Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,780 members, 7,813,576 topics. Date: Tuesday, 30 April 2024 at 02:19 PM

Ukay2's Posts

Nairaland Forum / Ukay2's Profile / Ukay2's Posts

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 95 pages)

Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 10:58pm On Aug 01, 2023
Solumtoya:


Services in the NHS is for only Citizens and Residents. A baby born here to immigrant parents has access for free for 3 months after which you either pay out of pocket, or get a visa fornthe baby.

The exceptions are some Emergency services that are for every person in the UK... Also, for minor cases, vaccinations, etc, most GPs won't bother charging. But such parents should pray the child doesn't need a surgery or treatment like hernia, the BILL would be heavy.

I know parents owing £15,000 NHS bills for simple hernia surgery their children born here in the UK without valid visas.. the bills are quite shocking to them...lol

Even the emergency services, it will be done for the children and the parents will receive normal International services NHS Bills later via the post...

2 Likes

Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 10:53pm On Aug 01, 2023
Zahra29:


Not correct. I believe it's only the first 3 months, as long as they do not leave the country in this time. The parents are required to apply for a visa for the child within the 3 months. Below excerpt from NHS.uk:

Children born in the UK to those here lawfully for more than 6 months
If you give birth to a child in the UK, your child will be entitled to free NHS hospital treatment in England on the same basis as someone who's ordinarily resident up to 3 months of age, but only if they remain in the UK during that period.

You'll also need to meet one of these criteria:

you have a valid visa of more than 6 months and paid the surcharge for that visa
you have a valid visa of more than 6 months, but were exempt from paying the surcharge
you have a valid visa of more than 6 months, which you applied for prior to 6 April 2015

You should apply for a visa for your child during the 3-month period after your child's birth.

If required, you may have to pay the surcharge for your child. Failure to do so means you may be charged for NHS services provided for your child after the 3-month period.

Thank you for this response...l don't have time for too much arguments for what l know and have seen my patients born here in the uk without valid visa for their children being sent heavy bills after surgical procedures in my department.

Many people will get NHS international services bills soon if the child needs NHS services without valid visa for the child......
Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 5:29am On Aug 01, 2023
hayesconcept:
You don’t need to include the newborns in your visa application unless you’re planning to go to Naija with them.

Hmm if the babies no get visa...., make any of the babies no come get sickness that will require surgery or admissions in the hospital....NHS will send them better bills after discharge.

2 Likes

Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 5:24am On Aug 01, 2023
Jcole123:
Hi guys,

A friend of mine applied for a trainee Job in an engineering company. He was invited for a physical interview at the company's office. After the interview, he said the interviewers sounded very impressed and told him that his previous experience makes him over qualified for the trainee position and they would like to fit him into a qualified role with an improved pay. He was asked to come for a 4hrs trial work session to familiarise himself with the work environment and so they can better access his understanding of the job. After the trial session, the director once again reiterated the fact that my friend is very knowledgeable and would consult with the senior staff that accessed him to know the final step. However, he was asked to provide a reference from previous employer.

After providing reference, he recieved a mail from the company requesting additional 4hours trial work session and my friend feels a bit frustrated about the back and forth.

Please any advise for him?

Let your friend go again. Hopefully they will finalise it and he will start work soon. Congrats in advance.

1 Like

Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 7:03am On Jul 31, 2023
hustla:


LOL Not like that o

I like to have back up plans for backup plans wink

Take it easy oo cheesy
Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 5:55am On Jul 30, 2023
brine:


Yes, that's actually very possible. I don't buy clothes monthly but I know I spend more than that (£200 x 12) yearly on clothes and shoes. I looked at a food delivery app I used some time ago and I discovered I spent roughly £12k on takeaways between Jan 2020 - Dec 2022 alone!

Well done....
Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 2:41pm On Jul 26, 2023
AKALAMAGBO:
Please what’s the maximum speed allowance I can go on motorway 🛣️ ? I was on 77MPH yesterday and just about 100 metres away was this man standing by the bridge wearing black, sat in a black van 🚐 and pointing what looks like a Speed Gun towards my direction…. 😭😭😭

Should I be waiting for a letter 😭😭😭

Wetin de pursue you that you will not be on 70MPH?

I go by the speed limits on the roads...l am not a fan of 10% addition to speed limits.
Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 7:17pm On Jul 24, 2023
Willie2015:


They are paying daily interest on uninvested part of my balance...




Yes, really good

1 Like

Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 8:34pm On Jul 23, 2023
Zahra29:


Yes definitely, these would be strong grounds to negotiate a reduction in the price with the vendor. It's only a request and the vendor can decide not to drop their price, however given the current market I imagine they would want to hold onto their buyer and will at least offer to meet you part way.

