Business – Page 85 – Michmutters
Categories
Business

North Carolina woman goes TikTok viral for living in her Honda Civic

The “Van Life” movement may conjure impressions of a freeing nomadic lifestyle in a nicely designed vehicle that looks great on social media, but a North Carolina woman has taken to TikTok to show the honest side of living on four wheels.

As reported by the new york postNikita Crump, who boasts 1 million followers on the app, has documented her experiences of living in her Honda Civic, which reportedly came from absolute necessity.

After struggling to pay her rent on time and skipping meals to save money – all the while going into debt despite working two jobs – she decided to call her car her home to avoid falling further into financial ruin.

Crump moved into her Honda in late 2019 and has lived in it ever since – and despite her candid discussions of what it takes to live this way, it is a way of avoiding today’s exorbitant costs of living, as inflation continues to boost food prices and , yes, rents.

It’s a way of saving money, but a number of her videos come with TikTok disclaimers saying, “Participating in this activity could result in you or others getting hurt.”

Crump discusses safety measures she takes. In a video from May, which earned more than 3 million views, she shows the window covers she uses at night-time to block out any views inside, which she says in the caption are handmade and “are effective when it comes to stealth, safety and insulation”.

Reflective and insulated materials coat one side of the covers, while another has black fabric, which goes against the window.

“It’s totally inconspicuous,” she says in the clip. “Nobody knows I’m in here.”

Two months later, on July 4, Crump posted another video showing her ways of finding places to sleep each night. She uses satellite view on Google Maps to locate “nice” neighborhoods, or those whose aerials show big properties with their own pools.

Then she zooms in to see if other cars are parked on the streets. The next step, she says, is to go at night-time to check it out for herself.

“The neighborhood is clean, nice and quiet – and I can blend in,” she says of one area in an undisclosed city where she spent a recent night next to an ivy-covered brick wall.

Other videos show her sleeping in parking lots, covered windows, and document the practicalities of living in such a small space on four wheels. On July 5, viewers can see her start the day by removing the window covers after folding and tucking her bedding onto her back seat.

She then heads into a Planet Fitness, whose parking lot she spent the night in, for a shower. She tugs a toiletry kit with her inside to wash up and brush her teeth.

Next comes eating. In that same clip, she shows a small, black tray that attaches to her steering wheel that she uses as a makeshift table to eat canned fruit, peanut butter sandwiches – or even take-out orders from Subway.

Later on, she shows the only way laundry can get done: in a laundromat at a stop along her way to Oregon.

“I always fold my laundry in the laundromat – that is not something that I’m trying to do in my car,” she says.

What’s more, there are storage containers in her trunk and portable devices to keep her electronics charged.

“Here’s things in my car that just make sense for homeless life,” she says, classifying her life candidly.

“I’ve been homeless by definition most of my adult life,” she says. “I’ve even lived in my car before, briefly.

“So I’m not that unfamiliar with being in uncomfortable situations and being homeless.”

Despite the serious nature of her situation, she receives an array of comments on her posts – including “This looks so lonely” and “Hotel Civic.” Others, meanwhile, support her.

“I love your resilience,” one commenter wrote in a July video, while another recent clip had another tell her, “Supporting your journey through and through!”

One even learned tips of the trade.

“Thank you for this,” another commenter replied. “I need to leave my place unexpectedly. This is unbelievably helpful.”

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

.

Categories
Business

The Oaks hotel in Sydney up for sale for $175 million

After five decades of ownership, the Thomas family are calling last drinks at their sprawling Oaks pub on Sydney’s lower north shore. A price tag of about $175 million is expected, which would make it the biggest sale in the sector’s history.

Oaks Hotel owner David “Taffy” Thomas said that after many unsolicited offers, he was ready to sell the Neutral Bay pub, famous for its 80-year-old oak tree that dominates the beer garden.

In April, former Sydney lord mayor Nelson Meers shelled out $160 million for the Crossroads Hotel in the western suburbs, reflecting the large appetite for the pub sector.

