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Occasional Paper 56: Fair exchange: Presenting foreign exchange quotes to improve consumer choice [pdf]
In this study, we tested 3 different practices for presenting cost and exchange rate information in an online experiment with a nationally representative sample of participants. -
Occasional Paper 56: Fair exchange: Presenting foreign exchange quotes to improve consumer choice
In this study, we tested 3 different practices for presenting cost and exchange rate information in an online experiment with a nationally representative sample of participants. -
Occasional Paper 50: Addendum [pdf]
Addendum to Occasional Paper 50: Quantifying the High-Frequency Trading ‘Arms Race’: A Simple New Methodology and Estimates -
Occasional Paper No. 55: Better the lender you know? Limited attention and lender familiarity in UK mortgage choices [pdf]
Occasional Paper No. 55: Better the lender you know? Limited attention and lender familiarity in UK mortgage choices. -
Occasional Paper No 54: When Discounted Rates End: The Cost of Taking Action in the Mortgage Market [pdf]
Occasional Paper No 54: Occasional Paper No 54: When Discounted Rates End: The Cost of Taking Action in the Mortgage Market -
Occasional Paper No. 54: When discounted rates end: the cost of taking action in the mortgage market
When an introductory mortgage rate expires the majority of borrowers remortgage, but a minority end up paying reversion interest rates. Who are these borrowers and how much could they benefit from remortgaging? -
Occasional Paper No. 55: Better the lender you know? Limited attention and lender familiarity in UK mortgage choices
This Occasional Paper looks at the effect of brand loyalty when borrowers are choosing new mortgages. -
Occasional Paper No. 53: Changes in the mortgage market post 4.5 limit on loan to income ratios [pdf]
FCA Occasional Paper No. 53: Changes in the mortgage market post 4.5 limit on loan to income ratios -
Occasional Paper No. 53: Changes in the mortgage market post 4.5 limit on loan to income ratios
Lenders have been encouraged to restrict the number of mortgages they issue with high LTI ratios following concerns over excessive and unsustainable borrowing for consumers. How has this affected allocation of mortgages and their prices? -
Occasional Paper 52: Bond liquidity and dealer inventories [pdf]
Read a joint FCA and Securities and Exchange Commission working paper on bond liquidity and dealer inventories, using US and European regulatory data.