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.
Fred1new
- 09 Dec 2013 20:56
- 33826 of 81564
Probably, it would have been more appropriate for you to be part of the foundations.
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Just met a kinsman of yours on the boat back from Paris.
He was very pleasant and his wife very beautiful.
Wished I had been a week younger.
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Strange thing was that he was a moderate Jew from Israel, with the first name of Israel. But even better his wife was very intelligent.
Very enjoyable 2 hours.
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Showed me his metal leg due to one of the Israeli wars and due to and Israeli misfire". Showed him my bits of metal and we wished we had a hat to put on the floor in front of us.
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It is good to know some of you are human!
================
aldwickk
- 09 Dec 2013 22:39
- 33827 of 81564
It is good to know some of you are human!
But the rest are not ? you should join the BNP
MaxK
- 09 Dec 2013 23:40
- 33828 of 81564
Nigel Farage: establishment and media are out to get us
Ukip leader makes warning as he defends councillor whose comments on immigration were, he says, 'taken out of context'
Rowena Mason, political correspondent
The Guardian, Monday 9 December 2013 19.13 GMT
Forget the daily garbage article, read the comments:
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/dec/09/nigel-farage-ukip-establishment-media
Haystack
- 10 Dec 2013 00:03
- 33829 of 81564
The monthly ICM poll for the Guardian is out tonight and has topline figures of CON 32%(+2), LAB 37%(-1), LDEM 12%(-1), UKIP 9%(-2). Changes are from ICM’s November poll
ICM finds 39% backing Dave/George to handle the economy best, compared with just 23% who side with Two Eds.
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 02:47
- 33830 of 81564
LOL, it still gives labour a 60 seat majority hays.
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 06:07
- 33831 of 81564
that's a broken drum sticky, and i very much doubt its (your) accuracy ..... we all know that % vote does not lead to the equivalent number of seats .... but hey ho, you guys keep handbagging away :-)
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 07:34
- 33832 of 81564
on BBC Breakfast this morning, a non-political analysis commented as below (but rather better!) .....
help to buy
not making much impact for first-time buyers as (i think) mortgages still remain tight
bubble?
nowhere near ..... in the last year still only 1m transactions vs average of 1.6m
house prices
rising at about 6% pa, partly due to the improved feel-good factor across the country, so those who have equity are much more inclined to start house-hunting
letting market
remaining strong and likely to stay that way as first time buyers still struggle badly to buy without parental or similar help
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 08:55
- 33833 of 81564
Unbelievable, and Hays says these assessments are fair!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/09/atos-disabled-people-assessment-fit-work-report?CMP=twt_gu
More and more people are calling for ID Smiths head.
Dont forget it could be you Your family your relations your freinds who have to be assessed by this cruel organisation with a butcher as a minister guiding it.
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 08:58
- 33834 of 81564
Cyners if theirs no bubble why is Carney and as Carney already taken measures to reign in the governments help for mortgage lending?.
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 09:23
- 33836 of 81564
sticky - there's somewhat conflicting evidence ...... on the one hand .....
house prices are rising at 6% pa; ergo a potential bubble i guess, though if more houses can be built, supply and demand start to equalise
on the other hand ....
it seems that mortgage money for real first time buyers remains tight unless they can use the bank of mum and dad for a decent deposit
in my opinion, the upper limit for help to buy is preposterous, and even for london suburbs, where prices are assuredly far higher than pretty much anywhere else, £450'ish will buy you something very respectable - but the borrower (+ partner?) would still need an income of about £100k to pass the other tests for affordability etc
as far as i can see, many would-be buyers have champagne aspirations and beer income .... if their sights were set at a more realistic level - e.g. a 1/2 bedroom flat perhaps in one of the less gentrified parts - then many more options appear
MaxK
- 10 Dec 2013 09:28
- 33837 of 81564
If rising house prices was a vote loser, do you think they would be going up?
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 09:32
- 33838 of 81564
that wasn't quite the point ..... as far as i am concerned, politics on this issue are merely a side issue and i'll try to stay away from that
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 09:35
- 33839 of 81564
Cyners yep agree with you............"in my opinion, the upper limit for help to buy is preposterous, and even for london suburbs, where prices are assuredly far higher than pretty much anywhere else, £450'ish will buy you something very respectable - but the borrower (+ partner?) would still need an income of about £100k to pass the other tests for affordability etc"......
MaxK
- 10 Dec 2013 09:44
- 33840 of 81564
How stringent are the tests?
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 10:02
- 33841 of 81564
certainly much tighter than they used to be when one could self-assess .... nevertheless, i think certain cases of estate agents "working the oracle" have recently been uncovered
MaxK
- 10 Dec 2013 10:08
- 33842 of 81564
I bet they have :-)
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 10:16
- 33843 of 81564
CYNERS from the FT....... Just out on twitter........
ECONOMYUK lending to first-time buyers at post-crisis high
7 minutes ago
Lending to first-time home buyers in the UK has surged to its highest level since the end of 2007, new data from the Bank of England show.
The value of residential mortgage loans extended to people making their first house purchases has jumped by nearly 40 per cent, to £9.9bn, over the past year - the highest level since the fourth quarter of 2007, the BoE said.
First-time buyers accounted for 20 per cent of the new residential lending granted in the third quarter of the year, the highest proportion since the data series began.
A further breakdown of the lending stats:
Gross advances, including lending to first-time buyers and buy-to-let lending and new commitments are at their highest levels since 2008;
Similarly, interest rates on new lending, the number of new arrears cases and stocks of possessions cases remaining unsold are at their lowest level since the series began in 2007.
The overall value of the residential loan amounts outstanding was £1,234 billion in Q3 2013, an increase of 0.3% compared with Q2.
Gross advances of £49.5 billion in Q3 2013 were 19% higher than in Q2 2013 – an upward movement usual in the third quarter of the year, but also 25% higher compared with the same quarter in 2012. This was the highest amount advanced in a quarter since Q3 2008.
Net advances in Q3 2013 amounted to £7.2 billion, which was 29% higher compared with Q3 2012.
Economy, UK
goldfinger
- 10 Dec 2013 10:18
- 33844 of 81564
Jesus christ we do get them on money am these days.
I blame it on advfn stopping live links for non subscribers.
Best just to filter I suppose.
cynic
- 10 Dec 2013 10:33
- 33845 of 81564
33845 - if that is indeed so, then i'm delighted to hear it, but i don't think that invalidates what i wrote earlier