dark maroon that is indeed almost black. I mix it in pots with a few white ones, especially Alabaster, which flowers at the same time: six or seven black to three white. Another chic option is a green-flowered variety from the viridiflora group, which flowers in late April; Green Spirit is a cool customer, a cream-white with green stripes on its petals, as is the similar Spring Green. In pots they are eye-catching, but after a long wet winter I am even more cheered by Yellow Spring Green, a bright yellow with green stripes, a tulip that opens prettily and holds itself well.

Tulips offer colours unlike any other flower, so it is fun to choose them. I particularly like those that are streaked or striped, Olympic Flame being my top choice, a Darwin hybrid whose primrose yellow flowers are streaked with red. In pots, the ruffled flowers of parrot tulips are fun too, especially the robust Estella Rynveld, a May-flowering tulip whose white flowers are twirled with red and streaks of green, and Flaming Parrot, whose mid-yellow flowers are feathered in bright red. In flowerbeds, parrot tulips in a block look too exotic, but in pots they are very striking, apt for their artificial setting.

A deep-red and white bloom is shown in close-up
Tulipa Estella Rynveld, which flowers in May © GAP Photos/John Glover

Parks and public gardens accustom our eyes to tulips massed by the hundred in only one colour. In a broad open space they are impressive, but in a garden I find small groups, dotted in tens, are more effective and obviously much cheaper. In the beautifully planned gardens at Coton Manor in Northamptonshire, double-flowered tulips are planted in small groups where the bare earth is visible in the broad borders of summer flowering plants. They look like early peonies and blend in beautifully, pink Finola with a dash of white being the garden’s favourite. I am trying white-and-red streaked Carnaval de Nice for this purpose, badgers permitting. It is an excellent use for double tulips, which simulate peonies and otherwise look too fussy.

Good choices proliferate, but these are a start. Water lily tulips will often flower well for a year or two, but the others I have named are one-year wonders. The bulbs split in British gardens and seldom build up to a size that flowers again. Tulips are the very opposite of sustainable. They are unmissable, unlike sustainable, tedious ground elder. Beauty is still beauty, even if it lasts for no more than a fortnight.     

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Map reveals best pubs in Britain including stunning Victorian boozer and hidden micropub gem – is your local listed?

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Map reveals best pubs in Britain including stunning Victorian boozer and hidden micropub gem - is your local listed?

THE best pubs in Britain have been revealed, with four finalists now competing for the top spot.

Every year the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) assembles a list of less than 20 local pubs from around the UK for a shortlist in its Pub of the Year competition.

The Black Horse in Preston

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The Black Horse in PrestonCredit: The Black Horse
The Three B's Micropub in Bridlington

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The Three B’s Micropub in BridlingtonCredit: Three B’s Micropub

This is the highest achievement a pub can receive and is especially important at a time when many pubs are being forced to shut up shop due to high energy prices and other costs.

All pubs are scored on their atmosphere, decor, welcome, service, inclusivity, overall impression and the quality of drinks including beer, real cider and perry.

This year there are 17 pubs which have been hand-picked from thousands across the nation.

These include both local pubs and former high street shops.

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The shortlist has now been whittled down to just four competitors, of which the overall winner will be crowned in January 2025.

Last year’s winner was the Tamworth Tap in Staffordshire, which bagged the top spot in both 2023 and 2022.

Black Horse

Among the top four finalists is the Black Horse in Preston.

This Victorian Grade II listed pub still has many of the original fittings from when it was built, including a ceramic bar, tiled walls and mosaic floor.

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A seating area has been dubbed the “Hall of Mirrors” due to its breathtaking original stained glass.

Its ten handpumps include four changing guest beers and a range of ciders.

The UK’s 5 most beautiful Wetherspoons pubs

Despite its name it’s not a dark horse in the contest and has already bagged the titles of Central Lancashire Branch Pub of the Year and Lancashire Branches Pub of the Year.

Three B’s

This micropub in Bridlington is run by a husband and wife duo who are passionate about beer and cider.

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Its name encapsulates the pub’s ethos and stands for “banter”, “beer” and “bar snacks”.

The Three B’s aims to never sell the same beer twice, which ensures there’s always an exciting range of ever changing drinks at the bar.

