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UK’s oldest intelligence unit reveals their most important alert since predicting World War Two:

The next Prime Minister will be
Keir Starmer
someone even worse

Hurry! You still have time to act before this new leader could devastate millions of British families

This urgent broadcast will go offline in:

Countdown

John Butler,
Investment Director, Southbank Investment Research

Hello. I'm John Butler, investment director at Southbank Investment Research.

What you're about to see has been dubbed perhaps the most terrifying interview in modern British history. That's because the information you're about to receive is both shocking and controversial.

It contradicts everything you're hearing on the BBC and reading in the Times and the Telegraph.

It details what could be the biggest threat to democracy our country has ever faced. It could endanger the financial security of almost every person in the UK, and it will inform every decision you make regarding your personal finances, from your pension, to the stocks in your portfolio, to whether or not you have enough money to go on holiday or even pay your energy bills.

You see, on 4 July, millions of Brits headed to the polls and, as expected, handed an overwhelming victory to Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer. But while many people saw this victory coming months in advance, Fleet Street Letter editor Nick Hubble went on record saying that while Keir Starmer would indeed romp to a landslide election victory, he would be prime minister in name only, and that someone other than the prime minister would be our country's true ruler.

Nick calls this man the shadow prime minister and posits that in recent years, he has already ousted one prime minister, one chancellor, and one top Treasury official. What's more, this master manipulator has already used his power to shuffle billions of pounds of wealth out of ordinary people's pockets.

And now that Keir Starmer has collected the keys to Number 10, Nick says our shadow prime minister is preparing to enact his most devastating policy yet.

One that threatens to make a serious dent in your savings unless you take a few simple financial steps today.

With potentially just weeks before this policy comes into effect, we're sharing Nick's full unabridged interview recorded before the election took place. So you can do what's required to help protect yourself and your family while there's still time to act.

So please pay very close attention, because over the following minutes, you'll learn exactly who Nick claims Britain's shadow prime minister really is.

You'll also see the smoking gun. This official document from the International Monetary Fund. It details exactly what our shadow prime minister's policies are and how they are designed to drain away your hard-earned savings and investments into that of a handful of individuals and institutions.

Most importantly, Nick will give you the exact steps aimed at helping to sidestep this looming threat to the wealth you've worked long and hard to accumulate.

If you've got a pension, if you've got a single penny in the bank or in property or stocks, I implore you to watch every minute of what Nick has to say.

You'll be very grateful you did in the months and years ahead.

Kit Winder,
Host, Southbank Investment Research

KIT: Evening, everyone, and welcome to “Election Upset 2024.”

On Thursday 4 July, millions of Brits will be heading to the polls. But the new prime minister won't be Keir Starmer or Rishi Sunak. It'll be someone much worse.

The next de facto prime minister is preparing policies that could devastate your savings unless you take a few simple financial steps today. And what's more, they could come into effect just weeks after our next prime minister is confirmed.

That's the prediction of today's guest, Nick Hubble, editor of The Fleet Street Letter, perhaps the oldest financial newsletter in Britain.

Now Nick, in your years as editor you've gone on the record with some bold predictions to say the least. Predictions that later proved to be right.

For example, in 2022, you told readers that clean energy stocks would falter despite seemingly endless government assistance, while nuclear stocks would surge instead.

You recommended two nuclear stocks to some of your readers that are up 45% and 530% as the sector took off.

Source: Koyfin
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
Five-year performance of Boss Energy is unavailable.

Source: Koyfin
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
Five-year performance of Rolls-Royce Holdings plc: 2019 -16.28% | 2020 -52.55% | 2021 +10.45% | 2022 -24.15% | 2023 +221.57%

And as far back as 2020 and 2021, you told your readers the historic surge in inflation was just around the corner despite what central bankers were saying.

At the time, it seemed like an unusual claim. After all, inflation had averaged less than 2% per year for the 12 years prior.

And, of course, I don't need to tell our viewers today what happened next. We all felt the launch of inflation at 40-year highs.

In July 2020, you revealed how our central bankers had crossed a Rubicon in your words, but you weren't just warning of inflation.

Your second big warning was of an imminent crash in the real returns of stocks, and we all saw what came next.

2022 was the worst year for stocks since the 2008 financial crisis.

Thirdly, you warned that the bond market was in for a world of pain. You wrote:

“The stakes couldn't be higher for investors, especially with the alternative bonds failing even worse.”

