UK News
Middle East crisis live: Trump extends pause on energy site strikes; German minister says US-Iran talks to take place ‘very soon’ | US-Israel war on Iran
US and Iran plan to meet soon in Pakistan, says German minister
Germany’s foreign minister is saying the US and Iran have had indirect negotiations and that representatives from both sides plan to meet shortly in Pakistan.
“Based on my information there have been indirect contacts, and preparations have been made to meet directly. That would be very soon in Pakistan, apparently,” Johann Wadephul told Deutschlandfunk radio on Friday, cited by Reuters.
The report could not be independently confirmed.
Key events
Saudi Arabia urging US to keep up Iran attacks, intelligence source confirms

Julian Borger
Saudi Arabia has urged the US to ramp up attacks on Iran, a Saudi intelligence source has confirmed, while it is weighing a decision on whether to join the fight directly.
The Saudi source confirmed reporting in the New York Times, which said the kingdom’s de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has urged Donald Trump not to cut short his war against Iran, and that the US-Israeli campaign represented a “historic opportunity” to remake the Middle East.
The intelligence source said Riyadh was not just calling for the military campaign to be continued, but to be intensified. Trump appeared to confirm the report about the crown prince’s role, telling journalists on Tuesday: “Yeah, he’s a warrior. He’s fighting with us.”
There are no reports of active Saudi military involvement in the nearly four-week-old war so far, but a Saudi political analyst said the kingdom was likely to take that step if current peace efforts led by Pakistan failed.
Julian Borger is the Guardian’s senior international correspondent and Aram Roston is senior political enterprise reporter for the Guardian US.
US troops using Persian Gulf citizens as human shields, says Iranian foreign minister
Local people in Persian Gulf states are being used as human shields during the US-Israeli war on Iran, the Iranian foreign minister has said, according to the semi-official Tasnim News Agency.
From outset of this war, US soldiers fled military bases in GCC to hide in hotels and offices. They use GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] citizens as human shield.
Hotels in US deny bookings to officers who may endanger customers. GCC hotels should do same.”
Abbas Araghchi said in a post on his X account on Thursday.
Pakistan’s emerging role as broker in US-Iran peace talks
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, said on Tuesday his country is ready to “facilitate meaningful and conclusive talks” to end the war in the Middle East amid attempts to push Islamabad as a possible venue for negotiations between the US and Iran.
The White House confirmed that Pakistan’s army chief, Asim Munir, had a call with Donald Trump last weekend to discuss the conflict.
Qatar, Turkey and Egypt have been touted as potential venues for talks, but reportedly Tehran’s preference is Islamabad.
Read more about Pakistan and the role of JD Vance in Hannah Ellis-Peterson and Shah Meer Baloch’s report
Israeli military says it carried out ‘wide-scale’ strikes on Tehran
Israel’s military said it carried out strikes on targets in Tehran early on Friday, according to AFP.
A brief military statement said Israeli forces “completed a wide-scale wave of strikes targeting infrastructure of the Iranian terror regime in the heart of Tehran”.
The military said in a separate statement that it had also struck “ballistic missiles and aerial defense systems production sites across Iran”.
It reported hitting missile launchers and storage sites in western Iran, as well as missile production sites in the capital.
Donald Trump has in recent days repeatedly claimed progress in talks with Iran, even as Tehran denied any formal negotiations were taking place.
Interim summary
In case you’re just tuning in to today’s live coverage of the US-Israel war on Iran, here’s a snapshot of the latest. It’s 10.30am in Tehran, 9am in Tel Aviv and Beirut and 3am in Washington DC.
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Donald Trump said he would extend – again – his pause on his threat to attack Iran’s energy infrastructure for 10 days until 6 April, claiming that the request came from Tehran and that talks were going “very well”. The US president threatened last Saturday he would destroy Iranian power plants if Tehran did not reopen the strait of Hormuz. Then, on Monday, he postponed his threat for five days (until Friday), citing “very good and productive conversations” with Iran on ending the war – which Tehran dismissed as “fake news” designed to “manipulate” the oil markets. Now, he’s pushing that deadline back again.
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The price of Brent crude oil dropped after Trump’s latest announcement, but stock markets fell sharply in the US and Europe on Thursday and followed suit in Asia on Friday as investors worried about the war dragging on.
