Author: Jordan

Anyone fighting off high-interest debt, listen up: Right now, top balance transfers cards are offering a full 21 months of 0% intro APR.That means you’ll pay 0% interest for the rest of this year…and all of next year, taking you into early 2028. If you’re looking to save on piling debt and/or upcoming purchases, you can’t do much better than that.Here are three credit cards that can get you 0% intro APR until 2028. 1. Wells Fargo Reflect® CardBest for: Intro APR offer on purchases and balance transfers If a friend or family member asked me to recommend a balance…

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Delayed 06:37:52 2026-04-07 am EDT 5-day change 1st Jan Change 1,956.44 USD -1.01% -0.39% -4.87% Published on 04/07/2026 at 06:30 am EDT Reuters This article is reserved for members Unlock the article: REGISTER NOW! © Reuters – 2026 DurationAuto.2 months3 months6 months9 months1 year2 years5 years10 yearsMax.PeriodDayWeek Indices Europe America AsiaStock MarketStock Market NewsLifezone Metals Ltd – announces first production of platinum, palladium and rhodium from its U.S. PGM recycling projectOUR EXPERTS ARE HERE FOR YOUMonday – Friday 9am-12pm / 2pm-6pm GMT + 1 Legal information | Cookie settings | MarketScreener Blog | About us | Copyright © 2026 Surperformance…

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Registration has officially opened for the Buy-to-Let & Investor Finance Expo 2026, taking place at Cranmore Park in Birmingham on 2nd June, with an expanded focus designed to reflect the full spectrum of today’s landlord and investor finance market.  Now in its third year, the event – formerly known as the National Buy-to-Let Adviser Event (NBTLAE) – has been repositioned to better support advisers operating in an increasingly complex landscape. While buy-to-let remains at its core, the expo now brings together a wider ecosystem of products and providers that modern landlords rely on, including bridging, development finance, second charge lending and portfolio structuring.  Supported by Fleet Mortgages, Keystone Property Finance and OSB Group,…

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Hampshire Trust Bank (HTB) has launched Flow, a new residential buy-to-let (BTL) proposition offering rates from 5.54%, as part of a refined three-tier structure across its specialist mortgages range. The new structure – Flow, Core and Bespoke – is designed to align pricing and engagement more closely with the complexity and scale of each case. Flow targets more straightforward residential buy-to-let scenarios, while Core and Bespoke continue to support increasingly complex and large-scale transactions. Flow is available from 5.54% on a 2-year fixed product at 75% loan-to-value (LTV) and is positioned 55 basis points below equivalent Core products. It supports…

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Oil prices rose after US President Donald Trump signalled that an escalation of strikes on Iran could come as soon as Tuesday, renewing fears that oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz could remain constrained for longer.Energy – Oil climbs on Trump escalation threatOil prices rose after US President Donald Trump signalled that an escalation of strikes on Iran could come as soon as Tuesday, renewing fears that oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz could remain constrained for longer.Brent traded above $111/bbl in Tuesday’s morning session, while WTI was around $116/bbl after it closed at its highest since June…

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Hampshire Trust Bank has introduced Flow, a new residential buy-to-let proposition offering rates from 5.54% for cases within clearly defined criteria. Flow sits within a defined three-part structure across HTB’s specialist mortgages proposition: Flow, Core and Bespoke.  Core and Bespoke reflect how HTB already supports everyday specialist transactions and larger-scale requirements, now aligned within a clearer commercial framework. Flow is introduced with rates from 5.54% on a two-year fix at 75% LTV. Rates sit 90 basis points below equivalent Core products, while arrangement fees remain unchanged. Flow supports defined residential buy-to-let cases, including HMOs and multi-unit blocks, up…

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TOKYO: Japanese government bonds (JGBs) advanced on Tuesday after a smooth 30-year bond auction reassured investors, easing market concerns that demand for the sale might be weak. The 30-year JGB yield sank 2 basis points (bps) to 3.735%. Yields move inversely to bond prices. “In the morning session, caution ahead of the auction was probably what pushed long-term and super-long-term yields higher, and in the afternoon session they’re simply being bought back in response to the auction result,” said Naoya Hasegawa, the chief bond strategist at Okasan Securities, adding that the weak result of last week’s 10-year bond auction was…

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