18 Jan 2024 | 07:30
Thursday newspaper round-up: Housing market, Tata Steel, electric cars
(Sharecast News) - The housing market has had some "respite" in recent weeks as activity picked up amid easing mortgage rates after a challenging 2023, according to surveyors. Inquiries from new buyers are approaching a flatter trend, after falling in recent months, according to the December report from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics). - Guardian
Concern is mounting that Tata Steel will confirm plans to shut down much of its production at the Port Talbot steelworks during a crunch meeting with trade unions, putting thousands of jobs at risk. Three sources said they believed that Tata, owned by the Indian billionaire Ruia brothers, was on the brink of confirming plans to close Port Talbot's two blast furnaces, ending more than a century of making steel from scratch in south Wales. - Guardian
Electric cars lose as much as half of their value after just three years on the road, new figures show, as the rate of depreciation far outstrips conventional equivalents. Research from Auto Trader said there were "unsustainable levels of depreciation" in the electric car market, with used prices of battery-powered vehicles dropping by 23pc in the last year alone. - Telegraph
Chinese brands will launch a price war and will capture a sixth of the UK electric car market by 2030, according to Auto Trader. With BYD, China's largest electric car manufacturer, having overtaken Tesla as the world leader in zero-emission vehicles and with Shanghai Automotive's MG brand already out-selling Volkswagen and BMW in the segment in Britain, a new order is coming, according to the online car-buying platform's latest The Road to 2030 report. - The Times
Britons doubled their spending on bowling in December compared with the same month a year ago, according to Lloyds Bank. People also spent more on booking holidays last month, with demand for cruises up by more than a quarter compared with December 2022, the high street lender said. - The Times