In May, the well-known Minskys Hotel, also on the lower north shore, sold for $39 million to the Karellas family with publican Mitchell Waugh.

The present building dates to 1939 after the original structure burned down.

The present building dates to 1939 after the original structure burned down.

The Thomas family bought the leasehold of the 2188-square-meter property in 1975 from Tooth & Co and have worked to make it the most well-known pub in the area.

David Thomas’s son and family representative Andrew Thomas said that given the offers, “it just feels like the right time for the family to move on, and we’ll leave The Oaks with fond memories and many friends.”

“It holds a very special place in the Australian hotel landscape, and we look forward to seeing its next incarnation under the new custodians,” he said.

Boosting the pub’s price tag is the mixed-use zoning and favorable planning guidelines that will enable a new owner to add five levels to the site.

Over the past few years, The Oaks has undergone extensive renovations to change the front bar, on the corner of Military and Ben Boyd Roads, into Taffy’s Sports Bar, create Alala’s Cocktail Bar and the Bar & Grill restaurant, add more lights to the oak tree and upgrade the beer garden.

Categories
Business

A2 Milk nears approval to sell baby formula in US market

​Bubs was the early mover in the application process and was one of the first infant formula manufacturers globally to receive temporary US government approval to help address the country’s baby formula shortage.

Bubs delivered more than 540,000 tins between May and July, funded by the US government’s Operation Fly Formula. Chinese-backed Bellamy’s Organic was approved to sell products at the end of June to ship at least 1.25 million tins of its formula.

The latest Australian formula manufacturer to get the tick on July 8 was Care a2 Plus – a little-known infant formula player formerly named Acell Milk Australia.

Care a2 Plus makes Care a2+ infant and toddler formula using single-sourced milk from Australian grass-fed a2 cows.

The FDA approved Care a2 Plus to deliver up to 4.8 million tins of Australian-made Care a2+ Premium Infant Formula with Iron and added Lactoferrin to the US market. Its first orders for more than 250,000 tins of infant formula are due to ship starting this week.

According to documents lodged with the corporate regulator, the company was founded in 2019 with Dominic Galati, Kerry Hyland and Gary Lissa all named as directors.

In early 2021, it snared $50 million in equity financing from alternative investment group LDA Capital. LDA’s other recent Australian portfolio companies include software group GetSwift, lithium player Altura Mining and technology group BrainChip Holdings.

Comment was being sought from Ms Hyland who did not return calls from the FinancialReview.

Empty shelves

About 160 companies have applied under this enforcement discretion policy – ​​including a2 milk and New Zealand’s Fonterra – all of which are seeking to gain a foothold into the world’s second-biggest formula market.

While the Abbott Laboratories’ plant in Michigan has reopened after being shuttered in February due to the contamination worry, and importation from global companies surged, US supermarket shelves in many places are still in short supply as the crisis moves into its sixth month.

Despite the need, the US food safety watchdog suspended emergency imports of baby formula from a UK-based company after accusing it of submitting altered paperwork to authorities in England, according to a Financial Timess article published August 1.

The suspension of Global Kosher’s plans to export millions of tins to the US is a major setback in the country which has traditionally relied on just three major players for domestic production including Abbott, Reckitt Benckiser and Nestlé. However, it might provide more opportunity for local players.

Categories
Business

Woolworths changes in-store trading hours for deli, meat and seafood sections

Giant Supermarket Woolworth’s you have announced a national change to the trading hours of its in-store deli, meat and seafood sections.

The grocer said the move to standardize operating hours of its counters across Australia is due to a shift in customer shopping behavior and to “offer a consistent customer experience across our store network”.

“We’ve made a change to the trading hours of our fresh service counters nationwide, due to a shift in customer shopping behaviour,” a spokesperson for Woolworths told 9News.com.au.

Woolworths wish to “offer a consistent customer experience” across their store network by altering operation hours. (Janie Barrett)

“This includes our meat, seafood and deli counters.

“Customers can still purchase similar products, such as chicken breast fillets and salmon, within our packed Fresh Convenience range located in-store.