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The Pentagon is looking at sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give Trump more military options even as he weighs peace talks with Tehran, the Wall Street Journal reported, quoting defence department officials.
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Lebanese media said an Israeli strike hit Beirut’s southern suburbs early on Friday. Several explosions were heard from the Hezbollah stronghold and smoke was later billowing from the area. Israel has previously issued sweeping evacuation warnings for the area but provided no specific warning in advance of Friday’s strike, AFP said. It was unclear if there were any casualties.
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Yemen’s Houthis said there was “no cause for concern”, Lloyd’s List reported, amid fears that if Trump follows through on threats to seize Iran’s Kharg Island, Tehran may ask them to attack shipping in the Red Sea.
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A Thai-flagged cargo ship that was hit by unknown projectiles in the strait of Hormuz earlier this month has run aground off Iran’s Qeshm Island, Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency said on Friday.
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India has slashed taxes on diesel and petrol, the government announced, amid the war’s continued disruption of global energy supplies.
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The United Arab Emirates has told allies that it would participate in a multinational maritime task force intended to reopen the strait of Hormuz as it lobbies to form a coalition to ensure shipping can pass through the vital waterway, the Financial Times reported.
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The Israel Defence Forces’ chief of staff has warned that the military will “collapse in on itself” as it faces increasing demands and a growing manpower shortage while fighting on multiple fronts, according to Israeli media reports.
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Vietnam’s trade ministry says it has temporarily waived an environmental tax on fuel to cut soaring prices by more than a quarter.
Kuwait’s Shuwaikh port has been hit by drones that caused material damage, the Gulf state’s ports authority said on Friday, cited by Reuters.
No injuries were reported, it said.
US and Iran plan to meet soon in Pakistan, says German minister
Germany’s foreign minister is saying the US and Iran have had indirect negotiations and that representatives from both sides plan to meet shortly in Pakistan.
“Based on my information there have been indirect contacts, and preparations have been made to meet directly. That would be very soon in Pakistan, apparently,” Johann Wadephul told Deutschlandfunk radio on Friday, cited by Reuters.
The report could not be independently confirmed.
Here are some of the latest images coming in from the Middle East as the US-Israel war on Iran continues in its fourth week.
More now on India slashing taxes on diesel and petrol amid the global disruption in energy supplies: finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the move would “provide protection to consumers from rise in prices”.
The country is one of the world’s largest crude oil importers and relies on foreign suppliers for more than 85% of its oil needs, with Russia being the biggest supplier.
Sitharaman said that “in view of the West Asia crisis” – referring to the Middle East war – taxes on petrol and diesel had been slashed by 10 rupees ($0.11) a litre, AFP reports.
She also announced charges on exports of diesel and aviation turbine fuel at 21.5 rupees ($0.23) and 29.5 rupees ($0.31) a litre.
“This will ensure adequate availability of these products for domestic consumption,” she said.
India insists it has adequate supplies, with the oil ministry saying it has “nearly two months of steady supply available for every Indian citizen regardless of what happens globally”.
But despite the repeated assurances, panicking citizens have triggered long queues at filling stations.
UAE pushing for international force to reopen strait of Hormuz – report
The United Arab Emirates has told allies that it would participate in a multinational maritime task force intended to reopen the strait of Hormuz as it lobbies to form a coalition to ensure shipping can is pass through the vital waterway, the Financial Times is reporting.
The newspaper says the UAE told the US and other western states that it would take part, according to three people familiar with the situation, two of whom said Abu Dhabi would deploy its own navy.
The move reflects the country’s hardened stance towards Iran as it bears the brunt of Tehran’s retaliation to war from the US and Israel, it says.
The report could not be immediately verified.
It also says the UAE is working on a UN security council resolution with Bahrain to provide any future task force with a mandate, but Russia and China could oppose the move, one of the people said.
Gulf states are concerned that Iran could seek to maintain control even if the war ends, the report says. There is a growing conviction among some Gulf states and the Trump administration that there is no easy means to reopen the blocked strait without naval escorts.

Jason Burke
The Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ naval commander who was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Thursday was a veteran hardliner with a taste for fiery rhetoric who grasped better than many the strategic importance of the strait of Hormuz.