Nick Hubble

Your warning on the bond market was another good call. Not long after it, we started seeing headlines like this:

So, Nick, I have to say that on the three most financially pressing questions of the 2020s so far, that of 40-year high inflation, a bond market meltdown the likes which we hadn't seen in centuries, and a punishing bear market in stocks, you were spot on.

Three dire warnings, three calamities soon after. And anyone who listened was able to sidestep a lot of pain.

Nick Hubble,
Editor, The Fleet Street Letter

NICK: Well, Kit, thanks for the kind words.

I've been the editor of The Fleet Street Letter for many years now, and the truth is I've had big shoes to fill from the moment I stepped into that role.

The Fleet Street Letter has a long and storied history of breaking uncomfortable but vital truths to its readers, truths that the mainstream media can't or won't convey.

Back in 1938, for instance, we warned readers about the folly of appeasement with Nazi Germany by pointing out the war was inevitable sooner or later.

In fact I think we've organised for viewers to see the actual pages from that specific warning 86 years ago on their screen right now.

It might be a bit hard to see because the document was 80 years old when I photocopied it, but the founder Patrick Maitland said, “Herr Hitler would like to postpone a conflict for another six months or until September.

You know what happened next. On 1 September, German tanks rolled into Poland starting World War II.

This warning is a matter of public record available for you to see in the British Library at St Pancras.

Another accurate prediction my predecessors made was that of Black Monday in 1987, one of the worst stock market crashes in history.

But to our readers, that crash came as no surprise. They'd been put on guard over five months earlier in a discreet and timely warning.

And long before anyone had heard of cryptocurrencies, my predecessors were predicting that a new digital form of money would emerge from all this central banking madness.

So I take my role as the editor of The Fleet Street Letter very seriously. My most solid responsibility is to tell my readers what I would want to know if our positions were reversed.

KIT: And that's exactly what you've done since I've known you, Nick.

From pressing warnings of imminent inflation to sounding the alarm on the implosion of the green bubble months before it happened, you've never shied away from controversial, but usually accurate predictions.

Which brings us to the present moment…

With Labour leading the polls by upwards of 20 points, almost everyone anticipates a Starmer victory. But you're here today to say not so fast.

NICK: Before we get into that, Kit, I just want to make it abundantly clear that what I'm going to be saying in this video isn't some wild conspiracy theory, and the policies our “new leader” has planned are all laid out in this report from the IMF in 2015.

I'll be revealing what those policies are and who our new leader will be in just a moment, but I just wanted to make it completely clear that it's not a wild conspiracy theory.

KIT: Okay, Nick. I've got you. But let's get straight into it then.

Who will be the next prime minister if not Sunak, Starmer, or Farage?

NICK: I'm calling him the “shadow prime minister.”

Now, Liz Truss might be a long-forgotten memory for most of us, but she's been out promoting her new book, which accuses the Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey of firing her, and that's why I'm calling him the shadow prime minister.

KIT: God, I mean, we had a laugh at the time the book came out and we saw that claim, but you went off and you've done some digging.

And so now you're saying that she's more right than maybe even she realises?

NICK: That's right, and it's hiding in plain sight.

In fact, I can't believe we didn't see it at the time.

What Truss is referring to is a big blow-up in the bond market that happened in September of 2022, when she and her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng released their budget.

Everyone credits the bond market with causing all the chaos at the time. That's not the full story.

KIT: So as I understand it, you're saying that the media is only half right?

NICK: Yes, Kit.

KIT: So the media is correct in the sense that the bond market controls the government. However, who controls the bond market?

NICK: The answer is of course the Bank of England. There are two ways in which this is true.

The first is interest rates, and is very familiar to all of us. Over the last few years we've seen our mortgage rates go bonkers, and we've had to cut back our expenditure on holidays, on restaurants, and all the sorts of things we like to spend money on.

It's very much the same for the government. The government has to pay its bills as well, and so when the interest rates go up on the national debt that means it can spend less on other things.

And so that's how the Bank of England can control the government and its spending and what political promises can be made. Just as the Bank of England has dished out pain to us in our personal lives, it's also dished out the same pain to the government, and it can decide how much of that pain it wants to dish out.