“Select stores across the country will open one hour later or close one hour earlier to align with other stores and better match customer shopping patterns.”

The changes mean Woolworth’s Fresh Service Deli will open from 7am to 8pm, seven days a week.

The Seafood and Meat Counters will trade from 9:30am to 7pm on weekdays, and 9am to 7pm at the weekend.

Woolworths fresh service deli, seafood and meat sections to see a change in operating hours. (Janie Barrett)

A handful of stores will operate longer fresh service counter hours due to high customer demand at those specific stores.

Woolworths have posted signage at the Fresh Service areas and at the front of stores for customers to be informed of the altered trading hours.

The changes come following a handful of trials across New South Wales stores in May.

Categories
Business

Australian streaming apps from TV brands chip away at Netflix dominance | australian average

More Australians are turning to local streaming video platforms, according to new data, threatening the dominance of Netflix in the country.

While Disney+ remained the top downloaded entertainment app in the country in the last 12 months, with almost 2m downloads, Netflix came in fourth after Amazon and TikTok, according to the data from Sensor Tower.

Four Australian brands took spots in the top 10 – the streaming apps of Nine, ABC, Seven and Stan. All but Stan are free streaming on demand platforms.

Sensor Tower tracks the number of new downloads from both the Apple and Android stores.

Last month Netflix reported its second quarterly decline in subscriptions globally, dropping 1m subscribers in the quarter.

Sensor Tower’s APAC managing director, Tom Cui, said while Netflix was still the dominant player, there was room for locals.

“When many people think of streaming services, it’s Netflix, Amazon and Disney that spring to mind,” he said. “What our Sensor Tower data has shown is that actually, homegrown streaming services are giving these global brands a run for their money in terms of both popularity and revenue.”

In terms of estimated revenue, Streamotion – the Foxtel-owned platform for Binge and sporting stream company Kayo – beat out Netflix with $15.1m in the past 12 months in Australia, compared to $12.3m for Netflix. Disney Plus was also estimated to beat out both, with $56.1m, followed by TikTok ($28m) and Amazon ($17.6m).

“Streamotion is a key performer with its sporting service, Kayo, ranking higher than most entertainment apps for revenue in Australia,” Cui said. “This is a reflection of how much Aussies love their live sport and if you work in the streaming industry, this is where you can expect to continue to see a surge in consumer downloads and spend.”

Sign up to receive the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

PwC’s entertainment and media outlook for 2022 found that Australians spent $4.8bn on subscription services last year, and that was projected to rise to $6.5bn by 2026.

The report found 75% of households in Australia were paying for a streaming service in 2021, and that it was expected to rise to over 80% this year. The average household was paying for 2.3 subscription services, spending $40 a month.

A Roy Morgan survey in February found Netflix still dominated in terms of total subscriptions, up to 12m, compared to 7m for the group of Foxtel apps, and 4.7m for Stan.

QuickGuide

How to get the latest news from Guardian Australia

Show

Photograph: Tim Robberts/Stone RF

Thank you for your feedback.

The communications minister, Michelle Rowland, has indicated the government will push ahead with plans commenced by the former Morrison government to regulate streaming platforms to ensure they are producing Australian content.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority reported that Amazon Prime, Disney, Netflix and Stan spent a collective $178.9m in the 2020-21 financial year on 1,765 Australian programs.

Categories
Business

Australian house prices set to drop further as interest rates arise. Here’s a round up of what’s happening with property prices across Australia

Australia’s median property value has dropped by 2 per cent since the beginning of May, to $747,800—a figure that includes houses and apartments, the latest housing data shows.

CoreLogic research director Tim Lawless says Australia’s housing market conditions were likely to worsen as interest rates ticked higher through the remainder of the year.

Here’s a state-by-state breakdown of Australia’s latest housing figures.

Sydney: home prices down

Average change: 2.2 per cent decrease in July

Sydney median house value: $1,346,193

Median unit value: $806,310

Five of the eight capital cities recorded a month-on-month decline in July, led by Sydney dwelling values ​​recording a drop of 2.2 per cent.