Same thoughts...seemingly a buyer's market now.

Thank you.
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 7:15pm On Jul 23, 2023
Zahra29:


Do you mean an Agreement in Principle (AIP/DIP) or a formal offer from the lender?

The estate agent is wary because the affordability checks on a higher LTV purchase are more stringent, especially with the recent interest rate hikes. If it is an AIP, then this is only indicative and may change when the underwriters conduct their in-depth checks, which may result in a lower borrowing amount being offered by the lender. In addition, a property can be down valued by the lender and the estate agent likely wants reassurance that you have enough savings to cover the difference if needed.

Essentially you might need to show the agent proof of funds significantly higher than the 5% deposit to reassure them that you have a decent enough buffer to continue the purchase if the lender offers you less than 95%, or the property is down valued( as well as enough to cover all the legal and other costs involved in buying a house)


If the lender down values a property, like a house of £400k and the lender down value it to £380k, should l go with the lender valuation and ask the seller to sell at the lender's valuation report, because l believe the actual valuation should be that of the lender.

Your opinion please
Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 7:03pm On Jul 23, 2023
henrimoto:

Pls. If one wants to benefit on the upward movement of a stock's price due to an upcoming impressive quarterly earnings report, When is the suitable time to take advantage ? Is it before the report date or after the report date ?

Cc: coputa
Yok
Ukay2


It depends on your waiting time....

Like l expect good performance from Canadian Pacific Railway plc (CP) from their recent merger with the Kansas city railway, l took position at $73, l am in for a very long-term time with the CP now.

2 Likes

Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 10:25pm On Jul 22, 2023
aremso:
Just did one analysis now, if the money I used to buy RBT is used to buy zenith Bank at even 20naira and zenith rose to max 70 naira max if I sell I will get about 700k as gain that is if it get to that point which I doubt cos what is coming to banking sector in naija is doing press up. The same money in RBT holding to my TP the gain will be 6.5m convert to naira. Foreign stock is the best bet.

God told Abraham to leave his comfort zone and he never looked back or compared his present location to his former location.

You have moved to NYSE, concentrate on your new zone and no need for comparison.

Move forward and keep mastering the NYSE....WELL DONE

5 Likes

Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 1:31pm On Jul 22, 2023
justwise:


If you can afford it go for 5yrs and have rest of mind.

I was in your position couple of years ago and i wanted to fix for 5yrs at 2.3% but my mortgage broker suggested 2yrs that interest rate will drop after covid. I went with his suggestion.

By the time my mortgage is due for renewal interest rate was 5.5% and he emailed me asking me to pay £150 to help me renew it, i totally ignored him, i called my lender and spoke with them and i was asked to wait and watch the market before jumping to renew.

As i monitor the market and exploring other lenders the interest rate keep going up, i called the bank again 2months to the end of my fixed term and i was given 6.5%(i was overpaying my £120 monthly), angrily i allowed the mortgage to automatically rollover to variable but sadly at the rate of 7.5%.

I paid that for one month and decided to do myself, logged in to my mortgage account to explore how to fix it, guess what? i was given 3.99% with options of 5 and 10yrs fix, i went for 5yrs.


My biggest prob was not following my instinct right from the beginning of the process, i did so much research, watch YouTube videos, news about mortgage market and effect on mortgage after covid but my mortgage broker insisted otherwise.

Big lesson learned, in my next project i will do things differently.


Thank you Justwise for this. I was giving 6% fixed for 2 years and 5.5% fixed for 5 years at my AIP a few weeks ago.

I am likely going for the 5 years fixed when l apply for the mortgage. I am just thinking now the UK inflation rate is coming down, maybe the rates may start coming down soon if the inflation rates keep coming down.

Hopefully, with the inflation rate coming down, Bank of England may not continue to increase the lending rate going forward.
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 5:38am On Jul 22, 2023
lightnlife:
Thanks for sharing your experience.

Whilst you're exploring other countries and waiting to naturalise/re-relocate, have you been saving in a LISA account for mortgage purposes? If yes, what happens if you don't eventually buy the property in the UK and leave? Also, how has it been renting over the last 5/6 years?

After Thought 1

It seems myriad of immigrants in the UK are just waiting to either get ILR or naturalise before exploring other countries for permanent residency. I reckon I'm on that list too.😊

Given this reality, I was analyzing a few things around mortgage savings (LISA) and rent.

So, I currently pay £1100 pcm as rent, that's about £13200 per annum. If I continue to rent till I get ILR or naturalise (4/5 years from now - ceteris paribus), I might be paying an average of £14000 per annum on rent. Meaning I'd have paid over £70,000 as rent with 5 - 6 years. Meanwhile, this 70k or some part of it could also have been used to start a mortgage plan. However, as I'm not certain on my next relocation plan, I'm unable to commit to a mortgage.

