Chris Heminway, Exec-Chair at Time To ACT, explains why now is the right time for the Group to IPO. Watch the video here.
No frap your honour was inflicted upon said persons other than them being robbed...
makes a bank job easy
OK , we all get it wrong with blowing heads off re Brazil ,but this one wanted it!
... what a waste of tax payers monies , a shot to his head would have done!
Excuse me but as you have wasted a shed load of innocent folk , do you mind giving up without a fight..
A bullet at close quarters , but I guess euro health and safety springs to mind.
He will likely be banged up for more than a few years , write his story , be understood and then published and reintroduced to society at 65 to then draw his state pension.
...but he has a voice , clearly louder than others
... suffice to say I am well vexed
.. trading is for for profit ,placve it , gain it and give it back,gl,Mark
...loads of folk died today , global, as normal.
..the trillions agreed state side will be fun next week
The odd 100 billion does petty cash syndrome to me and I am looking for a big gain in the mix ....
Logging in on LSE is simply enough a breath test. I ask the tech heads for ceilings. I understand that the print machines will churn , regardless , for self preservation, but , what is the print run?
.. nice bronco ride on the Italian Stallion§!
still trading http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fay1uk7wpnQ&feature=fvst
old news but a recap for others
... this article amused me Europe is bankrupt and the EU will not exist in its current form within 12 months. The ECB tried to “bailout our way to success” strategy on some of the more minor players (Greece), but is now finding that there isn’t actually enough money to bail out the larger players (Spain and Italy). So, barring a leveraged buyout of Italy by Germany and China, the EU will be breaking up and the Euro collapsing within the next 12 months. How this will happen remains to be seen (the EU splits into two sections? Is done away with altogether? Etc). But the facts remain that the EU has reached the end game for bailouts (you cannot bail out entire countries). The last straw of hope that the bulls are clinging is China’s recent decision to actively buy EU member states’ sovereign debt. Those of us who recall China’s decision to buy Morgan Stanley in 2008 can’t help but wonder if the country has never heard of “due diligence” or if it simply doesn’t care about losing money. Speaking of China, the People’s Republic is finding out that the Republic made $540 billion worth of loans to the people that: 1) Have not been accounted for 2) Are properly garbage and won’t be paid back We all know how this scheme ends (see subprime collapse in US). However, given that China pretty much makes up its economic data, it’s pretty safe to assume that the bad loan situation there is even worse than Moody’s believes. So look for a “2008 type” bust in China in the coming months. And then of course there’s the US: the current least horrendous disaster winner by default (literally in Europe’s case and metaphorically in China’s case). Congress continues to play “debt talk” phone tag with President Obama. However, to say this is a debate ignores the fact that there isn’t actually two sides to this discussion. Both Congress and the White House are debt-crazed groups who believe throwing good money after bad = recovery. So regardless of whether the debt ceiling is raised or budget talks reach an agreement, the US is broke and will continue to be until we default and restructure our debt obligations. In simple terms, what I’m trying to say is that we are about to witness another “2008” only on a sovereign scale. The EU will be first, but China, Japan, and even the US will be defaulting in the future. The implications these actions have for asset classes will be HUGE as all assets move relative to sovereign bonds which used to be considered the primary low risk asset class in the world. So expect another bigger Crisis that will feature huge waves of volatility, market crashes, debt defaults, civil unrest, food shortages, bank holidays and the like.