Meanwhile, its customer service is unmatched and staff are keen to chat about the drinks they serve and the local area.

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Little Green Dragon

There’s something for everyone at the Little Green Dragon in Winchmore Hill.

The micropub boasts an ever changing selection of four cask beers which are sourced from local and independent breweries.

The Bailey Head, Owestry

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The Bailey Head, OwestryCredit: The Bailey Head
The Little Green Dragon in Winchmore Hill

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The Little Green Dragon in Winchmore HillCredit: Little Green Dragon

Plus there’s a fantastic selection of real cider, perry and four keg beers.

While they drink, pubgoers can also enjoy a traditional game of table skittles or shove ha’penny.

The pub has already secured several titles including CAMRA’s Great London Pub of the Year.

The Bailey Head, Oswestry

Close to the Welsh borders in the delightful market town of Oswestry is the Bailey Head.

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The pub has one of the largest beer selections in all of Shropshire and claims to have sold more than 3,400 different beers since it flung open its doors in March 2016.

There are six constantly changing cask beers and always includes one dark beer, plus eleven other draught beers, four ciders and a perry.

National Pub of the Year Coordinator Andrea Briers said: “These fantastic four are the epitome of what a good pub should be.

“I am excited to find out which one will be crowned the best pub in the UK.”

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Pub of the year shortlist 2024

Thirteen other remarkable pubs were beaten to the top spot this year.

They include:

  • The Bell Inn, Aldworth,
  • Blackfriars Tavern, Great Yarmouth
  • Horse and Jockey, Stapleford
  • Northumberland Arms, Marple Bridge
  • Nelson Arms, Tonbridge
  • Turks Head, St Helens
  • Grey Horse, Consett
  • Dog and Duck, Lisbellaw
  • Hillend Tavern, Dalgety Bay
  • Crossways Inn, West Huntspill
  • Brickmakers Alehouse, Bexhill on Sea
  • Cresselley Arms, Cressel Quay
  • Woodman Inn, Bridport

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

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New Google Flights feature will let you always find the cheapest plane ticket

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The new Google Flights feature will show the cheapest flight options (stock image)

GOOGLE Flights have revealed a new tool that will help holidaymakers find the cheapest plane ticket.

The new booking feature, which was announced earlier this week, will help passengers find the cheapest fares.

The new Google Flights feature will show the cheapest flight options (stock image)

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The new Google Flights feature will show the cheapest flight options (stock image)Credit: Getty

Holidaymakers who already use Google Flights to find airfares will know that the search engine displays the ‘best options’ at the top of the results page.

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These deals are normally direct flights that fly to and from the most convenient airport, although they’re not always the cheapest options.

Google Flights‘ latest feature, which is being rolled out across the platform this week, will have an option to display the cheapest flights.

A blog post from Google reads: “But sometimes, there might be cheaper options available for those of you who are willing to give up some convenience for the best deal.

“For example, there could be a third-party booking site offering a lower price than the airline itself.

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“Or you might be able to save by flying back to a different airport that’s in the same city you departed from — like flying out of New York’s LaGuardia and returning to JFK.”

In order to find the cheapest flights, passengers will need to click on the “cheapest” tab on the search engine to see if there are any better deals to be had.

In order to bag the cheapest flights, holidaymakers may need to be more creative with their itineraries by opting for longer layovers, self-transfers or purchasing flights with multiple airlines.

By using this new feature, holidaymakers will need to decide whether the cost savings are worth the hassle.

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It is hoped that the new Google Flights feature will help budget travellers find the best bargains.

How to safeguard your holiday: A guide to ATOL protection and vetting travel companies

The news comes just weeks after Google Flights introduced a refund feature that offers travellers the lowest price guarantee when booking certain flights.

Google announced: “No one likes to feel buyer’s remorse, and that’s especially true for a big purchase like plane tickets where the prices change from day to day.”

The new tool enables travellers to determine whether the price of their trip is low, high, or average for their planned trip.

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Jetsetters can also set flexible dates to find the cheapest time to book.

However, if the price drops between the time of purchase and take-off, Google will pay the difference via Google Pay.

The refund policy will only apply to flights that are booked with Google and departing from the US.

Travellers should ensure there is a price guarantee badge before purchasing a ticket otherwise, they won’t be eligible for a refund if the price drops before takeoff.

