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Hardup
Get my first payment on both bonds at 6.2% next week "thanks to you" . I don't get state pension until next year so shouldn't be to bad on tax. I think state pension is £203 a week so i looked up ? .
In layman's terms it's a right. s h i t show over there GB.
The more savvy amongst us know, long term, the only way a single currency will/can work is a 'US' of Europe. Surprised it's gotten this far, but let's face it, during the euro's short life the consequences of this experiment have inflicted some real hardship on its citizens. In short, without major reform it's doomed to failure.
And yet, we still have a few numpties who cannot see what's unfolding before their eyes. Thank goodness we had the foresight and the democratic opportunity to escape.
Yawn...
Far too long-winded to read gateboy.
Try paraphrasing the next time
Gap Watch --- Lloy --- Current SP - 44.37p
19th-20th Sept 23 - 42.9p
9th-10th Mar 23 - 51.3p
21st-24th Feb 20 - 55.17p
10th-13th Jan 20 - 60.1p
23rd-24th Jun 16 - 71.1p
27th-28th Oct 15 - 77.1p
~~~~~
Gap watch --- Barc --- Current SP - 159p
28th-29th Aug 23 - 144
20th-21st Sept 23 - 159.58 - closed
9th-10th Feb 23 - 189.56
11th-12th Aug 15 - 278
~~~~~
Gap watch --- NWG --- Current SP - 235.7p
25th-26th July 23 - 250.4
9th-10th Mar 23 - 289.9
23rd-24th Feb 11 - 471
11th-12th Dec 08 - 648
Based on LSE tech chart ---- https://www.investopedia.com/articles/trading/05/playinggaps.asp ---- https://allstarcharts.com/gaps-need-filled/
A1
Lloyds TVR RNS 29th September 2023
https://uk.advfn.com/stock-market/london/lloyds-banking-LLOY/share-news/Lloyds-Banking-Group-PLC-Total-Voting-Rights/92159257
Total voting rights
28th Feb 2018 72,086,432,586
29th Mar 2018 72,176,280,921 +89m
30th Apr 2018 71,992,041,055 -184m
09th May 2018 72,407,041,055 +415m
31st May 2018 72,129,030,238 -278m
29th June 2018 71,958,123,874 -171m
29th July 2018 71,515,614,767 -443m
31st Aug 2018 71,132,542,688 -383m
28th Sept 2018 71,139,419,538 +7m
31st Oct 2018 71,147,373,711 +8m
30th Nov 2018 71,155,240,499 +8m
31st Dec 2018 71,163,592,264 +8m
31st Jan 2019 71,172,185,031 +9m
28th Feb 2019 71,349,949,398 +178m, total for year MINUS 736m shares
29th Mar 2019 71,196,168,225 -154m
30th Apr 2019 70,864,314,036 -332m
08th May 2019 71,409,314,036 +545m
31st May 2019 70,956,983,504 -452m
28th June 2019 70,764,310,880 -193m
31st July 2019 70,472,185,753 -292m
30th Aug 2019 70,128,674,524 -344m
30th Sept 2019 70,026,650,473 -102m
31st Oct 2019 70,036,069,794 +10m
29th Nov 2019 70,044,224,961 +8m
31st Dec 2019 70,052,557,838 +8m
31st Jan 2020 70,285,353,360 +233m
28th Feb 2020 70,426,890,295 +141m, total for year MINUS 923m shares
31st Mar 2020 70,442,102,615 +16m
30th Apr 2020 70,453,630,525 +12m
29th May 2020 70,752,109,189 +300m
30th June 2020 70,762,180,096 +10m
31st July 2020 70,774,420,907 +12m
28th Aug 2020 70,787,965,706 +13m
30th Sept 2020 70,802,126,471 +14m
30th Oct 2020 70,815,383,752 +13m
30th Nov 2020 70,829,127,790 +14m
31st Dec 2020 70,839,206,060 +10m
31st Jan 2021 70,849,366,949 +10m
28th Feb 2021 70,859,202,885 +10m, total for year PLUS 433m shares
31st Mar 2021 70,945,784,662 +86m
30th Apr 2021 70,954,353,687 +9m
28th May 2021 70,962,362,830 +8m
30th June 2021 70,970,030,431 +8m
30th July 2021 70,978,544,624 +8m
31st Aug 2021 70,986,783,092 +8m
30th Sept 2021 70,995,638,276 +9m
31st Oct 2021 71,005,038,043 +10m
31st Nov 2021 71,012,823,613 +7m
31st Dec 2021 71,022,593,135 +10m
31st Jan 2022 71,038,165,242 +16m
28th Feb 2022 71,047,437,994 +9m, total for year PLUS 188m shares
