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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

goldfinger - 09 Jun 2005 12:25

Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).

Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.

cheers GF.

MaxK - 11 Oct 2013 19:11 - 30942 of 81564

So the Nu owners took into account the pension provisions?



Haystack - 11 Oct 2013 20:54 - 30943 of 81564

The new owners are just the shareholders. The pension is complicated. It would take a few pages to explain it. Essentially, the government has absorbed the current scheme, which is closed to new members. After privatisation a new scheme will be started. The government is then responsible for the pensions of the members of the old system.

cynic - 11 Oct 2013 21:00 - 30944 of 81564

Strong demand for the controversial privatisation of Royal Mail prompted the government to explore whether it could extract a higher price for the postal operator, but key institutional investors signalled they would drop out if they had to pay more than 330p a share

the cynical might suggest it was succumbing to blackmail, though Hilary would claim just as fairly that the price was what the market would bear

doodlebug4 - 11 Oct 2013 21:20 - 30945 of 81564

Where has the self-appointed bulletin board guru - gf - gone, just when we need his sage words of wisdom here. Font of all knowledge - have you been devoured by a shark in your fish pond or are you just trying to chat-up the local slapper? :-)

cynic - 11 Oct 2013 21:26 - 30946 of 81564

eating or being eaten by worms at the bottom of the river perhaps
better chance of that than hearing words of wisdom from that quarter

Fred1new - 11 Oct 2013 21:48 - 30947 of 81564

Hays,

You seem by your postings to be "Jack of all trades, master of none".

Lucky you parents were born before you.

------

Royal Mail.

With 4 daughters and a wife to apply for shares, we got more shares than I expected.

It was a complete balls up and if your estate agent sold your house for 37.9% less than the market valued it for you, you may wish to lynch that estate agent,


That is one good reason for taking the Hairy one's opinions with a pinch of salt.


================


Again it is a failure of competence by an inept government and will count against them at the next GE.

Especially when Cameron and the Hairy one try to present the sell off as a "success".

===========

Whether the price goes up or down the public will see it as a failure.

===========

DB4

Don't describe yourself as a slapper, and keep off the streets. You never know there must be somebody who may fancy you.



MaxK - 11 Oct 2013 21:49 - 30948 of 81564

ah, so it's as I thought.

The "post" as it was, was not a viable business, it's debt was overwhelming it. (it was losing money, altho making it in a primary sense)

So now we have the "Nu post", which is privately run for whatever profit the nu owners can make, and the taxpayer picks up the tab for the bits that don't make a profit + plus any lingering debt.

Pensions: the gov hasn't absorbed anything, the taxpayers have been landed with the bill again, and let the juicy bits go to the shareholders.


It's not that complicated Haystack, you just have to follow the money.

doodlebug4 - 11 Oct 2013 21:54 - 30949 of 81564

Cynic, don't forget that he told us we were potentially heading for a market crash on 3rd October. I'm glad you immediately stamped on that prediction! Dow is currently up another 110 points tonight after the 300+ points yesterday.

Haystack - 11 Oct 2013 21:58 - 30950 of 81564

The government has the assets of the pension scheme to cover part of the cost of the scheme. In fact the RM made a profit recently which is what made it possible to privatise it. There is no reason for the government to run businesses. It is better for the private sector to run them and take the risks. The government can then tax the profit from the companies. Those taxes are the ONLY source of wealth and income for the country.

Haystack - 11 Oct 2013 22:03 - 30951 of 81564

gf is probably walking up and down his nearest high street wearing a doom board.

Chris Carson - 11 Oct 2013 22:04 - 30952 of 81564

Fred The Red...... Oh dear what a shame, never mind! :O)

aldwickk - 11 Oct 2013 22:52 - 30953 of 81564

chris

The trouble with a 3 day game is that your opponent can cheat by having the time to use a Chess software program like Fritz to make his move

Chris Carson - 11 Oct 2013 23:36 - 30954 of 81564

ald - never thought of that, really? If you get a chance look up my user name and pick one of the guys I have played and challenge them. I would never have won a single game against them if they had cheated.

MaxK - 11 Oct 2013 23:42 - 30955 of 81564

"The government has the assets of the pension scheme to cover part of the cost of the scheme."


What does it take?


Haystack - 11 Oct 2013 23:44 - 30956 of 81564

About 30+ billion.

MaxK - 11 Oct 2013 23:49 - 30957 of 81564

to do what?