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Cheap Airfares

Earlier this year, a travel expert revealed the “sweet spot” for flights to get cheap fares.

Jack Sheldon, flight expert at Jacksflightclub.com, said the best time to bag the cheapest flight tickets is between six to 12 weeks before taking off.

Flyers can get an absolute bargain deal while following the hack – and can save up to 50 per cent on flight tickets.

Booking a flight midweek instead of a weekend – when airports can be really busy – can also help you save some extra cash which you can splash on your vacation instead.

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Gavin Lapidus, travel agent and director of multi-centre holiday specialists eShores, said Monday to Wednesday is the best time of the week to board a cheap flight.

If you’re flexible with your dates, always double-check departure days, as flying a day sooner or later could save you up to 20 per cent.

The travel expert has shared a number of tips around saving cash when booking your holiday.

Three money-saving travel hacks to take the stress out of your holidays

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READY to escape the dreary weather? Here are some tips on saving cash

TIME TO FLY: Always use a flight comparison site to search for the cheapest operator on your chosen route.

Airlines release tickets up to a year in advance and, generally, the earlier you book, the cheaper flights are.

This is especially true if you’re planning to fly during peak periods, such as summer holidays.

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FLEXIBLE WINS: You’ll be able to find the best deals if you can be flexible on your destination or with dates of travel.

Flying midweek is usually the cheapest, while Fridays and Sundays tend to be the most expensive.

If you have set dates in mind, try Skyscanner’s “Everywhere” search tool, which will show the cheapest destinations available at those times.

PACKAGE UP: You can usually save cash by opting for an all-inclusive deal over booking flights and hotels separately, according to research by consumer group Which?.

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However, it does depend on the destination so it’s worth doing your research.

Spain was found to be cheaper as an all-inclusive, but you would be better off doing a DIY holiday in Portugal’s Algarve.

However, travellers are advised not to overlook travel agents as lots of them specialise in finding the best value trips for customers.

Condé Nast Traveller’s fashion editor Charlotte Davey gave a word of advice when booking future flights.

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A new Google Flights feature will help holidaymakers find the cheapest fares (stock image)

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A new Google Flights feature will help holidaymakers find the cheapest fares (stock image)Credit: Getty

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The who’s who of restaurant loos

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The Pod loos at Sketch, Mayfair

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The Pod loos at Sketch in Mayfair are probably the most Instagrammed in the world. But if everything had gone to plan, they wouldn’t even exist. Originally the huge space behind the gallery and the restaurant was going to be a bar. But then, one night during construction, owner Mourad Mazouz woke in a panic convinced he was making a mistake. Instead of adding another bar to the two already planned, he thought why not install some statement bathrooms instead.

As Sketch (Bloomsbury), a new history of the landmark restaurant that opened in 2002, recounts, the 12 egg-shaped loos were inspired by sci-fi and constructed out of fibreglass by a Cowes yacht-maker whose initial response was “I do NOT make toilets”. The Pods aren’t even the fanciest loos at Sketch. That honour surely falls to the “Music Box” bathrooms on the first floor conceived by jewellery designer Mehbs Yaqub and decorated with Swarovski crystals.

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The Pod loos at Sketch, Mayfair
The Pod loos at Sketch, Mayfair © Ed Reeve
The stairs to the WCs at Jacuzzi in Kensington
The stairs to the WCs at Jacuzzi in Kensington

Few chefs want to be outshone by their bathrooms. But the best examples reinforce the values of their restaurants and act as a marketing tool in the form of the #bathroomselfie. This phenomenon arguably reached its zenith when the pink floral and rainforest-themed powder rooms designed by Martin Brudnizki for the revamped Annabel’s in Berkeley Square became the spots to see and be seen.

Nevertheless, our fascination continues. Gemma Wardle’s Loos of London TikTok guides (79.6k followers) take us take us from the disco-themed loos at Jacuzzi in Kensington High Street to the baroque lavatories at Gloria in Milan – prime examples of the deranged bathrooms for which the Big Mamma group is famous.