“Although the housing market is only three months into a decline, the national Home Value Index shows that the rate of decline is comparable with the onset of the global financial crisis (GFC) in 2008, and the sharp downswing of the early 1980s,” Mr Lawless said.

“In Sydney, where the downturn has been particularly accelerated, we are seeing the sharpest value falls in almost 40 years.”

The harbor city still has a median house price of $1.35 million and median unit price of $806,300.

Adelaide: home prices up

Change: 0.4 per cent increase in July

adelaide median house value: $705,634

Median unit value: $431,409

Corelogic data shows Adelaide dwellings have recorded a 24.1 per cent annual increase.

Brisbane: home prices down

Change: 0.8 per cent drop in July

Brisbane median house value: $884,336

Median unit value: $504,520

Brisbane edged into negative territory for the first time since August 2020.

Mr Lawless says the trend in rising rents is seen in each capital city, led by Brisbane with a 4.2 per cent rental rise over the three months to July.

“Rental markets are extremely tight, with vacancy rates around 1 per cent or lower across many parts of Australia,” he said.

Canberra: home prices down

Change: 1.1per cent drop in July

canberra median house value: $1,047,912

Median unit value: $626,128

Canberra’s median house value sits at $1.05 million.

Mr Lawless said that unit values ​​across the combined capital cities are generally recording smaller falls compared with house values.

“This trend is most apparent across the three largest capitals as well as Canberra, where housing affordability challenges may be deflecting more demand towards the medium to high-density sector,” Mr Lawless said.

“Such widespread and rapid rental growth is likely to remain one of the key domestic factors pushing up inflation, along with construction, food, transport and energy costs.

“While some of these can be attributed to global supply chain issues, the rental situation is a domestic one caused by a combination of tight supply and amplified demand,” Mr Lawless said.

Darwin: home prices went up

Average change: 0.5 per cent increase

Darwin median house value: $589,748

Median unit value: $374,340

Gray roofs in a Tasmanian suburb
The RBA has increased interest rates for three straight months, with another increase expected this afternoon.(abcnews)

Hobart: home prices down

Change: 1.5 per cent decrease

Hobart median house value: $782,748

Median unit value: $577,307

Corelogic data shows Hobart’s dwelling values ​​recorded a 10.1 per cent increase over the year to July.

Melbourne: home prices down

Change: 1.5 per cent decrease

Melbourne median house value: $964,950

Median unit value: $614,351

Melbourne dwelling prices are now down for five months in a row with prices recording a 1.5 per cent decline in July.

The data shows that major regional centers Geelong, Ballarat also recorded a decline in home values ​​over the three months to July.

Perth: home prices slightly up

Change: 0.2 per cent increase

Perth median house value: $587,024

Median unit value: $411,460

Looking at annual figures, Perth dwellings have recorded a 5.5 per cent increase.

Mr Lawless says that Perth, Adelaide, and Darwin property markets had recorded a sharp slowdown in the pace of capital gains since the first interest rate hike in May.

A table showing that Australia's median property price dropped 1.3 per cent in July 2022 to $747,812.
Property prices in Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart fell sharply in July.(CoreLogic)

How will rate rises change things?

The RBA has lifted the cash rate by 1.75 percentage points since its first rate rise in May to 1.85 per cent.

Just as the cut in interest rates to record lows was the key driver of the price boom coming out of the pandemic lockdowns, AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver says the surge in interest rates now underway will be the key driver of the property market ahead.

“Being able to borrow at a fixed rate of 2 per cent or less was a key driver of the boom in prices with fixed rate lending accounting for 40-50 per cent of new lending about a year ago,” he said.

“But with fixed mortgage rates now up nearly three-fold from their lows and variable rates rising rapidly this has substantially reduced the amount new home buyers can borrow and hence their capacity to pay.

“As a result, the rug has effectively been pulled out from under the property market.”

