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Every week when Linda Glass pays for her weekly shop, she is also overpaying on her mortgage – and is on track to save almost £16,000.

Shopping at Morrisons and spending around £200 – “I have twin teenage boys,” the mum from Lincoln said – she is able to earn £7.48 that goes directly towards her mortgage.

She uses Sprive, an online app that works as a mortgage assistant.

One of the app’s main functions is that, by linking to your bank, it analyses how you spend and makes small payments into an online account, with that money used towards your mortgage.

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“I want my money to work harder for me, and I am trying to save in any way I can,” she added.

But now, its latest feature – Shop with Sprive – functions a bit like traditional cashback, but instead the money goes towards making homeowners debt-free quicker.

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While it might not seem like a lot, earning an extra £25 a month towards your mortgage can have a huge benefit.

Putting this towards a £250,000 mortgage at 4% for 30 years would save you £7,969.

How Linda will pay off her mortgage four years early

Linda was making regular overpayments of between £25 and £125 a month and was on track to save £7,400 and pay off her mortgage three years and four months earlier.

Now she has started using Shop With Sprive, the additional £30 a month will save her an extra £8,400 and see her pay off her mortgage an additional year and one month earlier.

This means her total savings are almost £16,000 – and she will be finished paying her mortgage four years and five months faster.

So far, the brand has partnered with four supermarkets – Morrisons, Waitrose, M&S and Iceland – a number of food and drink outlets – including Costa and Uber Eats – and home, travel and book retailers.

Linda, 51, said she is quite tech-savvy but likes how easy it is to make overpayments.

Linda Glass
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Linda Glass

For those who think it might be too good to be true, Linda said: “Give it a go. You can always opt out of it. You are not locked into anything if you don’t feel comfortable with it.

“But be open to everything that is there to save you money. Whilst you don’t see it put in your bank account, everyone’s house is their biggest debts hanging around their necks and it will pay off in the long-run.”

Why overpaying your mortgage is a good idea

Interest rates are at their highest in years – so if you can, overpaying on your mortgage should be something you should do. You can save thousands and become debt-free quicker.

You can save such large sums because you aren’t just clearing your debt, but because you pay less in interest.

You can usually pay off up to 10% of your outstanding balance each year without facing an early repayment penalty.

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It is almost always better to overpay your mortgage rather than put that money in savings (although an emergency fund is also a good idea before you do this).

For example, according to MoneySavingExpert, £100 extra month would save you £17,082 in interest on a £150,000 mortgage at 4%. If you put that same amount in savings, you’d have £9,585.

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Petrofac administration not a great start to the week for Ed Miliband though relief could come

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Petrofac administration not a great start to the week for Ed Miliband though relief could come

It’s not the start to the week that Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, would have been hoping for: more than 2,000 private sector jobs in Scotland at risk from the collapse of Petrofac, the London-listed oilfield services group.

Its slide into insolvency was triggered by last week’s cancellation of a major contract by its biggest customer, but the failure of a company once valued at more than £6bn has been a long time coming.

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Administrators at Teneo will now attempt to salvage what they can from Petrofac’s wreckage.

“The group’s operations will continue to trade, and options for alternative Restructuring and [sale] solutions are being actively explored with its key creditors,” Petrofac said on Monday morning.

“When appointed, administrators will work alongside Executive Management to preserve value, operational capability and ongoing delivery across the Group’s operating and trading entities.”

For thousands of employees, the future is now uncertain, although people close to the company say they are hopeful that a buyer can be found swiftly for its North Sea operations, with one suggesting that it could even happen in the coming days.

That would be a relief to Mr Miliband, whose energy policy has come under growing scrutiny in recent months amid dire warnings about the future of Britain’s offshore oil industry.

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More than 2,000 jobs at risk as oil and gas company enters administration

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More than 2,000 jobs at risk as oil and gas company enters administration

More than 2,000 Scotland-based jobs are at risk as oil and energy services group Petrofac has applied for administration.

The group’s operations will continue to trade, and options for restructuring of the company and a possible merger or acquisition are being actively explored with its key creditors, the company said on Monday.

