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"Chips. I wish my average was near to yours."
Ditto
Chips .
I wish my average was near to yours.
hardup.
On that score yes.
US companies added 534,000 jobs in November, ADP data
Where have all the doomsters gone!
Rennies work.
yes its not a race ,Rome was not built in one day,
Average 23p for me ,with looking to get out between 80p - £1 which we should see early 2023 IMHO DYOR
Just happy to sit and wait and take what ever dividend the board give us.
Love & Light
Chips
64p end of year
MV
But the remit, function, reason for being, call it what you want, of both, is equivalent/the same.
Hard
Thanks for the link and I have actually read it
But a short blip down in this case makes the upwards move more stronger.
In the absence of any concerns or any evidance of sevear illness by Omicorn I say this is now back on track and moving nicely
Of course it will be some ups and down but the push is upwards for this stock and I honestly think we have seen nothing yet with Lloyds
As a long termer honestly non of these moves matter to me
With the current t avarage of 42 I am here to stay till at least 75p which i actually think easily achivable by mid 2022
I am expecting at least 3/4 interest rise next year potentially starting from Dec but I think they might wait till January
Either way Lloyds will benefit
I am already heavily loaded here and jealous of others with lower avarge but I have made profits in other places so can't really complain
All the best
SR
IMHO
Hardup
The BoE is owned by the government the Federal reserve is a group of 12 regional federal reserves, Banks within the Feds must buy stock in the regional fed, banks, they make money trading us bonds and money etc and get a dividend of 6%.
The Congress has over sight on the Fed, the US Treasury is the US governments entity.
Stockready1
How else would you describe the SP fall on Friday last week? Read the article fully instead of jumping in feet first again.
"With the discovery of the Omicron variant, the Lloyds rally has been derailed in the short term, but it could be the opportunity investors are looking for to buy Lloyds shares for a longer term hold."
Derailed !!
How?
55/57p at least before end of the year
Lloyds share price recovery derailed by Omicron variant and could provide buying opportunity.
https://ukinvestormagazine.co.uk/lloyds-share-price-recovery-derailed-by-omicron-variant-and-could-provide-buying-opportunity/?mc_cid=eccf1572c5&mc_eid=305a38a814
US Federal Reserve is the US equivalent of the BOE in the UK.
Hardup.
On the Fed, you may be surprised that a large number of Americans still think the Federal Reserve is a branch of Government.
They are amazed when told it is the front for Wall Street Banks.
As so many still think Fort Knox is full of GOLD !
Hard up
The omicron is not a big concern goverment doesn't have a clue what they are doing
The people who first reported it telling scientists this is taken way out of proportion
Within 10 days you soon learn the panic was over nothing
Of course they have to save their embaressment so they are holding that BS line but show me large numbers of people in the hospital with sever illnesses as a result of Omicorn?
There isn't one
Being positive with Omicorn doesn't mean you get several sick, you wouldn't
This virus is weak and symptoms are mild
GL
DYOR
From todays Investment Chronical email newsletter.
"So, ‘transitory’ is being retired. At last, you might say. It’s been clear for months that inflation would not prove as transitory as central banks told us. But how come so many of us in the market could see it and they couldn’t? And who knows how much damage has been done? Fed chair Jay Powell said it’s "a good time to retire that word", whilst admitting that the economy is strong and inflation high. He also said the Fed would look to speed up the pace of its tapering of QE – cue expectations the Fed will raise rates sooner. The Fed fell behind the curve and is now in an invidious position where it’s going to need to tighten monetary policy during a slowdown. It should have acted far sooner. Bond yields are on the move and we are seeing a swift flattening of the curve - 10s down on economic fears, 2s up on bets the Fed will tighten sooner. Not the prettiest picture for risk assets, so stocks fell. Higher short-term yields are also weighing on gold.
Markets have other things to worry about right now – the Omicron variant is a big concern, clearly. Powell’s comments did little to soothe market concerns; pointing to how this is very different to March 2020 in more ways than one: CBs don’t have the firepower to call on that they did back then. Just as well that Omicron is barely comparable with the first wave. Stocks sold off further, oil retreated with WTI sinking below $65. Both are back up this morning, enjoying something of bounce in early trade on the first day of the new month – though risk appetite is clearly shaky. We need to see at least another sell-stop washout before the low is in. Volatility is high and will remain so until more is understood of Omicron – my bet is that’s going to a passing concern and markets can rally. But Omicron headlines will drive price action in both directions for a couple more weeks. European stock markets are broadly higher, the FTSE 100 seeing near-term resistance at 7,140, the 38.2 per cent retracement area of the recent selloff.
Indications from Israel suggest people who have had three doses are reasonably well protected from the new variant. Cue the UK and others ramping up their booster programmes. Meanwhile all the evidence thus far (it can change) says the symptoms are relatively mild – at least not more severe than other variants. Cases in the UK are coming down, as are hospitalisations and deaths. But as we know it’s not so much about the actual impact of the disease as it is about the policy response, which once again has rested on a combination of authoritarianism and stoking fear."
The Far End
Ask seven economists, the same question and you will get seven differing answers, they are only experts within their own judgement. Like so many experts, their sphere of expertise is not an exact science . Similar to the China Virus none experts it appears.
hardup.
If the FED (Jerome Powell) has dropped the word "transitory" from his description of this inflation spike, I wonder if the BOE (Andrew Bailey) will follow suit?
Perhaps they will use alternatives like, short-lived, brief, passing, momentary because after all their recent rhetoric they can't really start using opposites like permanent or continuing etc.
They can always blame (just like other authoritarian bodies) Omicron or some other world event as an unexpected 'we didn't see that coming' get out clause. Although Omicron could actually help in drumming down inflation.
For all their collective information, knowledge and 'tools' at their disposal it's all just a best guess. After all, the last time they hit their mandated 2% target was earlier this year on its way through from low to the present day high.
That must be a bulk standard repetitive letter they write to the chancellor every month.
Good recovery this morning, hope everyone has taken advantage of this blip as most stocks are up.
Fed Chair signals faster Tapering, as Powell told a Senate banking committee that it’s time to stop using the word “transitory” to describe inflation.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-29/asia-stocks-set-for-steady-open-as-virus-fear-ebbs-markets-wrap