Piranhas circling the tank above the washbasins at Piraña in Mayfair
Piranhas circling the tank above the washbasins at Piraña in Mayfair

A tour of other standout bathrooms might include the nautical-themed WCs at Foxglove in Hong Kong; Brooklands in London, inspired by Concorde and racing cars; and the high-rise loos at what used to be called the Boom Boom Room at the Standard in New York, where views across the city were briefly eclipsed post-launch by views from the street of patrons doing their business. Privacy screens were promptly added. These days the most talked-about facility in New York is probably the handwashing station inside the entrance to Coqodaq, where diners are expected to ritually cleanse with Loewe soap before entering the “cathedral of fried chicken”.

Horst portraits in the bathrooms at The Park, Bayswater
Horst portraits in the bathrooms at The Park, Bayswater

Speaking of cathedrals, the hieratic loos at Sessions Arts Club in Farringdon were inspired by the cathedrals of Canterbury and Amiens. Stained-glass portraits on the confessional-like cubicle doors pay tribute to figures associated with the building, such as King George III, who initiated its construction, and George Harrison and Star Trek’s Jean Luc-Picard, two heroes of the architects (Ted and Oliver Grebelius) behind its refurbishment.

As for the most beautiful loos in town, I nominate The Park in Bayswater, the newest opening from Jeremy King. Located at the bottom of a grand staircase over which hang two lower panels (torso and legs) from Alex Katz’s Coca-Cola Girl, the honey-toned bathrooms designed by Shayne Brady (behind Arlington and The Maine) are filled with black-and-white Horst portraits and lit to make you look like a million bucks. “I always want our bathrooms to cocoon a guest and make them feel the prettiest version of themselves,” says Brady.

A bathroom in the Peninsula Hotel, London, designed by Archer Humphryes Architects
A bathroom in the Peninsula Hotel, London, designed by Archer Humphryes Architects

Plenty of bathrooms send you back humming a tune too. At Raffles at the OWO in Whitehall, guests encounter a James Bond score playlist. At Cycene at the Blue Mountain School in Shoreditch, a Roberts radio set to Radio 3 “provides a constant purring backdrop of familiarity”. At The Tent in Fitzrovia you get stand-up comedy from legends such as Eddie Murphy and Robin Williams. “We often hear laughter coming from the toilets when Richard Pryor’s routines are playing,” says chef John Javier. At Lyst in Denmark designed by Olafur Eliasson, what sounds like a cheery guest in an adjacent cubicle is actually a recorded soloist from a humming choir diddlee-dumming to traditional Danish songs.

Researching this piece, I got so used to listening out for avant-garde soundscapes that when I visited the bathrooms at Piraña in Mayfair, a Peruvian-Japanese restaurant where the tacos are as tasty as the sushi, I mistakenly took the echoey acoustics for choral music spliced with whale sounds. It turned out to be the extraction fan. Still, the two-dozen red-bellied piranhas circling the tank above the washbasins made up for it.  

@ajesh34

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Energy suppliers start making £150 payments to millions of customers to help with heating bills – will you get one?

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Energy suppliers start making £150 payments to millions of customers to help with heating bills - will you get one?

ENERGY suppliers have started issuing £150 payments to help millions of households with gas and electricity costs this winter.

This support is provided through the government’s Warm Home Discount scheme, offering a one-off, tax-free discount on electricity bills for low-income households.

Households in England and Wales don't have to apply to get the cash and receive it automatically

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Households in England and Wales don’t have to apply to get the cash and receive it automaticallyCredit: Alamy

The scheme reopened at the beginning of the month, and customers have taken to social media to share that they’ve started receiving the £150 discount.

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Households in England and Wales don’t have to apply to get the cash and receive it automatically.

Some Scottish households do have to apply for the discount.

One EDF customer on Facebook yesterday: “Has anyone got their Warm Home Discount of £150 as we have had ours this afternoon added to our smart meter.”

Another customer responded and said: “Mine came through today too.

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One Ovo Energy customer also said on Facebook this morning: “Woke up this morning to the Warm Home Discount applied to my meter!”

Another added: “Same! I haven’t been entitled the last few years, so I don’t know what’s changed!”

The eligibility requirements for the Warm Home Discount are the same as last year.

Between now and December, the government is issuing letters to over three million households eligible for the scheme.

