The cost of motoring is soaring, with drivers spending an average of £5,500 a year to keep their car on the road
Category: Aggregator
This Is Money: Google Clicks With £3000 Per Minute
Google has turned in another stellar performance, revealing it is making more than £3000 every minute of the day
This Is Money: Brief Honeymoon For Banks
Just 24 hours after the good and the great of finance were lording it up on Downing Street, High Street banks are back in the doghouse
This Is Money: Homeloans Hit Another Record
Homeowners borrowed a record monthly amount again in September, but mortgage lending slipped back slightly from the previous month
This Is Money: Credit Giants Hit Russian Music Site
Credit card giant Visa has joined the battle against a Russian website accused of profiting by selling cut-price music downloads illegally
Motley Fool: Hazardous Home Loans To Avoid!
One of the most important choices that the average person makes is deciding which home to buy — and choosing a mortgage to pay for it.
Motley Fool: Ten Tips To Get Credit
Debt breeds more debt, which can spiral out of control. (Um, I’m supposed to put a little humour into my articles, but I’m not sure how with an opening like that. A comedy thunderclap perhaps? I’ll get the sound-effects team on it…)
Motley Fool: Make A 28% To 67% Return Today
As well as this week being National Identity Fraud Prevention Week, 16 to 22 October is also National Giving Week. What’s more, Children In Need is just a month away on Friday, 17 November, so we Brits will be digging deep to raise or donate money for good causes over the next month.
Motley Fool: Is Offsetting Your Mortgage The Answer?
What should you do if you’re given a large bonus from work that you don’t want to spend now, but still want easy access to in the future? Stash it carefully away? Or how about use it to reduce the interest payable on your mortgage?
Motley Fool: 0% Mortgages: Too Good To Be True?
I suspect that most people who see a mortgage advertised at 0% have alarms, clarions and sirens ringing in their head all at once, but is there anything to these mortgages?