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.
Australian house prices dropping at ‘fastest rate’ since 2008(Emilia Terzon)

.

Categories
Business

Arnott’s new Less Sugar biscuit range released

Arnott’s has released a new line of some of its favorite biscuits. But these treats come with a lot less guilt.

The company has released new packs of its Scotch Finger and Shortbread Cream biscuits with 50 per cent less sugar.

The new Less Sugar treats are now available on shelves in the biscuit aisle at all major grocery stores for $4.70 a pack.

Arnott’s said the release came after research conducted by the company revealed a third of Aussies are looking to limit their sugar intake.

But, 60 per cent said they would still buy a “better for you” version if it tasted the same as the original biscuit.

Arnott’s has been broadening its range to meet more dietary restrictions with the release of a gluten-free range in 2021 that featured Tiny Teddies, Mint Cream and Scotch Finger biscuits.

Arnott’s marketing manager Pauline Mercier said: “We’ve been listening to what consumers are asking for; one of the ongoing requests is for Arnott’s to offer more options that suit their specific dietary needs.

“Our dedicated bakers have spent more than a year perfecting the reduced-sugar versions of some of our beloved biscuits and we are confident they’ve got the same great taste as their originals!”

Just a week ago, Arnott’s announced its new Shapes Fully Loaded range.

The range includes Sizzling Meatlovers, Flame Grilled Chicken and Ultimate Cheese and sell for just $3.50 a pack.

The three flavors are currently available for Aussies to snap up at Woolworths.

.

Categories
Business

Metricon sacks NSW sales staff via Microsoft Teams

Construction giant Metricon has unceremoniously sacked the majority of its NSW sales staff via Microsoft Teams in the latest sign that the struggling company is teetering on collapse.

David Shorten, Metricon’s NSW state sales manager, informed staff at the Monday morning meeting that numbers would be cut to just 18, from roughly 60 currently, with redundancy payouts offered to those unable to be redeployed.

About 15 trainee sales consultants have also been terminated with no offer of redeployment.

“To better accommodate and reflect the requirements of the current market and ensure the most appropriate deployment of resources, we have undertaken an important review of the sales team,” Mr Shorten said in a statement read out in the Teams meeting.

“This is necessary to ensure we remain competitive in both the short and long term. The review was not undertaken lightly and has resulted in proposed changes to the current structure of the team. We understand that you may feel anxious at this time and that you are likely to have a number of questions. Under the proposed structure, the number of new home advisors will be reduced to 18.”

The affected employees were given until midday on Wednesday to offer any “thoughts, insights or feedback you may have regarding the proposed structure and approach”, with employees to be told if they’re being sacked by the end of the week.

Mr Shorten said Metricon would “select the most appropriately skilled individuals to occupy the positions moving forward” but warned “options are limited” for redeployment.

“In the event that you were unable to be redeployed to a suitable alternative position within the notice period, you would receive the relevant redundancy entitlements if they were available to you,” he said.

Employees who are offered one of the remaining roles but choose not to accept may not be entitled to a redundancy payout.

One employee, who asked not to be identified, said he had been expecting the announcement after Metricon closed its HR portal last Friday.

He said there had been some staff turnover recently with “people abandoning ship to go to competitors”, and those who stayed “basically had the rug pulled out from under them” through “no fault of their own” after believing the company’s repeated public denials that it was facing difficulties.

“It has not been received well by some of them,” he told news.com.au. “I’m a little bit burned by the whole situation.”

The company’s largest home builder was plunged into crisis in May amid reports it was on the verge of financial ruin and engaging in crisis talks with the Victorian government, following the sudden death of its founder Mario Biasin.

Acting chief executive Peter Langfelder has repeatedly shot down those allegations, but a question mark still hangs over Metricon’s future despite the company’s directors injecting $30 million into its business to allay fears about its survival, and a rescue deal being struck with Commonwealth Bank.

Last month, Metricon listed nearly 60 display homes for sale across NSW, Queensland, South Australia and Victoria, worth a total of around $65 million.