During naval exercises in the Gulf in January, Alireza Tangsiri said the Iranian revolution of 1979 represented “a turning point in the history of the Iranian nation and a new dawn for the awakening of the oppressed nations of the world”.
Like many senior officials of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Tangsiri won his regime credentials as a young man during the bloody 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. He then received a series of promotions, eventually becoming the commander of the IRGC’s maritime force in 2018, where he pioneered the unconventional weapons that would allow Iran to project power and influence in the Persian Gulf and beyond.
As well as cruise missiles and armed drones, a third weapon Tangsiri strongly supported was fast boats – light, manoeuvrable craft that can threaten civilian shipping but also, he hoped, evade the defence systems of modern warships.
You can read more here:
Circling back to Donald Trump’s press conference at the White House earlier, the US president took another swipe at Nato, the UK and Australia for not being more involved in his war on Iran.
We have covered the Nato comments here:
But Australia got a mention too – late in the press conference – in response to a question about his phone calls with British prime minister Keir Starmer. Trump said:
[Starmer] did something that was shocking: he didn’t want to help us. And maybe in particular that country, you know, the longest bond, the longest ally.
Australia, too, Australia was not great. I was a little surprised by Australia.
I wouldn’t say anybody was great, other than the five countries in the Middle East. We never really had very much support.
More on petrol prices: Vietnam’s trade ministry is saying it has temporarily waived an environmental tax on fuel to cut soaring prices by more than a quarter.
The environmental protection tax rate on gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel would be slashed to zero from today until 15 April, the ministry said on Friday, adding:
This is considered an urgent and effective solution to stabilise the petroleum market and ensure national energy security amidst the escalating conflict in the strait of Hormuz, which is creating the ‘biggest energy bottleneck ever’.
India has slashed its special excise duties on petrol and diesel amid the soaring prices triggered by the Iran war.
In a government order, the Indian finance ministry on Thursday cut the excise duty on petrol to 3 rupees ($0.032) a litre from 13 rupees earlier. It also cut the duty on diesel to zero from 10 rupees.
In case you missed it earlier, Lebanese media said an Israeli strike hit Beirut’s southern suburbs early on Friday.
Several explosions were heard from the Hezbollah stronghold and smoke was billowing from the area after the raid, Agence France-Presse reported.
Israel has previously issued sweeping evacuation warnings for the area but provided no specific warning in advance of Friday’s strike. It was unclear if there were any casualties.
Israel has sent ground troops into south Lebanon in a push to establish what it calls a “defensive buffer” zone, and Hezbollah said its fighters kept up its attacks on troops there early on Friday.
And just to recap, on Thursday Wall Street had its worst day since the war with Iran started.
The S+P 500 fell 1.7%, and the index is headed for a fifth straight losing week, which would be the longest such losing streak in almost four years. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1%, and the Nasdaq composite sank 2.4%.
Some news on the Asian markets, after early Friday trading.
South Korean shares have fallen more than 3% today and are set to end the week lower. Japan’s Nikkei share average is also down today, and is on track for a fourth straight weekly decline, amid fading hopes for an imminent ceasefire.
Elsewhere, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 0.1%, while the Shanghai Composite index was up 0.1%. Australia’s S+P/ASX 200 fell 0.5%, while Taiwan’s Taiex was trading 1.5% lower.
World Trade Organisation chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has warned the global trading system is experiencing the “worst disruptions in the past 80 years”.
“The world order and the multilateral system we used to know has irrevocably changed,” she said on Thursday, at the WTO ministerial conference. “We cannot deny the scale of the problems confronting the world today.”
Welcome summary
Hello and welcome to our continuing live coverage of the US-Israel war on Iran and the consequences for the region, the world and the global economy.
Here are the latest developments:
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Donald Trump said he would extend – once again – his pause on his threat to attack Iran’s energy infrastructure for 10 days until 6 April, claiming that the request came from Tehran and that talks were going “very well”. The US president threatened last Saturday he would strike Iranian energy infrastructure if Tehran did not reopen the strait of Hormuz. Then, on Monday, he postponed his threat for five days (until Friday), citing “very good and productive conversations” with Iran on ending the war (which Tehran dismissed as “fake news” designed to “manipulate” the oil markets). Now, he’s pushing that deadline back, again.