The second way in which the Bank of England can control the government is by deciding whether or not to allow it to refinance its debt so when the government borrows money it doesn't just borrow in one big mortgage. What it does is it borrows many small mortgages known as bonds and the Bank of England actually buys and sells some of those bonds as part of its managing of inflation.

That also means that when the government is trying to borrow money, the Bank of England can decide whether it wants to support that borrowing by buying the bond. Or it can undermine that borrowing by selling its own bonds at the same time, making life even more difficult for the government.

An easy way to think about all this is in terms of a drug dealer and their customer.

At first, a drug dealer and the customer don't really have control over each other, but if the customer gets addicted to the drug, then the dealer has complete control over that customer, right?

They can decide whether or not to sell that drug, and of course that heavily influences the customers behaviour when they’re addicted. That's the situation between the government and the Bank of England right now.

KIT: Okay Nick, so I think I see what you're saying. But can you take us through what actually happened?

NICK: Sure. So the day before the mini budget, the Bank of England held its monetary policy meeting.

It decided to begin selling £80 billion worth of bonds. It also decided to raise interest rates by 0.5% to 2.25%, the highest level since November 2008 despite declining GDP.

That change meant the Bank of England would go from buying government bonds in support of government spending during the pandemic to selling government bonds to reduce inflation.

Not only would the government be left trying to fund itself, the Bank of England would actively be undermining those efforts by selling their own bonds too.

This made the UK bond market incredibly fragile by heaping a dangerous load onto the camel's back. Crucially, the Bank of England did this the day before they knew the mini budget would be released, and so when the budget was released, it was like the straw that broke the camel's back. The bond market crashed.

Now we don't know whether the Bank of England sold bonds to actively sabotage the bond market, but we do know that the BoE announced it would sell bonds, and then it didn't intervene to prevent the crash for five full days.

That's negligence at best because it's the Bank of England's responsibility to prevent a crash in the bond market.

So whether by action or inaction, the Bank of England is responsible for the market crash that brought down the Liz Truss government.

Source: Prime Minister’s Office, OGL 3, via Wikimedia Commons

KIT: Okay.

So while it's the bond market which controls the politicians, what you're saying is actually it's the central bank, the Bank of England, which is controlling the bond market.

But if that's true now, why wasn't it true five or ten years ago?

NICK: It's quite simple, Kit.

What happened was the pandemic. Obviously, the government had to spend frightening amounts of money during the pandemic to pay for things like furlough and lockdowns and all those subsidies that went out from all that government spending.

That tipped the balance because it made the government reliant on the Bank of England to finance its deficit.

The Bank of England was buying government bonds to support the government during that period.

At the time it seemed like a perfectly good thing to do. I mean, who cares about the consequences of printing money to finance the government during the pandemic?

It’s only afterwards that we struggled with the consequences, which were of course inflation. Now that shift is what turned the government into that drug addict in the analogy earlier. It made the government so reliant on the Bank of England that the Bank of England can now decide to either finance the government or not finance it, and not financing it is enough of an act of sabotage that it has the consequences we saw for Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng.

Just by refusing to support the government as it usually had during the pandemic, is an act of sabotage.

KIT: So it all makes sense. Once a country has so much debt, the person it's indebted to can control it.

But you claim that we've seen this all before, Nick. Is that right? Yeah.

NICK: That's right.

It's happened many times before, especially in European history, but it's actually happening in France right now as we record this, which is quite extraordinary.  

It's the exact reason the European markets have crashed over the last few weeks. What's going on in France is that the European Central Bank is warning voters, “Do not vote for far right or far left government parties because if they spend too much or tax too little, what's going to happen is a crash in the bond market.”

Source: Koyfin

The European Central Bank is saying, “We will allow the bond market to crash.” It’s the same thing that happened to Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng.

This is obviously causing a lot of chaos in people’s portfolios right now. European stocks are crashing, and it's also causing a lot of chaos in the French government as well.

But to people who understand what’s really going on here and then how all of this works, they are able to protect themselves from this.

Interestingly enough, I just saw a headline today.

It's also happening in the UK election. The same story.

The reason that the parties are so similar this election cycle is because they're so terrified of what happened to Liz Truss.

They don't want the same fate, so they’re promising spending and tax policies that are incredibly boring and incredibly similar so that they don't upset the Bank of England, which as I say is the true prime minister, the person that's truly in control.

It also happened in Greece in 2015. You might remember that story about the European sovereign debt crisis. It happened in Italy in 2018.