People close to the company say they are hopeful a buyer can be found swiftly for its North Sea operations, with one suggesting that it could even happen in the coming days.

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Administrators will work alongside company management to “preserve value, operational capability and ongoing delivery”, its announcement read.

News of a possible insolvency announcement was first reported by Sky News.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and other ministers have been briefed on the situation.

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Not a great start to the week for Ed Miliband, though relief could come

It’s not the start to the week that Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, would have been hoping for: more than 2,000 private sector jobs in Scotland at risk from the collapse of Petrofac, the London-listed oilfield services group.

Its slide into insolvency was triggered by last week’s cancellation of a major contract by its biggest customer, but the failure of a company once valued at more than £6bn has been a long time coming.

Administrators at Teneo will now attempt to salvage what they can from Petrofac’s wreckage.

For thousands of employees, the future is now uncertain, although people close to the company say they are hopeful that a buyer can be found swiftly for its North Sea operations, with one suggesting that it could even happen in the coming days.

That would be a relief to Mr Miliband, whose energy policy has come under growing scrutiny in recent months amid dire warnings about the future of Britain’s offshore oil industry.

An advisory firm, Kroll, had been engaged by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero to work with ministers and officials on the unfolding crisis for the company.

What is Petrofac?

Petrofac employs about 7,300 people globally, according to a recent stock exchange filing.

It designs, constructs and operates offshore equipment for energy companies.

The company has been valued at more than £6bn but has been struggling with debt.

It also faced a Serious Fraud Office investigation, which resulted in a 2021 conviction for failing to prevent bribery, and the payment of millions of pounds in penalties.

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Ed Miliband ‘welcomes’ challenge from Jeremy Clarkson for seat in parliament

Founded in 1981 in Texas, the business has been in talks about a far-reaching financial restructuring for more than a year.

A formal restructuring plan was sanctioned by the High Court in May this year with the aim of writing off much of its debt and injecting new cash into the business.

This was subsequently overturned, prompting talks with creditors about a revised agreement.

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Start-ups warn Reeves over budget tax bombshell

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Start-ups warn Reeves over budget tax bombshell

A lobbying group representing UK start-ups will this week warn Rachel Reeves against a tax raid on limited liability partnerships (LLPs), arguing that it would hit the backers of Britain’s most innovative companies.

Sky News has seen a letter to be sent to the chancellor on Monday, in which the Startup Coalition will argue that imposing employers’ National Insurance Contributions (NICs) on venture capital funds could make UK fund launches “commercially unviable”.

Venture capital firms, along with private equity firms, law firms and accountants were alarmed last week by speculation that Ms Reeves was planning to raise close to £2bn by taxing LLPs in this way.

Treasury officials are said to be in talks about the move ahead of next month’s crucial budget statement.

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Has Rachel Reeves changed her tone on budget?

“Combined with last year’s carried interest reforms, this is the second budget where VC risks collateral damage from policies not designed for it – and the combination of these changes could raise VCs’ overall tax burden by around 30%,” Dom Hallas, executive director of the Startup Coalition, will say in the letter.

“Any additional tax on partnership profits directly reduces the working capital available to investment teams.

“For emerging managers, often operating at or below cost in their early funds, these changes could make UK fund launches commercially unviable.

“For more established funds, they would accelerate an existing trend: partners and decision-makers relocating to other jurisdictions.

“Fewer UK partners mean fewer meetings with British founders, fewer term sheets signed here, and less capital flowing into high-growth British companies.”

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Cutting cash ISA allowance could backfire, MPs warn
Be bold with tax hikes or risk ‘groundhog day’, chancellor told

The group’s intervention risks embarrassing the chancellor, given her pledge on Friday to “supercharge innovation” with a new unit aimed at so-called scale-up companies.

Mr Hallas’s letter will call on the chancellor to protect venture capital fund structures from new taxes “while allowing the government to make changes to the wider LLP regime or similar areas”.

He will also urge her to “differentiate [venture capital] from private equity in the tax system, aligning treatment with its public-interest role in innovation”.

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