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The price of Brent crude also dropped following Trump’s latest announcement. Oil prices rose to their highest level this week, with Brent crude trading at roughly $108 a barrel after Trump’s cabinet meeting earlier on Thursday.
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Yemen’s Houthis have said there is no need to worry amid fears that if Trump follows through on threats to seize Iran’s Kharg Island, Tehran may ask them to attack shipping in the Red Sea.
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A day after Tehran dismissed Trump’s 15-point ceasefire plan, the US president claimed Iran was “begging to make a deal”. and that he wasn’t the one pushing for negotiations. Earlier, he told Tehran to “get serious soon” on negotiating a deal to end the war.
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Trump rejected reports he was looking for an exit ramp, as oil prices soar and political pressure mounts to avoid the kind of drawn-out Middle East war he once spurned. “I read a story today that I’m desperate to make a deal,” Trump told reporters. “I’m the opposite of desperate. I don’t care.”
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A US proposal for ending nearly four weeks of fighting is “one-sided and unfair”, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Thursday.
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Trump said Iran was allowing some oil tankers through strait of Hormuz as a sign of good faith for talks. He said Iran allowed 10 oil tankers to pass through the strategic strait as a “present” to show it was serious about negotiations to end the war.
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The Pentagon is looking at sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give Trump more military options even as he weighs peace talks with Tehran, the Wall Street Journal reported, quoting defence department officials.
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The Israel Defence Forces’ chief of staff has warned that the military will “collapse in on itself” as it faces increasing demands and a growing manpower shortage while fighting on multiple fronts, according to Israeli media reports.
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A Thai-flagged cargo ship that was hit by unknown projectiles in the strait of Hormuz earlier this month has run aground off Iran’s Qeshm Island, Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency said on Friday.
UK News
Manchester City v Liverpool kicks off FA Cup quarter-finals, Fernández latest and more – matchday live | FA Cup
Key events
Billy Munday caught the return of Roy Hodgson to Bristol City after 44 years of absence.
Football has changed in the two years since Hodgson left Crystal Palace, including “the cult of the long throw”, with Charlton’s Harry Clarke launching a ball into the box within moments of kick-off here. “I only came across that in the 80s when we played Wimbledon,” he said.
Per Reuters, it’s a big day in Miami for MLS club Inter Miami.
Inter Miami will open the home Lionel Messi helped build when they host Austin FC on Saturday night.
The match will be the first at the Herons’ permanent home, the 26,700-seat Nu Stadium, constructed slightly northwest of downtown Miami.
While approval for construction came before Messi joined Miami (3-1-1, 10 points) and MLS in the summer of 2023, it was always billed as a project meant to attract the game’s biggest stars. And now the man considered the game’s greatest living player will lead his team there.
“Honestly, it’s spectacular getting to see the new home,” Messi said this week in Spanish. “The new stadium turned out incredible, and it’s really special to be able to experience it. We’d been eager to play there, to make our debut, to finally be competing there. And now the moment has arrived.“
We didn’t see Harry Kane this week for England, but Barney Ronay has been keeping an eye on the great man.
The Premier League does feel a distance away, doesn’t it? Perhaps the FA Cup and European action in midweek can salve our thirst for now.
don’t recall a mid-season period like this with almost 3 full weeks between PL matches, and none over an easter weekend. This afternoon’s early match should be good, you’d guess that neither want to go to penalties, but whether as has been suggested the next 5 or so matches for Liverpool decide Scot’s future is debatable ie he’s either staying or going, nobody knows which just yet but if he goes then who is in the frame to replace him…and what does his replacement do if he ain’t comfortable with Liverpool’s set up re their new and rather expensive recent signings
said before the start of this season that I’d take top 4 and a decent domestic cup run, still holding to that but actually and given how they’re played, and how they’ve not played too often, this season maybe events 4 isn’t realistic…Liverpool can be expected to concede so yet again they may have to outscore their opponents and that issue, amongst a few, needs addressing before next season
The Women’s FA Cup is being played, too. Suzanne Wrack runs the rule over the ties.
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Arsenal v Brighton, Sunday 1pm
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Charlton v Liverpool, Sunday 2.30pm
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Chelsea v Tottenham, Monday 1.30pm
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Birmingham v Manchester City, Monday 5pm
Arsenal will come up against a goalkeeper on loan from Bayern Munich when they play Southampton in the cup later today. Ben Fisher spoke to Daniel Peretz.