I've prepared a special report which lists many other examples where this similar story of the central bank controlling the government by the bond market plays out.

And I believe we're able to send that to viewers right now into their email inbox if they've provided and submitted it to us.

KIT: Okay. And, Nick, often, you know, a picture speaks a thousand words. And so I think alongside our investment director, John Butler, you’ve come up with a little cartoon that maybe we can flash on the screen that can help explain things to people.

NICK: Yes.

So our investment director at The Fleet Street Letter, John Butler, came up with this crazy idea that the Bank of England is like a dominatrix controlling our national politicians like puppets on a puppet string.

And he decided to turn this idea into a crazy cartoon which I I believe is what you’re looking at right now.

And I better explain it as well. The Bank of England is also known as the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street which is why the Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey looks the way he does.

KIT:  Well, I don’t imagine he goes shopping for clothes just like that.

But, moving on, I think there’s a a couple of other things to talk about before we finish up today.

Okay and long-time readers of your research, Nick, will be well aware of everything you've written about Italy in the past, and that's a pretty extraordinary case.

Am I right?

NICK: Yeah. This is probably the textbook case, and I think this is why I was able to identify what's going on in the UK now and as of very recently what's going on in France as well.

So what happened in Italy in 2018 was that a right-wing and a left-wing coalition government came to power and what they wanted to do was spend vast amounts of money and to cut taxes and the ECB basically rejected this.

But the way that they rejected it is by allowing the bond market to crash.

Source: Koyfin

And this caused the cost of financing the deficit to go up for the Italian government and that was enough to change their behaviour, to change their spending and taxation promises and effectively to control that government from that point on.

KIT: Yes. And readers, if you look on the screen now, you'll see that Nick predicted this five days before the mainstream media went into a frenzy about it. And that sort of urgency is the most remarkable thing about this prediction.

The key point to take away is that central banks are manufacturing these crises so they can implement their own policy goals. As you'll see in a moment, the Bank of England has its own policy goals laid out in the IMF document that Nick mentioned earlier that will negatively affect the lives of everyone in the UK.

But here let's take a step back here and look at some more examples where this has happened before so the people can reel it.

NICK: So it wouldn't be a massive surprise for this to occur in the UK as well. A really good example for recent history is the Greeks in 2015. I'm sure everyone will remember this period. The Greeks held a referendum on whether or not to accept the austerity that the European central bank was demanding the time.

Now of course the Greeks voted “oxi” meaning no at the time, but their government imposed the austerity measures on them anyway.

Why did that happen? Because the European Central Bank allowed the bond market to force the government to do it. Bond markets crashed, interest rates went up, and the Greek government changed its mind.

Another good example involves nothing less than the world economic superpower, the US.

Source: PH3(NAC) Brandon T. Nelson, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Back in 1994, President Bill Clinton was spending like mad, but the bond market forced him to change his mind.

He was forced to go into a fiscally conservative stance because the bond market crashed, wiping out $1.5 trillion at the time.

Again, these days, Clinton is known as a fiscal conservative, but it's only because the bond market forced him into that position.

It all reminds me of that great quote by James Carville, a strategist for the president, who said:

“I used to think if there was a reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope. But now I would like to come back as the bond market because you can intimidate everybody.”

James Carville

And the sheer number of examples is kind of astonishing.

KIT: But if it's all true and the Bank of England really is running the country, what does it have planned next?

NICK: I'd hate to think if James Carville came back and discovered he was the bond market. But now the central bankers control the bond market and didn't do any better in the end.

But yeah, like you say, the question now is, if central banks do control the government, what do they have planned?

While the rest of the country is focusing what's in the Labour or the Conservative or the Reform manifestos, we should really be thinking about what the Bank of England wants the country to do.

So what does the bank of England have planned for us? I believe its about to implement what I call an invisible tax to try and pay down the national debt.

There are two parts to this.

The first is inflation and the second is very low interest rates. It’s all laid out in this report from the IMF from 2015.

The way to think about this is that the Bank of England knows the government's national debt is out of control, it's a risk to financial stability.

There are two ways to deal with that. The first is very unpopular and very visible. We call it austerity, it's high taxes and low government spending. But there's also the sneakier less accountable way of inflating away government debts.

They choose that second path whenever government debt is too high for austerity, which is precisely the point we're at now.