Haystack - 12 Oct 2013 00:56 - 30958 of 81564

It is around £37.5 billion to fund the pension of people already in it or collecting their pensions. There are approx 900,000 people in the scheme not yet at pensionable age. The government will get £28 billion of assets from the existing scheme. The difference will be funded in coming years as other civil service systems. The government already had around £5 trillion of pension liabilities for all of us to look after,

cynic - 12 Oct 2013 07:58 - 30959 of 81564

DB4 - we are by no means out of the woods yet, though as i have posted previously, a longer term solution of some kind will be found, even if it is yet another fudge

MaxK - 12 Oct 2013 09:44 - 30960 of 81564

It's election time again....



Boomtime: Britain bounces back

Share prices, house prices, luxury cars... The recession is over and the country has started spending again


Plasterers and joiners are, he adds, also seeing a return to the glory days – echoes of a time when Harry Enfield, with his 'Loadsamoney' character, parodied the seemingly endless cash being earned by tradesmen Photo: REX



Harry Wallop

By Harry Wallop, and Theo Merz

8:48PM BST 11 Oct 2013


A mere 20 yards from the London Stock Exchange, workers on their lunch break are in buoyant mood. Oysters are being shucked in the Paternoster Chop House (£12.50 for half a dozen), while pints are being poured in the neighbouring pubs that shelter in the great shadow of St Paul’s Cathedral.


And no wonder. The Royal Mail share sell has been met with an enthusiasm not seen since the bonanza days of Thatcherite privatisations. Some 730,000 private investors tried to buy stock – with a minimum order size of £750 – pointing to an army of optimistic ordinary savers, desperate to invest their money. After manic trading, the shares closed up 38 per cent yesterday, presenting an immediate paper profit of £285 to those 690,000 retail investors who got their hands on an allocation.


Five years after the devastating collapse of Lehman Brothers, which almost overnight sucked hope out of the Square Mile, things are looking bright once again, as City workers relate over their lunch.


“I travel in from Luton, and by Harpenden people are really struggling to get a seat,” says Steve Victor, an IT services manager who works for an investment firm. “Just a few months ago that didn’t happen until St Albans [seven miles down the line]. That shows how many more people have got jobs.”


His colleague, Christopher, an IT consultant for a City recruitment company, has a similar story. “There was just no spending for two or three years. But apparently they’ve now been given a blank cheque – in the last few weeks, they suddenly have a big pot of dollars to spend.”


More feelgood ramping here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/10372896/Boomtime-Britain-bounces-back.html

doodlebug4 - 12 Oct 2013 11:07 - 30961 of 81564

NEW YORK — The stock market wrapped up a volatile week with its biggest two-day rally since the start of the year on hopes divided lawmakers are close to striking a deal that will enable the U.S. to pay all of its bills on time and avoid a confidence-shattering default.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 111 points, or 0.7%, to 15,237 on Friday, a day after shooting up 323 points for its biggest one-day point gain since December 2011. The Dow's two-day gain of 434 points, was its biggest back-to-back point jump since the so-called "fiscal cliff" was narrowly averted late last year, resulting in a two-day jump of nearly 475 points on the last trading day of 2012 and the first trading session of 2013.

But investors shouldn't get too overconfident until they see the details of the final deal hammered out between Republicans and Democrats, who are expected to keep talking over the weekend, Wall Street strategists say. The latest Republican proposal would only raise the debt ceiling by enough to last six weeks, nor would it end the 11-day-old government shutdown.

There's no denying that the perceived thaw in the icy relationship between the nation's two political parties suggests they are moving closer to a deal to raise the debt ceiling by the Oct. 17 deadline and avoid the first-ever U.S. default. But it's also clear the deal currently under discussion comes with its fair share of caveats.

For one, a temporary extension of the debt ceiling will simply push off the "crunch date," or new deadline, until later this year, creating yet another layer of uncertainty. What's more, not reopening the government soon also poses additional risks to the economy, which could further damage consumer confidence and corporate earnings. There's always a chance a deal doesn't get done.

All three of those scenarios will cause market volatility to return.

While the odds favor this current political crisis "winding down," a six-week debt-ceiling extension "means we might have to do this all over again in November," says Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management.

Investors expecting the Dow to jump another 300 points when a deal is finalized might be expecting too much, adds Alec Young, global equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ.

The stock market, he says, has already priced in a best-case scenario, including an extension of the debt ceiling by the Thursday deadline and an end to the shutdown.

"In the short term, the stock market has probably priced in more than politicians are likely to deliver," Young says.

If lawmakers extend the debt ceiling but don't reopen the government and the shutdown drags on for weeks, there is a risk that the economic fallout will take a bigger bite out of growth.

"Just because the market has enjoyed a relief rally doesn't mean we can take our eyes off Washington," Young says.
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