Peretz was inspired by the Germany goalkeeper as a boy – he had a giant photo of the 2014 World Cup-winner on his bedroom wall – but in Bavaria Neuer, who turned 40 last week, morphed into a mentor. “[It went] from admiring the players, to them becoming my friends and my teammates.
“I watched every single save [Neuer] made and then he was with me day by day and he became a friend,” Peretz says, recalling the emotions of their first encounter. “I was sweating all over, so nervous that I could not speak. I had goosebumps, everything.”
More Liverpool, more Slot. More Salah.
Slot, however, insisted he would not have handled the situation with the club legend any differently. He explained: “Yes [he is happy with how he managed it]. I look back at this season thinking that I made a few decisions that could have been better, but I’m not talking about this specific thing with Mo. I don’t regret many things I did during our one-and-a-half years together, or just longer.
Ed Aarons takes up genealogy in this deep dive on the Arsenal family.
George Male was a key figure in Arsenal’s dominant side of the 1930s, helping them win five league titles in eight seasons. Known for his consistency and leadership in defence, he remains one of the club’s historic figures and is pictured in two places outside the Emirates Stadium. Male went on to become a long-serving youth-team coach and then a scout at Arsenal after retiring, and is remembered as the man who discovered Charlie George, who was part of the famous Double-winning team of 1970-71.
That Easter double-header got off to a great start for Frank Lampard’s Coventry. And: Millwall in the Premier League? It may well be happening.
Mikel Arteta wasn’t holding back in his press conference, either. This on the Carabao Cup.
During the first part, it’s like a ball of poison that you have in your tummy,” said Arteta when asked whether he had spent the international break stewing over the final.
“Take that out as quick as possible. How can I use that to make myself better, to make the team better? There is a part that I think has to be there and I think this is not going to go in the next 30 years. Because when you have the opportunity to win a final in Wembley, you have to get it done. So that has to stay there.
Talking of players linked with Madrid and City v Liverpool, Rodrí and Guardiola from Friday.
As mentioned in the preamble, today’s is a huge game for Liverpool. Andy Hunter has run the rule over the Arne Slot regime.
Let’s start with that Chelsea story. Ben Bloom was at the Liam Rosenior press conference while Jacob Steinberg has analysed the latest Cobham crisis.
Preamble
Good morning, football. Happy Easter, you happy eaters.
We’re up for the FA Cup, and it’s the last eight, with a huge game between Manchester City and Liverpool starting the weekend’s quartet of matches. Perhaps that’s not as amped up as it might have been, with both teams having tough seasons by contrast to previous successes but: City won the Carabao Cup in style and Liverpool look to rescue something from their season.
So, the games today are:
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Manchester City v Liverpool, 12.45pm
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Chelsea v Port Vale, 5.15pm
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Southampton v Arsenal, 8pm
With the EFL being played on Good Friday and Easter Monday, there’s a lack of action in England’s 92. But: there’s action in Scotland and across Europe, and a series of stories to look at, including L’affaire Fernandez at Chelsea.
Join me.
UK News
Bus or Lime bike? New subscription joins the race for a cheaper commute
It launched LimePrime at the end of February – a monthly subscription giving riders in Salford, Nottingham, London, Oxford and Milton Keynes a fixed price for the first 20 minutes of their journey. After that, riders are charged per minute at a discounted rate.
UK News
Claim sooner rather than later, experts urge, after £7.5bn car loan compensation scheme launched | Motor finance
Complain now to be at the front of the queue. That is the message from the City regulator and the consumer champion Martin Lewis as a scheme gets under way to pay out about £7.5bn in total to millions of motorists mis-sold car loans.
More information emerged this week about how much money the different categories of people might get and how it will all work after Monday’s announcement that an industry-wide compensation scheme for victims of the UK’s car finance scandal is definitely going ahead.
Here are five main takeaways:
Technically it’s two schemes. The plan was always for a single compensation scheme, but this week it emerged that the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), has set up two.
Scheme 1 covers older motor finance agreements, those taken out between 6 April 2007 and 31 March 2014; scheme 2 is for more recent ones, those taken out between 1 April 2014 and 1 November 2024.