28th Mar 2022 70,305,970,390 -742m
31st Mar 2022 70,176,792,699 -129m
30th Apr 2022 69,666,692,662 -510m
31st May 2022 69,647,400,492 -19m
30th June 2022 69,042,821,945 -605m
29th July 2022 68,479,354,394 -563m
31st Aug 2022 68,243,054,666 -236m
30th Sept 2022 67,804,960,981 -439m
31st Oct 2022 67,269,682,667 -535m
30th Nov 2022 67,278,416,588 +9m
3rd Jan 2023 67,287,852,204 +9m
31st Jan 2023 67,406,788,337 +119m
28th Feb 2023 67,386,199,641 -200m total for year MINUS 3.661bn shares
28th Mar 2023 66,686,047,352 -700m
31st Mar 2023 66,615,936,756 -71m
30th Apr 2023 66,006,787,187 -609m
31st May 2023 65,652,037,259 -354m
23rd June 2023 64,961,222,997 -691m
30th June 2023 64,640,297,474 -321m
31st July 2023 64,359,436,417 -281m
31st Aug 2023 63,540,750,749 -819m total for year MINUS 3.845bn
30th Sept 2023 ????????????????????
Gate
What is the source of your post?
Under Macron, France’s debts have ballooned to the third largest in the world in absolute terms, behind only the US and Japan, while the size of the state is still enormous.
If traders start to have doubts about France, that will be far more serious than anything that happens in Italy. It owes more money, and the debt is far more widely held globally.
Add it all up and one point is clear. At a point when the eurozone risks crashing back into a recession, governments are being forced into austerity programmes that will crush the life out of the economy. The flaws in the single currency are about to be exposed all over again.
First, its bizarre rules demand cuts to government spending at the time when it will do most damage.
No one with a basic acquaintance with an economic textbook would argue that Italy or Germany require an austerity programme right now, but the rules of the euro require it so there is no other choice.
Next, the eurozone prevents countries from devaluing when they need to. Italy’s currency has been consistently too high since it replaced the lira with the euro and the country has barely grown in the 23-year-old experiment of sharing a currency with its neighbours. Germany’s currency was too weak for most of the last two decades, but now, with no more cheap Russian gas, and with its prized auto industry getting destroyed by the Chinese, it is probably too high. Even so, it can’t devalue its way through a restructuring of its business model.
Finally, countries have lost the ability to control their own finances. The markets are quite rightly getting worried about the French state’s addiction to spending, and the refusal of its truculent workforce to accept changes to generous pension and welfare schemes.
But if it still had the franc, the central bank could always print the money to pay for it all even if it had to accept a weakening currency. That option has now been closed, with consequences that are becoming painfully obvious.
Two years ago the massive transfers within the zone in the Coronavirus Recovery Fund were meant to fix all the fault lines in the single currency, while a massive blast of quantitative easing from the European Central Bank papered over the cracks and just about kept the show on the road.
The ECB’s balance sheet, a rough measure of the amount of money printed, hit 82pc of GDP at the peak, compared with 36pc for the US Federal Reserve, and 39pc for the Bank of England. Over the next year it will become disturbingly clear that the zone is crashing right back into austerity and recession. And that, whatever its other challenges, the UK is at least well out of the mess on the other side of the Channel.