Question: If I start a mortgage plan and eventually leave the country after getting ILR or citizenship, can I sell the property? If yes, that's the modality for such?

With regards to LISA, if I eventually decide not to buy a house and leave to another country with a LISA savings of 50K (bonus inclusive), how much dem go give me? Would I better off saving the funds in another account outside of LISA, knowing I'm not interested in buying a property in the UK?

Lastly, is owning a house in the UK better off than renting in the long run? I have a property in Nigeria and mehn maintenance is draining - financially and mentally.

Thanks


Buy a good property instead of renting.....rent money is a dead money according to Lexusgs430. You can sell the house if you are leaving the UK and there's high probability of selling the house at higher price.

I know a house that was bought at £317,000 in 2017 and it's currently in the market for £400,000 as the owner has relocated to Poland.

Who knows, the UK may even favour you the more, before you finish getting the British citizenship self grin

3 Likes

Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 10:05pm On Jul 21, 2023
Lexusgs430:


Have you tried webull...... Download make we enjoy slice of fractional share .......😜

https://www.webull-uk.com/s/vTzukLUlBsNM8qTFWv

I am OK with Trading212 and Freetrade for now...thank you Boss
Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 8:41pm On Jul 21, 2023
aremso:


Bro. Thanks for the info, they might be right or wrong but for me am holding that stock to my target level. I have a personal assessment of stocks which I set, I may be wrong or right but that stock to me will move higher than where they predicted it will get to. So am a long time holder. I discovered the stock late so I entered late at 1.74$ it got to 2$ before pulling back for GAN and 0.94 for FIXX.

Be careful with penny stocks too....
Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 8:37pm On Jul 21, 2023
Lexusgs430:



Wetin una do all this international brokerages...........🤣😂

Ask Emefiele
Investment / Re: Us Stocks Pick Alert by ukay2: 8:36pm On Jul 21, 2023
Willie2015:


Those of us that were able...
to open with Trading212 back in the days were lucky...
Nothing as smooth as zero trade commission...

Trading212 is quite a good platform...
Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 5:21pm On Jul 14, 2023
jedisco:


Just stumbled on this, oddly, when I search they're not many mainstream UK media reporting it. The UK openly admits immigration fees as an essential source of revenue. Simply means that for workers to get their 6-7% wage rise, there has to be a minimum number of immigrants coming thru. The recently touted 8yr wait period for an ilr makes more sense now. I wonder what those who 'did not vote for black and brown people' think about the this. Perhaps, they would get EU citizens willing to pay so much for little in return.

Take a married 28yo who comes here for masters. They'd pay:

Initial visa fee
Initial ihs fee for 1-2 yrs
Uni school fees

Then;
PSW fee
IHS fee again for 1-2 yrs

Then;
Tier 2 visa fee
IHS fee for 5 yrs.
ILR fee
Passport fee

All these are aside income tax and NI and very importantly, the economic footprint they bring.

After giving 8-9 years of their productive life to the the UK economy, a whole lot of these people would still be lower bracket income earners. The UK adds to their life but in far less measure than what they have brought.

Reason why I asked how many Brits of similar age have contributed as much.
Without immigration, this economy would crumble under its own weight

Well said....

2 Likes

Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 6:17pm On Jul 13, 2023
Tier4Dependant:


Police can stop you for the minutest of things.

Police once stopped me because my rear plate was covered with dust which made it not to be visible enough.

Why would I ever think I could get stopped for such.

And of cos if any driving doc is found missing, it would probably lead to a court case.



It's a driving offence for your plate number not to be visible
Investment / Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ukay2: 12:20pm On Jul 13, 2023
jideflash:
Never be to quick to assume.
Those that took action on this strong rumour then should be sitting on 50% since date.



Carry on Oga CustomStreet wink

I have been on Dangsugar since km 6...

2 Likes

Investment / Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ukay2: 12:19pm On Jul 13, 2023
megawealth01:
Really?

I have chopped enough from Alhaji.....Dang Flour, Dang Sugar and Dangote Cement grin
Investment / Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ukay2: 12:08pm On Jul 13, 2023
yMcy56:
I just don't want to make any comment in the Dangsugar and NASCON.......but as for me sha, I'll prefer to see what the details of the merger will look like. lipsrsealed

You will never go wrong with ALHAJI Dangote grin

1 Like

Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 5:39pm On Jul 08, 2023
Lexusgs430:


That's £500 extra.......