As they are broadly similar, the FCA is generally referring to them collectively as “the scheme”.
A very brief recap of the story so far: millions of people were treated unfairly when they took out motor finance to buy a new or secondhand vehicle and ended up paying more than they should have done.
It is lenders (typically banks) who are on the hook for the compensation.
The scheme, which will be free to use, covers motor finance taken out over a 17-year period during which commission was paid by the lender to whoever sold the loan – usually the dealer.
You will only get a payout if important information was not properly disclosed to you.
The vast majority of new cars and an increasing number of used vehicles are bought with motor finance – typically either a personal contract purchase (PCP) plan or a hire purchase agreement.
The average payout has gone up. The FCA said in October last year it expected eligible consumers to receive an average of £695 an agreement. But tweaks mean this has increased to £829.
Most people will receive the average of the estimated financial disadvantage and the commission paid, plus interest. The formula for calculating loss depends on which scheme you are in.
In scheme 1, the average for each agreement is £734; in scheme 2, it is £881.
How much those getting a payout will receive also depends on which type of case theirs is – there are three. By far the biggest category is deals that included a “discretionary commission arrangement” (DCA) – a now-banned type of finance which allowed the dealer or broker to adjust (ie, increase) the interest rate the customer would pay to get a higher commission.
There are two other main types of case. One is where there was an arrangement that gave a lender exclusivity or ‘first dibs’ when it came to providing the credit to the individual (these are known as “contractual tie” cases).
The other involves unfairly high commission (where it was at least 39% of the total cost of the credit and 10% of the amount borrowed).
FCA documents suggest that for the DCA people, the average payout will be £810. For the second category named above, it’s £807. For the third category, involving an unfairly high commission, it’s quite a bit higher: £1,203.
Interest will be paid on compensation, based on the annual average Bank of England base rate per year plus 1%. The minimum interest people will receive is 3% in any year.
The FCA says consumers should not be put into a better position financially than they would have been in had they been treated fairly. This means that in about one in three cases, compensation will be capped (details of the formula being used are available online).
Fewer people will get compensation. The FCA previously estimated 14.2m loan agreements would be considered unfair, but on Monday it cut this to 12.1m. “We have tightened eligibility so only those treated unfairly receive compensation,” says the regulator. For example, agreements involving “minimal” commission (less than £150 or less than £120 depending on the date) will be excluded from redress.
Also, where a lender can prove there were visible links between the finance and the car manufacturer/dealer, a contractual tie alone will not trigger compensation. In other words (this is a made-up example), if you used a Volkswagen dealer and the car loan you signed up for was branded something like “Volkswagen Finance”.
Payouts could begin immediately. In theory, at least. Nikhil Rathi, the chief executive of the FCA has said : “There’s nothing stopping lenders moving tomorrow now they’ve seen the rules.”
Technically, the scheme has launched, but there will now be a short “implementation period” so lenders can get their ducks in a row. This will be up to 30 June this year for loans taken out after 1 April 2014, and up to 31 August this year for the older agreements.
The FCA says millions of people will receive compensation this year, but the complexities of the scheme mean it is hard to say exactly how many will get their cash this year and how many will have to wait until next year or the very start of 2028.
Get your complaint in now. Lenders will have three months from the end of the relevant implementation period to let people who have complained know whether they are owed compensation and how much.
The FCA says: “People who have already complained, or who complain before the end of the relevant implementation period, will be compensated sooner.”
Lewis says: “The only way to know if you were mis-sold is to complain. To know if you’ve got a complaint, you have to complain.”
The FCA says there is no need to use a claims management company (CMC) or law firm as people can complain now for free using a template letter on its website.
Lewis’s MoneySavingExpert website also has a free complaint tool and template letter. “You just put your details in, it formulates an email for you and tells you where to send it. You check it and you press send,” he says.
If you are unsure about who your car finance provider was, the FCA website includes details of a few ways that you can check.
Meanwhile, while the credit reference agency Equifax’s myEquifax app includes a free car finance checker tool to help track down and access past loan records.
Lenders will only contact people who have not complained if they are likely to be owed money. They have six months from the end of the relevant period to do so.
Anyone not contacted has until 31 August 2027 to make a claim.
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