Was on nightshift last night went past tesco at 9.30, it was 155.7, Back past on the way home 157.9. Will check again tonight.
Stop bloody checking, every time you do that it goes up!Was on nightshift last night went past tesco at 9.30, it was 155.7, Back past on the way home 157.9. Will check again tonight.
Was on nightshift last night went past tesco at 9.30, it was 155.7, Back past on the way home 157.9. Will check again tonight.
Mine was £97 a couple of weeks ago when ot was £140 something, by the time I need to go again it could be £170Just filled the wife’s A1, still 155.7, £60 to fill it as well, not looking forward to filling my own ?
Saw a picture of a pump saying £2.19!!!Heard on the radio that a place in Chelsea has broken the £2 mark! It's around £1.76 around us.
Saw a picture of a pump saying £2.19!!!
I filled up on Tuesday at £1.49 - supermarket prices.
Also heard a couple on the golf whatsapp mentioning heating oil - 750 litres wanted, quoted just under £1600! When i asked how long that would last, they said about 3 months in winter
Price of Brent crude down 17% .. right let's see how long that takes to pass on
Yeah, but then promptly rose 3%. I predict that the 17% drop won't percolate but the 3% rise will... It's now becoming easy money for already greedy fuel suppliers.
Oil bought on long term contract months ago now being adjusted for today's price... It's like your bank phoning you today to say your 2001 £50k mortgage is being increased to £100k because your house is worth that now...
Schisters the lot of them.
155.9 petrol here now.
Banks are crooks aswell ofc. My grandfather in the mid 90s had cancer (he still with us today its not all bad a story) his company health plan would pay for just one more round of chemo so out of desperation he did equity release on his house for 30,000 .. (his house is a 5 bed detached in greater london) they own most of his house I think its something like when he passes they keep all but 130,000 and thats it.. even tho the value has greatly risen.
a few years ago a property developer wanted to buy a few metres of his garden for the apartments going up next door.. the bank refused because it would devalue their asset ... even tho they lent him 30,000 and the house is now worth upwards of £1 million.
long as they get their pound of flesh.
Not really sure what your point is here. Banks, as crooked as they may be, don't phone you telling your your mortgage has been re-appraised to today's values. Fuel producers, effectively, are doing that.
The issue of the bank's £30k "investment" in the property is fairly straightforward. The invested stake in the property has increased in value linearly with the value of the property. Your grandad didn't pay £1m for the property and he has seen his equity stake in the property rise. He (through no fault of his) "sold" some of that equity to the bank for a return (adjust that £30k for inflation to today). What would your pension fund look like if the invested stakes only ever retained the value that you invested regardless if the value of shares rocketed?