The Sydney employee said “events have snowballed” since Mr Biasin’s death, adding he was skeptical the company could survive.

“We still don’t have homeowners’ warranty insurance,” he said.

“We have not been taking deposits for the last 10 weeks. It should be known. People are still waiting for builds. I’m glad we haven’t been able to take deposits – do you want to be the guy that takes someone’s $20,000, $30,000 life savings and the company goes bankrupt in three or four weeks’ time?”

Reached for comment on Tuesday, Metricon confirmed it was “process of an internal restructure of the business, with an increased focus on delivering homes to more than 6000 Australians whose houses will be constructed this year”.

“To better accommodate and reflect the requirements of the current market and ensure the most appropriate deployment of resources, Metricon is working to appropriately reduce its sales and marketing capability while it focuses on the construction and delivery of more than 6000 homes,” a spokeswoman said in a statement to news.com.au.

“We have commenced a consultation process with our people. This process is proposed to lead to a reduction of personnel and redundancies across the national business.”

The spokeswoman said 2020 and 2021 saw record demand for homebuilding and that Metricon “expects demand to settle at pre-pandemic levels”. “As a result, the business will rebalance towards construction on homes it is currently building and the thousands more in the pipeline – the biggest volume in the company’s history,” she said.

The impacted roles will be at the “front-end of the business, predominantly in sales and marketing roles, representing approximately 9 per cent of the national workforce”.

“With the headwinds buffeting the industry, specifically labor costs due to competition for skills, combined with present global material cost hikes and with our very strong existing pipeline of work, we need to carefully balance the current pipeline of new builds with the construction side of the business,” Mr Langfelder said in the statement.

“We are working to restructure our front-end of the business given the current climate and the need to move forward efficiently. We are committed to looking after any of our people who may be impacted by these proposed changes, and they will continue to have ongoing access to the company’s support and mental health services.”

Mr Langfelder said Metricon was rebalancing the business’ focus over the next 18 months on executing builds as quickly and efficiently as possible whilst maintaining equilibrium in the pipeline.

“We have previously said that our company has a proven history of success and remains profitable and viable, with the full support of our key stakeholders – this remains the case today,” he said.

Mr Langfelder said Metricon was still expected to continue to contract on average 100 homes per week, in line with pre-pandemic levels. “Our future construction pipeline shows no sign of slowing down with more than 600 site-starts scheduled for 2023,” he said.

The spokeswoman did not address the claim that Metricon was not taking deposits.

The Australian building industry has been plagued with escalating issues that have already seen Gold Coast-based Condev and industry giant Probuild enter into liquidation in recent months, while smaller operators like Hotondo Homes Hobart and Perth firms Home Innovation Builders and New Sensation Homes, as well as Sydney-based firm Next have also failed, leaving homeowners out of pocket and with unfinished houses.

The crisis is the result of a perfect storm of conditions hitting one after the other, including supply chain disruptions due largely to the pandemic and then the Russia-Ukraine conflict, followed by skilled labor shortages, skyrocketing costs of materials and logistics and extreme weather events .

The industry’s traditional reliance on fixed-price contracts has also seriously exacerbated the problem, with contracts signed months before a build gets underway, including the surging costs of essential materials such as timber and steel.

It comes after it recently emerged that Australia recorded a staggering 3917 liquidations or administration appointments across all industries during the 2021-22 financial year.

The construction sector led the charge, representing 28 per cent of all insolvencies, although firms from countless industries also failed in the face of soaring inflation and interest rate pressures, Covid chaos, labor shortages and supply chain disruptions.

There were 1536 collapses in NSW, with Victoria recording 1022, Queensland 665, WA 350, South Australia 196, 91 for the ACT, 29 for Tasmania and 28 in the Northern Territory.

According to consumer credit reporting agency Equifax, “small-scale operators in Australia’s construction industry could well be the canary in the coal mine for the difficulties that lie ahead for this sector”.