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These will tell you:

  • You’re eligible and you’ll get the discount automatically; or
  • You might be eligible, and you need to give more information.
  • The letter will tell you to call the helpline by February 29, 2024 to confirm your details.
Three key benefits that YOU could be missing out on, and one even gives you a free TV Licence

Who’s eligible for the discount?

To qualify for the Warm Home Discount, you need to claim either the guaranteed credit element of pension credit or a different qualifying benefit form the list below:

If you weren’t claiming any of the above benefits on August 11, 2024, you won’t be eligible for the payment.

Where someone claims a qualifying benefit, the government will assess their energy costs based on the type, age and size of property.

This means that you may not be considered eligible for the Warm Home Discount if you live in a more energy-efficient property for instance, even if you receive a qualifying benefit.

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However, this rule doesn’t apply to recipients of the guarantee credit portion of pension credit.

Even if you weren’t getting pension credit on August 11, thousands of pensioners who apply for the benefit now can still qualify for the £150 payment.

This is because pension credit rules allow first-time claimants to backdate their benefit entitlement by three months.

So you’ll need to launch your claim by November 10 and then successfully get it backdated to cover the August 11 Warm Home Discount qualifying date.

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But if you fail to apply before this date, you’ll miss out.

What is pension credit and how do I apply?

PENSION credit tops up your weekly income to £218.15 if you are single or to £332.95 if you have a partner.

This is known as “guarantee credit”.

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If your income is lower than this, you’re very likely to be eligible for the benefit.

However, if your income is slightly higher, you might still be eligible for pension credit if you have a disability, you care for someone, you have savings or you have housing costs.

You could get an extra £81.50 a week if you have a disability or claim any of the following:

  • Attendance allowance
  • The middle or highest rate from the care component of disability living allowance (DLA)
  • The daily living component of personal independence payment (PIP)
  • Armed forces independence payment
  • The daily living component of adult disability payment (ADP) at the standard or enhanced rate.

ou could get the “savings credit” part of pension credit if both of the following apply:

  • You reached State Pension age before April 6, 2016
  • You saved some money for retirement, for example, a personal or workplace pension

This part of pension credit is worth £17.01 for single people or £19.04 for couples.

Pension credit opens the door to other support, including housing benefits, cost of living payments, council tax reductions, the winter fuel payment and the Warm Home Discount.

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You can start your application up to four months before you reach state pension age.

If you haven’t received a letter confirming your eligibility for the scheme by early January 2024, but believe you qualify, you should contact the helpline on 0800 030 9322.

How is the Warm Home Discount paid?

If you pay by direct debit or on receipt of your bill the £150 Warm Home Discount will be added to your electricity account as a credit.

Once it has been applied, it will show on your next bill.

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If you have a traditional prepayment meter, your energy supplier will send you a letter explaining how you’ll get your discount.

You’ll usually receive a Post Office voucher in the post and instructions on redeeming it. 

It’s vital to cash in these vouchers as soon as you receive them.

Data from the Post Office, showed that up to £3million worth of vouchers went unclaimed last year.

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If you have a smart prepayment meter, your energy supplier will automatically credit your meter with the discount.

What energy bill help is available?

There’s a number of different ways to get help paying your energy bills if you’re struggling to get by.

If you fall into debt, you can always approach your supplier to see if they can put you on a repayment plan before putting you on a prepayment meter.

This involves paying off what you owe in instalments over a set period.

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If your supplier offers you a repayment plan you don’t think you can afford, speak to them again to see if you can negotiate a better deal.

Several energy firms have grant schemes available to customers struggling to cover their bills.

But eligibility criteria vary depending on the supplier and the amount you can get depends on your financial circumstances.

For example, British Gas or Scottish Gas customers struggling to pay their energy bills can get grants worth up to £2,000.

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British Gas also offers help via its British Gas Energy Trust and Individuals Family Fund.

You don’t need to be a British Gas customer to apply for the second fund.

EDF, E.ON, Octopus Energy and Scottish Power all offer grants to struggling customers too.

Thousands of vulnerable households are missing out on extra help and protections by not signing up to the Priority Services Register (PSR).

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The service helps support vulnerable households, such as those who are elderly or ill, and some of the perks include being given advance warning of blackouts, free gas safety checks and extra support if you’re struggling.

Get in touch with your energy firm to see if you can apply.

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