The invisible tax inflation will hit every family in Britain. It's all following this plan that I pointed out from the IMF report.

We saw that austerity was followed after the great financial crisis of 2008 and is very unlikely to be followed again given how badly that went down with the entire country.

So this invisible tax feels like really the only solution the Bank of England has left. The only question is, how will it affect people's lives?

Kit, if you think the pain from the cost of living crisis is over, think again.

We all know what it means to face double-digit inflation, we've just been through it for the last few years. My point is that we're facing the same cost of living crisis several times over for next 14 years.

That's what the IMF document reveals. That's the plan the Bank of England is following and all of this, by the way, is not that unusual in British history.

It's the very same plan we followed to pay off the Napoleonic war debt, is the same plan we followed to pay off World War I and II debts and is the same plan we're going to follow this time around as well. It's the strategy the governments use when they're in too much debt and they can't pay it off with austerity.

KIT: Okay. But if a second wave of inflation is coming, why are so few people talking about it?

I mean, surveys show that the British public is expecting inflation to fall and keep falling over the next year. In fact, I think expectations are that it falls to 3% by next February.

NICK: A couple of things, Kit. The public didn't exactly see the inflation coming in 2021 either. Right?

So inflation expectations are one thing. The real question is what did this government and the Bank of England want?

What are they going to impose? In my report I explain how all famous economists historically agree that inflation is a policy the governments can use to get rid of their debt and that's what we're doing now.

The second thing I'd like to point out is that I'm not just predicting another surge in inflation. I'm predicting many more surges in inflation. We'll experience what we experienced the last three years again over the next 14 years.

The last point is that for this plan to work, it has to come as a surprise that inflation surges.

However, debt only falls with inflation surprises—rises in inflation expectations do not improve debt dynamics.

IMF(International Monetary Fund) Report - The Effects of Inflation on Public Finances

If people expect inflation to surge, the plan no longer works. And that's one of the reasons I've written the report exposing all of this.

If people realise what's coming, they can change their behaviour and avoid the crisis that the rest of us will face.

All it really takes is for people to understand what this plan is.

And while the rest of Britain is unaware of what's going on and will be caught off guard by this plan just as they were in 2021, the readers of this report will understand what's happening and what to do about it ahead of time, just like I warned in 2021.

KIT: So, Nick, you've laid out in pretty clear steps and with plenty of evidence what's happening and why and what's going to happen.

But why are we not seeing this anywhere else? Who else is writing about it… or are they not at all?

NICK: Well the whole point like I say is that people don't realise it's going to happen just like they didn't realise in 2021.

So don't expect to read about this in the media. In fact, when we found this IMF report I was surprised that it's so publicly available and there for anyone to read.

And it outlines exactly what's happened over the last three years and exactly what the Bank of England is planning to do over the next ten to 14 years.

The fact that the media isn’t covering it is part of the scheme. If everyone realised what's going to happen, the interest rate on bonds would surge and that would negate the effect of inflating away the government debt. So it's required that this remains secret.

KIT: So it's clear that the power behind the throne, this shadow prime minister, is bent on unleashing more inflation.

But I suppose the next question is, what can the people watching today do about it?

I mean, when you called inflation and the stock and bond market crashes in recent years, that wasn't all. You also found ways to help people protect their wealth or even profit from it. And is that true again this time? Are there ways and financial assets to avoid or that you think readers should be buying?

NICK: So the way we've gone about this, Kit, is that we've created four different reports. The first report is already in your inbox.

It's the one we discussed earlier.

The one that explains that the Bank of England controls the government and is deciding what government policy will be.

The second report lays out what the Bank of England actually has planned. It reveals what's in the IMF's plan, how the Bank of England is going to follow that, and what it means for you.

The third and fourth report are very interesting. They lay out what to buy and what to sell if you agree with our analysis… what you should do in your investment portfolio if you agree that the Bank of England is running the country and is going to implement high inflation and low interest rates.

There's a list of different investments that you should sell now if you believe the Bank of England is embarking on the IMF plan. There's also a selection of investments that should benefit from what the Bank of England is trying to do to this country.

KIT: Okay. Nick, it all sounds very interesting. I don't suppose I could induce you to talk about any of the specifics now in terms of what to avoid.

NICK: I think the one I'm comfortable giving away is the idea of avoiding a pension fund, one of those big funds where your savings are managed for you by someone else. I believe you need to take control of your own finances to escape what the Bank of England has planned for you.

