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The Big Freeze - gainers and losers     

Bullshare - 24 Nov 2005 14:03

The Met office keep warning us that we might have the coldest winter since 1963. Now that was a bad winter, as a slip of a lad living in the Cotswolds I remember snow drifts over the top of 7ft signposts.

Today Ian McLeod, chief executive of Halfords Group PLC, reckons the car parts and cycle retailer is well set to benefit if official forecasts that the UK is set to endure its coldest winter for 10 years come true. 'The colder it gets the happier I am,' he told AFX News in an interview after the group, which floated in June last year, published interim results in line with market expectations and revealed solid current trading.

So who could be the gainers and losers,I think

Gainers

Gas Producers
Gas Utilities
Electricity Producers
Electricity Utilities
Oil Producers (heating oil)
Oil Suppliers
Coal Miners
Holiday Companies ( Get away to the sun/ski packages)
Salt Suppliers(gritters)
SSL PLC- you can work that one out for yourself:-)




Losers

Ice Cream manufacturers
Sun Tan cream makers
Water Utilities (burst pipes)
Car Insurance Companies ( prangs)
Farmers/Crop Futures


axdpc - 24 Nov 2005 19:21 - 14 of 24

I was told 47 was longer (16 weeks) but 62 (6 wk) was much colder.
His mains water supply pipe was frozen for two weeks but had the enjoyment of skating on the canal :-)

axdpc - 24 Nov 2005 19:26 - 15 of 24

Not sure airline will do well in a big, prolonged freeze. If rail transport can't cope with autumn leaves and powdery snows, what chance will airlines cope with severe winter weather. We are not Switzerland with universal, genuine personal pride in efficiency, quality and work well-done.

MightyMicro - 24 Nov 2005 23:15 - 16 of 24

Bones: Bog off :) I was 4 and up to my waist in snow in Scotland. Nasty business, but I remember it well.

As for the airlines, you just need to remember the aquaplaning formula for nervous flyers (the speed at which the aircraft tyres lose adhesion on a wet runway).

As I recall, it's (7.7 x sqrt tyre pressure in lbs/sq inch) kts for spin-up (take-off) and (9 x sqrt tyre pressure in lbs/sq inch) kts for spin-down (landing).

It's a bit different if it's a slushy runway.

Happy landings :)

Mega Bucks - 25 Nov 2005 00:34 - 17 of 24

MM,and how much pressure does it require to move you Zimmer Frame old boy,even Mike cant remember that far back :-)

aldwickk - 25 Nov 2005 07:32 - 18 of 24

If Holiday Companies ( Get away to the sun/ski packages are gainers why are suncream companys not ?

MightyMicro - 25 Nov 2005 11:43 - 19 of 24

Mega, you young whippersnapper. A couple of glasses of red wine is all it takes to supercharge me . . .

Mega Bucks - 25 Nov 2005 11:45 - 20 of 24

How you keeping Derek ????

MightyMicro - 25 Nov 2005 12:51 - 21 of 24

Oh, the rudest of rude health!

Gausie - 25 Nov 2005 13:36 - 22 of 24

A long cold winter will be excellent news for PDX.

Um, I haven't worked out why yet, but I'll post as soon as I come up with something vaguely credible.

Scripophilist - 25 Nov 2005 13:44 - 23 of 24

A report has just thumped on my desk and apparently Soup has seen the biggest increase in sales at a retail level. Heaters, clothes are all up there.

Confidant - 07 Dec 2005 11:02 - 24 of 24

There you are - a reason why this cold winter will help PDX -- more soup needed
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