Tick, tick, tick... | We're kind of an IG deal |

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Hi John, here's what you need to know for September 18th in 3:14 minutes.

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Today's big stories

  1. The Bank of England promised to keep UK interest rates the same… for now
  2. There's an under-the-radar drinks market with a huge amount of growth potential – Read Now
  3. Online trading platform IG Group reported stronger-than-expected quarterly revenue
1/3

Borrowed Time

Borrowed Time

What’s Going On Here?

The Bank of England (BoE) announced it’d leave the UK’s key interest rate unchanged on Thursday, but it might only be a matter of time before it’s forced to cut rates.

What Does This Mean?

The BoE’s decision comes after identical ones this month by the US Federal Reserve (the Fed), European Central Bank, and Bank of Japan. But where they see an improving economic outlook, the BoE warned the UK’s early recovery could implode. That’s because a no-deal Brexit could cause even more damage than the pandemic itself – not to mention that unemployment could shoot up when the UK’s support for furloughed workers stops next month.

Those risks have spooked the BoE so much it’s considering cutting UK interest rates into negative territory. That should keep the economy ticking over, but it’s not great news for commercial banks: negative rates are negative for profits, as eurozone banks know all too well, Good thing the BoE’s in damage control discussions with the UK banks’ regulator, then…

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Action plans.
When central banks lower interest rates, it usually boosts the region’s stocks by making them appear more attractive than low-returning savings accounts. But investors who buy cheap-looking British stocks in hopes of an imaginary recovery risk getting caught in a “value trap”. And that, plus the increased likelihood of negative UK rates, might’ve encouraged investors to ditch British assets on Thursday – including the pound, which initially fell 0.5% versus the US dollar (tweet this).

The bigger picture: Reaction plans.
The BoE said it wouldn’t raise rates until inflation – i.e. the rate at which prices of goods and services increase – rises more quickly. The Fed said the same on Thursday, but also predicted US interest rates won’t increase until 2023. That’s caused confusion: those rates should stay low for longer given that the Fed thinks inflation will only be 2% by then. Remember, it recently promised to let inflation run higher than that for a while…

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2/3 Premium

Seltzer Stocks Look Tasty

What’s Going On Here?

Another brewing giant announced an assault on the fast-growing hard seltzer category this week, but analysts think one smaller stock is in a better position to bubble up.

Find out what that high-potential stock is with Finimize Premium

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3/3

Trump Card

Trump Card

What’s Going On Here?

Online trading platform IG Group revealed a better-than-expected revenue update on Thursday that its investors wouldn’t have swapped for anything.

What Does This Mean?

Analysts had been expecting IG to make about $780 million in revenue this financial year, which started in June. So when the company announced its first-quarter revenue alone was $270 million – over a third of that annual prediction and 62% higher than the same time last year – investors were all too happy to send its shares up 6%. IG reckons its success was partly thanks to 50% more active customers than the same time last year, as well as the 129% increase in new customers placing their first ever trade. It’s in good company too: rivals Plus500 and CMC Markets have both pointed to similarly positive trends recently.

Why Should I Care?

For you personally: See what you’ve done.
The more activity on IG’s platform, the more money it makes. So it would’ve been helped this summer by the risk-hungry “YOLO traders” who hoped to turn their stimulus checks into a quick buck – first by buying up shares of bankrupt companies, then by investing in short-term call options on big US tech stocks last month. And if that wasn’t risky enough, traders using IG tend to rely on borrowed money – or “leverage” – which amplifies potential losses as well as potential gains.

The bigger picture: Pick your poison.
IG makes its money from both trading commissions and “spreads” – that is, by offering the trader a slightly worse price than if they’d accessed the markets directly and pocketing the difference. There are trading platforms that offer “zero-fee” trading on certain assets these days, but there’s also no such thing as a free lunch. They need to make money from you somehow – and they might do it by selling your orders to brokers, or selling them to institutional investors who use your data to inform their own trades.

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💬 Quote of the day

“I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.”

– Douglas Adams (an English author and satirist)
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🤔 Q&A · RE: Disaster Zone

“Why are taxes expected to rise in the next few years?”

– Kesh in London, UK

“Governments worldwide have responded to the pandemic by announcing major tax cuts, in hopes that the money it’ll save people and businesses will be used to help the economy get back on its feet. Meanwhile, governments have been spending record amounts on covering workers’ paychecks while they’re forced to stay home, as well as bailing out some of the hardest-hit industries. And seeing as that money’s been borrowed, it’ll have to be repaid eventually. The main income lever governments have is taxes, which means they’ll probably be forced to raise them eventually to get their now-ballooned debts back to more manageable levels.”

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🌏 Finimize Community

🐲 Enter the Dragon

Next Thursday, we’ll be chatting with Norah Casey, an Irish businesswoman known for – among many, many other things – starring on Dragon’s Den (that’s the British version of Shark Tank). But Norah’s more than just an icon of the screen: find out how her fascinating career took her there.

🔥 Retire & Thrive: 7pm Amsterdam Time / 6pm UK Time, September 21st
😎 Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship: 7pm UK Time / 2pm NYC Time, September 23rd
🙋‍♀️ Women & Money: 5.30pm Perth Time / 10am UK Time, September 23rd
📈 A Tale of Two Recoveries: 6pm UK Time / 1pm NYC Time, September 24th
🐲 Invest Like a Dragon: 11am Ireland / UK Time, September 24th
💻 Find Career Fulfillment: 5pm Dubai Time / 2pm UK Time, September 29th
✈️ Healthy Financial Habits for Expats: 5pm UK Time, October 15th

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