There's a peculiar reason for this, which is related to the Bank of England’s plan and the IMF plan. That is they have to find someone to apply this inflation tax to, this hidden tax…

Someone has to be the victim here in order for all this to work, and I believe the pension funds are going to be pressured or even forced to be that victim.

According to the IMF paper actually, the pension funds in parts of Europe are already being dealt this treatment. It's one of the reasons why financial markets in Europe performed so badly, and pension funds in Europe performed so badly. They're being deliberately targeted by this plan to try and get rid of national debts.

So it's already happening and I believe it will happen in the UK as well.

KIT: So, Nick, on top of the report that is already on its way to viewers’ inboxes right now, can you just detail what else is on the table for viewers today?

NICK: Yes. So the second report we want to send you is called “The Bank of England is Coming for Your Savings.”

It outlines what is in the IMS plan and how the bank of England is planning to implement it.

The report after that is called “Five Toxic Time Bombs to Sell Now.”

It reveals which investments you should avoid if you agree with our prediction of what's coming.

The fourth report is called “How to Profit from the 2024 Election Surprise.” It details how we believe you should invest your money given what's coming.

KIT: Okay.

So there really is quite a lot out there for viewers to get their teeth into in terms of understanding the depth of material and evidence behind all this, Nick.

For everyone watching at home, all of this is available to you when you take up a 30-day trial subscription of The Fleet Street Letter.

The Fleet Street Letter is where Nick shares his insights about markets. It exists for one sole reason: to help you understand the deep changes happening in the world and to show you how to benefit from them financially.

In the past, that deep change has included World War II, the Black Monday market crash, the rise of crypto, and the great financial crisis of 2008, all of which we've mentioned today.

But the change today that we want to discuss is the shift in power from politicians to central bankers.

Over the years, our organisation has included MPs, members of the House of Lords, ex MI5, Soviet spies, and a former Citi fund manager.

Our global intelligence network today includes the leader of the reform party, Nigel Farage, former MEP, Godfrey Bloom, former Citadel fund manager, Daniel Lacalle Fernández, and a man said to have played an unseen role in the election of Argentine president, Javier Milei, Federico Tessore.

Finally, there's Goldmoney's Head of Research, Alasdair Macleod, and the founder of Southbank Investment Research himself, Bill Bonner.  

So Nick, can you just quickly give us some detail on the publishing schedule of The Fleet Street Letter?

NICK: So what we've outlined in this presentation is unusual.

We don't usually issue four reports on one topic. But this is the biggest warning we're giving investors since that warning about World War II way back in 1939.

So we believe it's worth publishing something much longer than usual. Usually what we do is have a weekly update to let our readers know what's going on in the investments we recommend and in the big trends that we've discussed.

There's also a monthly issue in which we outline new ideas, new investments for people to consider and occasionally an update on an existing trend that we've identified.

KIT: Thanks, Nick.

And if the testimonials the readers send to you are any indication, they're incredibly happy with your work. And I think you should be able to see some of those on screen now.

I regard it as my investment bible.

James Muir

I based my mortgage decision on The Fleet Street Letter's forecast and it proved to be remarkably accurate

lan Carrington

It does the research that I'd never have time for

Colin Byatt

All of the information is valuable to me

Glenis Kellet

So just to recap, here's a reminder of everything that you get when you take out your no-obligation subscription to The Fleet Street Letter.

“The Bank of England is Coming for Your Savings” is the first report, which lays out the Bank of England's 17-and-a half-year plan to liquidate your pensions and pay off the national debt.

Then there's “Five Toxic Time Bombs to Sell Now.” These five toxic assets are especially vulnerable as the shadow prime minister's policies roil markets. But if you sell them before the election, you should be able to sidestep their collapse.

Finally, you'll get “How to Profit from the 2024 Election Surprise,” a report which reveals the special kind of stock that can thrive amid high inflation.

The key question now is how much does it all cost?

In the City, this type of investment grade research would cost thousands of pounds. But at Southbank, we want to lower the banner barriers for entry for everyday people. That's why today, the retail price for a year's one subscription to The Fleet Street Letter is £249.

But given the urgent significance of everything you've seen and heard today, for a very limited time, we're offering The Fleet Street Letter for just £99 per year, a 60% discount. If you'd like to take us up on that offer, simply click the button below and you'll be taken to a secure order form where you can review everything that's on the table.