The company late last month claimed that “the significant increase in construction company failures since the start of the year shows no sign of abating”, with provisional data indicating that construction insolvencies increased 19 per cent for the month of May, sitting 43 per cent higher than May 2021.

Overall, construction insolvencies have increased 30 per cent over the last 12 months, according to Equifax.

[email protected] with Alexis Carey

.

Categories
Business

Canstar research shows banks offering discounts on mortgages for low-risk borrowers

Borrowers with big deposits or equity in their homes can shave more than $50 a month off their mortgage repayments as banks ramp up efforts to win low-risk customers.

Research by financial comparison site, Canstar, shows up to half of all lenders are now offering discounts to borrowers with a sizeable deposit or home equity.

Canstar group executive of financial services, Steve Mickenbecker, said banks were seeking to counter the risk posed by falling house prices on the east coast.

Canstar group executive of financial services Steve Mickenbecker.
Camera IconCanstar’s Steve Mickenbecker says customers need to ask to get the discounts. Credit: METHOD

He said the discounts were being offered by many lenders in WA even though local property prices had not failed.

But Mr Mickenbecker said it was up to borrowers to request the discount from their bank, with lenders highly unlikely to volunteer the potential saving.

The new research shows that 49 per cent of banks are offering customers with a 40 per cent deposit – or equity in their home worth the same amount – a discount on their interest rate worth an average 0.21 per cent.

Do not wait for a bank to tell you because it rarely happens

Its research states that a $470,000 loan with these banks would normally be subject to an average variable rate of 3.69 per cent interest, if the borrower had an 80 per cent loan-to-value (LVR) ratio on a mortgage for a $587,000 house.

However, these same lenders would discount the rate to 3.48 per cent for the same sized loan for customers with a 60 per cent LVR, which is worth a saving of $56 per month in interest.

”When it comes to the discount, you have to take the initiative – do not wait for a bank to tell you because it rarely happens,” Mr Mickenbecker said.

“And a 0.21 per cent discount is a decent saving.”

The research shows a smaller interest rate discount – worth 0.13 per cent – is being offered by almost a third of lenders to customers with a 30 per cent deposit, or the same sized equity in their home.

.

Categories
Business

Travel chaos: Airline experts warn delays and cancellations will continue for months

An aviation expert has warned travel chaos “pain” could continue into next year as the industry struggles to meet soaring demand after stripping services during the pandemic.

Flight Center managing director Graham Turner cautioned travelers to be wary of delays and cancellations until at least the end of the year as airlines contend with inexperienced and ill staff.

“Bear in mind the aviation industry, and you know travel industry generally, has two-and-a-half years when we had to absolutely cut to the bone everything and now building that back up is quite difficult,” he said on Channel 9’s Today show.

Mr Turner admitted the aviation industry was experiencing a “tough period” and asked travelers to exercise “a bit of patience”.

The travel boss noted the chaos was more manageable for domestic travelers despite the mass cancellations and delays.

On Monday, 40 flights between Sydney and Melbourne were canceled and hundreds of people were left sitting on plans after a computer outage grounded Qantas plans.

“Domestically, our experience is although there are delays, a lot of changes, quite a few cancellations, generally most people are getting away and getting to their destination,” he said.

“It is a bit harder internationally because if you get international cancellations it can be quite hard to get seats.”

Mr Turner said there would continue to be “pain” for travelers for at least the next couple of months as the industry grapples with staffing issues and the effects of the ongoing pandemic.

Happily, he predicts, traveling around Australia will be much easier by the end of the year when “all of this really settles down”.

“Domestically, it will improve and we certainly predict by October/November, assuming the Omicron does settle down, it will be much better off,” he said.

While the news will surely be welcomed by local travellers, those looking to travel internationally have no reassuring timeline for when the dust will settle.

The bleak news comes as Australia’s airports gain international attention for all the wrong reasons.

Sydney’s Kingsford Smith International Airport was recently ranked one of the 10 worst airports in the world for flight delays.

Meanwhile, social media has been flooded with angry travelers reporting lost baggage, delayed or canceled flights and staggering queues.

.