Thank you
Travel / Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 4:45pm On Jul 08, 2023
Solumtoya:


Hmmmm... This is not as simple o... In many cases, HP is often the better option

I prefer paying cash for car....average £5k car is ok...lool

1 Like

Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 4:42pm On Jul 08, 2023
Lexusgs430:


Let's assume your mortgage payment is £400 pcm........

By paying £100 extra every month, it would drastically reduce the length of your mortgage payment + paying less interest.......

What if the mortgage payment is £2000 pcm?
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 4:35pm On Jul 08, 2023
Zahra29:


It depends on your risk appetite. Many buyers are opting for a 2yr fix in the expectation/hope that rates will be lower from around 2025. Rates are forecast to fall in the medium term but it is also being cautioned that the era of ultra low rates is over and the new normal will be around 5%. So a 5yr fix at 5.5% may be close to where the market settles in the long run.
It comes down to what you're more comfortable with. The assurance of knowing what your fixed payments are for 5 years regardless of which way the market moves, or taking a gamble on rates being lower in 2 years, which might go either way.

I think the 5 years should be OK... stability and if rates get to 7%, one is still OK. Thank you.
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 4:33pm On Jul 08, 2023
Zahra29:


When the seller accepts a higher offer from someone else and decides to sell to them instead

Ooh..thanks
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 4:01pm On Jul 08, 2023
reavealhidden:
Barclays would lend to someone on any kind of visa, even a Tier 4 student visa @ 90% LTV i.e. you only need a 10% deposit. You must have lived in the UK for a minimum of 2 years. Minimum gross income of £25,000

Halifax is 90% LTV
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 3:39pm On Jul 08, 2023
deept:


Another point could be interest rates. When we switched mortgages two years ago the best we could get was around 3% so we decided to fix for two years. Interest rates rates that period was quite low with people getting 1.7% etc. We did two years thinkingg before you know it time would be up and we would be able to get lower rates but.....Russia invaded Ukraine, cost of energy went up, cost of living crises, BOE interest rate now 4.25% might go up this month again. Fixed term Is over I'm in sifia pains paying double the interest this month compared to last month on my mortgage.

Get all the education you can, get all the information you can. Lime they say best ttime to plant a tree was yesterday, next best time is today.if an opportunity come take it. The person with 5% deposit could potentially be paying less interest if he had taken is mortgage 2 years ago compared to someone with 30% equity with today's rate.


Should one go for 2years fixed rate at 6% or 5 years fixed rate at 5.5% now, please.
Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 3:31pm On Jul 08, 2023
shaybebaby:

The poster above has detailed one scenario however that is more akin equity release/ additional borrowing.

So let's start from the beginning with this. Foxybingo had a deposit of £100,000 ( saved up because he is a prudent fella) .

Property asking price: £300,000. So foxy speaks to the bank and the bank agrees to lend foxy £200,000. Seller gets his money ( £300k made up 100k from fox's deposit and the bank's 200k). Foxy's Loan to Value of the property (LTV) is 66%( 200k/300k)

Foxy is now liable for £200k which he has agreed to pay back to the bank over, say 25 years.

However foxy does not want to be exposed to interest movements ( like we've been seeing since 2022) so fox's mortgage deal with the bank is at a fixed interest rate of 3% for the first 3 years. After that his interest rate will revert to the banks variable rate for the remaining 22 years. So if interest rates increase, foxy is safe because he has locked in a rate for 3 years. Downside is if they fall, foxy still has to pay that 3% for 3 years. Also he cannot switch lenders during the fixed period without paying hefty charges and blah blah blah.

3 years pass, foxy has been good, and has paid off 30k from the 200k loan. His outstanding loan is now 170k. Property is now valued at £350k. But his fixed interest period is coming to an end. Foxy wants to fix again ( doesn't ever want to pay variable which is usually more expensive).

Fox's loan to value is now 170k/350k ( based on the current market price of the house)=48%.

With a lower LTV, Foxy can get more attractive fixed rates from banks and one has offered him 2.5%. His current lenders variable rate is 4% ( since the fixed rate period is over). So foxy decides to remortgage but with the lender offering the more attractive rate, fixes for another 3 years period. His overall term for the mortgage is now 22 years.

In summary, a remortgage is where you change your existing mortgage agreement to a different one.

Changes can involve term of mortgage, interest rate payable, loan amount and/ or lender but usually in relation to the same property.


Thank you for this explanation

1 Like

Travel / Re: Living In The UK: Property,Mortgage And Related by ukay2: 3:05pm On Jul 08, 2023
Lexusgs430:



The point you engage a conveyancing solicitor, it's all part of the process.......

NB : You have 2 types of survey

- Survey for mortgage (must).....
- Structural survey (optional, more expensive).......

Gazumping might still occur, after all this cost ......

What is Gazumping please?

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 95 pages)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 76
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.