Click here to take up your 30-day trial to The Fleet Street Letter

With the election looming, we feel there's an urgent opportunity for investors to profit and protect their wealth, and that's why we're offering this short-term discount.

Well, there you have it, everyone.

The man who ruled of imminent inflation in 2020 when central bankers and the media were dismissing it, and the man who predicted the massive sell off in bonds and the worst year for stocks since 2008. He has now shown us examples from all over the world of central bankers pulling the strings of politicians in the UK, the US, Italy, France, Greece, and elsewhere.

Now they're getting ready to do it in the UK once again. The proof to my mind is incredibly compelling, and the only question that remains is will you be prepared?

In as little as a few months, will you be caught off guard by the next bounce of inflation that the shadow prime minister will insist that no one could have foreseen?

Or when the bond market is reeling again, will you be among those looking at your pension fund with a sinking feeling?

We hope not. And that's why in addition to revealing free and actionable insights today, we want to make your decision to join The Fleet Street Letter as easy as possible.

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What that means is you'll have 30 days to peruse the research, the full Fleet Street Letter archive at your leisure. Decide if it's right for you, and if not, simply call our friendly customer support team for a full and prompt refund.

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Arguably, a once-in-a-century moment, and those who don't act in the next 30 days could fall prey to the “shadow prime minister's” invisible tax that Nick has laid out.

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But, Nick, I'll turn it over to you before we sign off. Any parting words for anyone watching tonight?

NICK: I think what I'd like to emphasise, Kit, is this is the most important thing facing everyone in the UK and perhaps even in Europe and US as well.

Right now, it's not just important for investors. We are all facing the inflationary challenge the Bank of England is planning to throw at us.

That's why these reports are so important. They detail every single step you should take and explain exactly why you need to take those steps. That's the challenge I set out for myself and our investment director of The Fleet Street Letter, John Butler.

And we believe we've delivered that in those four reports, the first of which is already in your inbox.

KIT: Thanks so much, Nick.

I think you've given everyone a hugely easy decision to make today. It's definitely been enlightening for me, and I'd like to give everyone watching at home one last chance to join The Fleet Street Letter.

Take advantage of everything that's been described tonight, especially our full briefing on the “shadow PM’s” plans, what you stand to lose, and how you could protect yourself, and even how you could profit.

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That's all for tonight. To everyone watching, I hope to see you on the other side. Thanks very much.


Important Risk Warning:

Advice in The Fleet Street Letter does not constitute a personal recommendation. Any recommendation should be considered in relation to your own circumstances, risk tolerance and investment objectives. Before investing you should consider carefully the risks involved, including those described below. If you have any doubt as to suitability or taxation implications, seek independent financial advice.

General – Your capital is at risk when you invest, never risk more than you can afford to lose. Past performance and forecasts are not reliable indicators of future results. Bid/offer spreads, commissions, fees and other charges can reduce returns from investments. There is no guarantee dividends will be paid.

Small cap shares - Shares recommended may be small company shares. These can be relatively illiquid meaning they are hard to trade and can have a large bid/offer spread. If you need to sell soon after you bought, you might get backless that you paid. This makes them riskier than other investments.

Overseas investments - Some shares may be denominated in a currency other than sterling. The return from these may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations. Any dividends will be taxed at source in the country of issue.

Taxation – Profits from share dealing are a form of income and subject to taxation. Tax treatment depends on individual circumstances and may be subject to change.

Funds – Fund performance relies on the performance of the underlying investments and there is counterparty default risk which could result in a loss not represented by the underlying investment.

Investment Director: John Butler. Editor: Nick Hubble. Editors or contributors may have an interest in recommendations. Information and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of other editors/contributors of Southbank Investment Research Ltd. Full details of our complaints procedure and terms and conditions can be found at, www.southbankresearch.com.

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Source List:

Morningstar

Yahoo Finance

IMF Working Paper – The Liquidation of Government Debt – 21 January 2015

Bank of England Market Operations Guide: Our objectives

Bank of England - Monetary Policy Summary, September 2022 – 22 September 2022

CNN Money - The Great Bond Market Massacre – 17 October 1994

Bloomberg UK - The Daily Prophet: Carville Was Right About the Bond Market – 29 January 2018