bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
hewittalan6
- 25 Jul 2006 08:36
- 17968 of 27111
Explosive,
She first discovered the invention by accident after her husband announced an interest in S&M and she made him a birthday present by sewing fish hooks in his underpants.
Don't know if thats true. i just made it up, but its a lovely thought.
Alan
barney12345
- 25 Jul 2006 09:09
- 17969 of 27111
without ramping this too much the hargreaves report seems spot on to me and looks moderately good. turnover up 316% in 1st six mnths "As yet, though, there's been little in the way of real commercial success and investors may want to see more progress before taking a punt. Fairly priced."
hewittalan6
- 25 Jul 2006 09:15
- 17970 of 27111
Agree.
The Hargreaves report said what a lot of the less extreme posters on here have been saying for some time, so credit goes to those posters. It will be interesting now to see how the market reacts to the end of exclusivity, and any announcement that may acoompany it.
Alan
greekman
- 25 Jul 2006 17:23
- 17972 of 27111
Must be a link Asda/Seo. If not the time scale would have to be delayed as other companies products would have to be trialed and tested.
25 Jul 2006
Web Exclusive
Asda launches zero waste to landfill target
Supermarket to redesign own label packs to cut waste
Asda is to stop sending any waste produced by its 307 food stores to landfill sites, it has announced today.
The commitment means that by 2010 everything Asda disposes of at the back of its stores will be recycled, reused or composted instead of being sent to landfill.
In addition, all its Asda brand products will be redesigned over the next 18 months, with the aim of reducing the weight and volume of packaging by at least 10%.
For full article see link.
http://www.checkoutmagazine.co.uk/market_update/market_update_story.ehtml?o=2089
As the trial period re Greanseal is set to end this Thurs 27th, possibilities anyone.
greekman
- 25 Jul 2006 17:43
- 17973 of 27111
Many more are jumping onto the environmental band wagon.
San Francisco is expected to ban Styrofoam food packaging later this summer.
Santa Monica could soon ban the use of non-recyclable packaging for takeout food.
Calabasas may ban polystyrene.
Berkeley, Huntington Beach, Malibu, Newport Beach and Portland (OR) Baltimore, Maryland, are also considering similar bans.
No wonder Walmart, McDonalds and the like are looking at the issue
Tonyrelaxes
- 25 Jul 2006 23:15
- 17974 of 27111
Greekman.
Thanks. Interesting find. It makes my mind run - hopefully along the path to come.
Here is it in ASDA colours :-
http://www.asda-press.co.uk/pressrelease/35
Tony
oblomov
- 26 Jul 2006 09:23
- 17975 of 27111
I find the article a little worrying in that while laying out its 'green' credentials ASDA makes no mention of Greenseal or Starpol (I wouldn't expect them mentioned specifically as no deals signed, but I would expect a general mention of 'greener' packaging to come - if it were imminenet, or a delay in the press release to include it).
Admittedly the press release deals predominantly with ASDA's on-site wastage and recycling, but the 'Notes for editors' covers a broader spectrum - shouldn't we have seen something along the lines of 'delivering biodegradable packaging to customers to reduce the effect on land-fill sites'?
hewittalan6
- 26 Jul 2006 09:29
- 17976 of 27111
Saw something on the box last night about supermarkets taking things from the shelves at the display untill date and giving them to a charity. Apparantly, up till now, the food equivalent of 13.8 billion apples are thrown away every year.
There was a brief interview with the usual green campaigner who did mention the drive to cut down on packaging and reduce fossil fuel consumption in the packaging and delivery.
Didn't concentrate too much on the interview cos i was still calculating the amount of potential cider thrown away in 13.8 billion apples.
Alan
oblomov
- 26 Jul 2006 09:54
- 17977 of 27111
@ 10 apples to a pint, thats a lot of hangovers, Alan.
1.38 billion pints, 5 pints per hangover = 276 million hangovers or approx. 6.13 hangovers for everyone over 18 in the UK!
Personally, I'd rather we continued to throw the food away - I dont think I could cope with the extra hangovers, current levels being high enough.
greekman
- 26 Jul 2006 13:46
- 17978 of 27111
OB,
Re your 'delivering biodegradable packaging to customers to reduce the effect on land-fill sites'?
There have been several articles re ASDA and their green policies over the last couple of days. Some of them have gone along the lines of biodegradable packaging, although the main theme was relating to all aspects of Green Issues.
I just hope the end date for the extended exclusivity, brings some news (obviously hopefully good) otherwise the familiar posts re SEO's PR dept will no doubt take over the thread, with some justification.
No news is good news, in this case, will not give that impression.
garypat2
- 26 Jul 2006 13:57
- 17979 of 27111
Hi All
N.Ireland news this morning- West Belfast firm Delta packaging has completed a deal worth 50m over the next five years to supply McDonald with folding paper cartons .This company has already been connected with McDonalds in the past and this product will be distributed to Scandinavia,France, Germany and China.
Just imagine we may well have an announcement like that very soon,re Wrap 100,
certainly makes you realise how big a global player McD is for Stanelco.
automatic
- 26 Jul 2006 14:17
- 17980 of 27111
MMs manipulating ,the SP going down on buys
Haystack
- 26 Jul 2006 14:57
- 17981 of 27111
The MMs aren't manipulating the price. The price is based on actual trades as this is a SETS/MM stock.The order book dictates the price. You also can't tell which is a SELL or BUY anyway with a SETS stock as they are matched bargains.
automatic
- 26 Jul 2006 15:17
- 17982 of 27111
all prices are higher than the bid, i always thought this was one way of telling that it was a buy, and if price was based on actual trades then the SP should be going up
greekman
- 26 Jul 2006 15:23
- 17983 of 27111
SEO is as you say a SETS/MM stock so yes it may be order driven, but the mm's can also influence the price through the order books. They can manipulate the sp.
If the buy order book looks heavier than the sell book it does indicate that the shares are in demand. The indications re sells buys are still there but as you say it is not as easy or clear cut to be sure.
As we all know each seller must equate to a buyer, but on most days one outweighs the other, showing that there are either orders out there that can't be filled or spare stock being held in the system. Level 2 gives very good indications (as long as you are watching the screen as the deals come in) as to if the trades are buys or sells.
Mad Pad
- 26 Jul 2006 15:30
- 17984 of 27111
Haystack can you explain then why then, when a few months ago I sold about 60,000 shares my broker had to go to the market to get a price?After all 60k shares even @10.25p isn't a lot of money,or does SETS only work up to the NMS whatever amount that is for SEO.Ideas on a postcard .
Haystack
- 26 Jul 2006 16:45
- 17985 of 27111
Because the stock is a SETS/MM stock. The MMs can still deal within the spread set by the order book. The basic spread is set by trades on the order book and not theoretical prices set by the MMs. MMs can put orders on the order book, but they are real trades.
superrod
- 26 Jul 2006 16:49
- 17986 of 27111
its mm and sets
put your order in with TDW eg and you will get a quote or asked to send your order. this will then join the queue.
whether or not you can trade online depends on the order book.
if 50000 peeps are tyring to sell at 4p put YOUR order in at 3.99p. top of the queue
Haystack
- 26 Jul 2006 17:05
- 17987 of 27111
Exactly. The MMS cannot just set a price to cause buying or selling without an actual trade existing. They can quote outside the current spread and put an order on the orderbook thereby moving the price, but it has to be a real order and not just an attempt to influence the price.