The Italian budget deficit is spiralling upwards again. France is about to have to make perhaps its first serious cuts of the free-spending Macron presidency. And Germany is facing a round of cuts to every form of government spending with the sole exception of defence. In the background, the bond markets are increasingly staging the kind of revolt against wild spending that the UK endured a year ago. The eurozone is heading straight back into austerity and recession, and as it does so all the flaws in the single currency will be painfully exposed all over again.
The latest round of upgrades to the UK’s growth figures published yesterday revealed that our performance has been middling compared to the rest of the G7 since the start of the pandemic. We have done significantly worse than the US or Canada, but, despite three years of propaganda from hardcore Remainers, better than Germany or France.
It turns out – surprise, surprise – that leaving the EU hasn’t made much difference to the economy one way or another. But it is about to become increasingly obvious to everyone that, while we have plenty of challenges to contend with, we were lucky to escape the mess across the rest of Europe.
Over the last week, the economic outlook on the other side of the Channel has taken a decisive turn for the worse. Italy has just published forecasts that its deficit will rise to 5.3pc of GDP, from earlier projections of 4.3pc, while its growth estimates have been cut to less than 1pc.
It turns out that the billions of euros of funds from other member states under the Coronavirus Recovery Fund, with the EU borrowing on its own account for the first time, that were designed to reboot the Italian economy have essentially been wasted. Italy is in a worse mess than ever, with its debt set to rise forever.
Emmanuel Macron, the French president, may present himself as a centrist reformer, but he has also been quietly spending money on a scale that even Boris Johnson might have felt queasy about, and this week the bills started to fall due. Its budget for next year includes cuts to welfare payments – usually a touchy subject in riot-prone France – and postpones corporate tax breaks as it struggles to bring a debt to GDP ratio of 112pc under control. Earlier this month, Germany published budget plans with cuts to everything except defence even though its infrastructure is creaking and public services are so old-fashioned that many still use fax machines.
It is probably no surprise that the bond markets have turned as jittery as they were during Liz Truss’s ill-fated premiership. Over the course of the week, the yield on 10-year Italian bonds rose to 4.89pc, the highest level since 2013. Everyone already assumes Italy is a basket case, but the rise in French yields was far more worrying, with rates spiking to 3.5pc.
“No doubt the lefties”
Predictive text nonsense
The bloke who did it must be some cret*n not worthy of comment. No don’t bythe lefties and their lawyers will coalesce to defend him.
What we have yet to hear is what motivated someone to do it.
I guess it will come out soon enough.
I guess that will be his dad.
Unbelievable
A man in his 60s has been arrested by officers investigating the felling of the world-famous Sycamore Gap tree in Northumberland, UK, police say
BEEB
One too many for me tonight. P*nis.
carltt - i think you have a really, really small *****. i blame the immigrants.
Also 60 year old arrested
With current woke lunacy surrounding Uk lawlessness, far more likely he will be put up in the Savoy, as a VIP, given free money, while his arresting police officers are suspended, for false arrest.
He will get a slap on the wrist.
He should be forced to pay and plant 1000 trees.
Why and how is a 16 year old walking around with a chainsaw??
It’s just nuts.
Put that guy who chopped the tree in a stocks or pillory at the spot where the tree was felled.
Members of the public would at liberty to form an orderly queue, and chuck rotten veg etc. at him!
Braverman is saying all the right words, just as the immigrant boats arrive here, with all immigrants laughing at our Uk government’s empty words, then being put up in the Savoy hotel.
Action, action, action.
Returning them all back is the only answer. No government has done it and so the immigrant knife crimes will grow. Of course, we have also had the recent Derbyshire public sword fighting.
@ carltt
I wonder what you will post when or if SP gets tp 50 p or more
Braverman is saying all the right words, just as the immigrant boats arrive here, with all immigrants laughing at our Uk government’s empty words, then being put up in the Savoy hotel.
Action, action, action.
Returning them all back is the only answer. No government has done it and so the immigrant knife crimes grow will grow.
The country has gone to the dogs.
The news is horrific at the moment.
I guess that’s what comes when politicians break their own laws and no police.
Well done if you were selling over 44p today. 👍