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.
goldfinger
- 10 Jun 2014 20:06
- 42178 of 81564
A USA site, on CNBC.
goldfinger
- 10 Jun 2014 20:15
- 42179 of 81564
MESSAGE FOR ALDERS.
Hi alders.
I saw your message yesterday sorry but Virgin have been on and off today, seemingly they are upgrading my download speed agai.
Anyway Ive read that book you put up yesterday and a lot more but I think this one is the best on spreadbet trading.
http://books.global-investor.com/books/337625/Malcolm-Pryor/Winning-spread-betting-strategies/
You can get it here a lot cheaper...........
http://www.gettextbooks.co.uk/
ExecLine
- 10 Jun 2014 20:16
- 42180 of 81564
From: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/91792e3c-f0b4-11e3-9e26-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz34GVYu9X0
June 10, 2014 7:14 pm
Charles Clarke ‘pessimistic’ on Labour winning UK election
By Jim Pickard and Kiran Stacey
Charles Clarke, the former Labour home secretary, has warned he is “pessimistic” about his party’s chances in next year’s general election, saying that Ed Miliband has not convinced the public he is capable of leading the country. Mr Clarke, who stepped down as an MP in 2010, said there was still a widespread public concern over whether Labour could be trusted with the economy.
He said “a lot of work still needs to be done” by Labour to convince people it could run the economy without going “back to bad economic circumstances in the past”.
Mr Clarke was one of the most vocal critics of Gordon Brown, the former Labour prime minister, and is seen as a passionate “Blairite”. Yet the comments come at an awkward time for Mr Miliband, given that his party’s poll lead has narrowed with less than a year to go before the most unpredictable general election for two decades.
The speed of the economic recovery has been faster than anticipated, threatening to derail Labour’s main argument that the coalition has damaged people’s living standards.
Mr Clarke said that Mr Miliband and Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, had mistakenly bet that the coalition’s austerity programme would choke off any recovery: “That’s proved to be an unwise judgment, because in fact the Conservatives have succeeded in getting the economy on to a more positive path.”
Asked about Labour’s prospects of winning the general election, Mr Clarke replied: “I’m pessimistic. I think it will be very difficult for us to do that. It could happen, it still could be done.” He agreed that he was “terrified” by Labour’s unconvincing performance in last month’s local and European elections. The former MP for Norwich South, who was education secretary as well as home secretary, told the BBC’s Daily Politics programme that it was “nonsense” for Mr Miliband to be dismissed as “weird”.
But the polls showed people were not convinced he could be a good prime minister, Mr Clarke said. “I think he does have the capacity to lead the country but people don’t believe that.”
The former cabinet minister said it was “tragic” that Tony Blair seemed to crave a return to frontline politics in Britain or Europe. “He does want another big job, but I don’t think there is any chance of him getting it,” he said.
goldfinger
- 10 Jun 2014 20:28
- 42181 of 81564
Hays Hays Hays.......
Latest marginal seats projection from Lord Ashcroft where the GE is won or lost.
labour with a 4 point lead gives them a 40 plus overall majority.
EASY PEASY.................
Lord Ashcroft’s weekly poll this afternoon has topline figures of CON 28%, LAB 32%, LDEM 8%, UKIP 17%.
Haystack
- 10 Jun 2014 20:57
- 42182 of 81564
Year to go!
aldwickk
- 10 Jun 2014 21:59
- 42183 of 81564
goldfinger
Thanks for that i will take a look , there is so much advice out there from spread bet company's, but they nearly all say you have got to have system/trading plan to control your loses and stick to it.
goldfinger
- 10 Jun 2014 22:08
- 42184 of 81564
Yep most certainly discipline and money management rules.
Ive seen great stock pickers start off in trading doing very well only then to come unstuck because they didnt have a trading plan and the discipline to carry it out.
Its an excelent book though and this chap the author is one of the best around with derivatives.
On that second link above you can buy the books second hand and they are just like new.
I always get my book s that way and must have over 700 books now on trading and investing.
jimmy b
- 10 Jun 2014 22:12
- 42185 of 81564
MaxK - 10 Jun 2014 18:31 - 42174 of 42186
That was brillient Max
goldfinger
- 10 Jun 2014 22:16
- 42186 of 81564
Bradford now under the spotlight re- to islam agenda.
I said this was just the tip of the iceberg.
Since schools were given their own budgets and central power taken from LAs this was bound to happen.
Gove trying to contol more than 2000 schools.......NO CHANCE.
This is a massive scandal that could easily lose the Tories their second place in British politics and is a god send to UKIP.
Haystack
- 10 Jun 2014 22:22
- 42187 of 81564
.
Haystack
- 10 Jun 2014 22:22
- 42188 of 81564
Actually the public may see that it is the Conservatives are the ones doing something about the problem. Don't forget this was going on under the previous Labour government and was brought to their attention. The difference is that Labour did nothing about it.
Stan
- 10 Jun 2014 22:53
- 42189 of 81564
H/S, When do think that Ashcroft will come back into the fold? before the election sometime obviously of course.
Haystack
- 10 Jun 2014 23:36
- 42190 of 81564
One of Ashcroft's activities apart from supporting the Conservative party.
Launched in 1988 by Lord Ashcroft, Crimestoppers UK was founded in the wake of the murder of Pc Keith Blakelock during the Tottenham riots. Initially called the Community Action Trust (CAT), the charity was intended as a three-way partnership between the business community, the police and the media
The purpose was to encourage members of the public with information on criminal activity to come forward anonymously, without the fear of their identity being revealed.
Since its launch, Crimestoppers UK has received more than 1.5 million pieces of useful information which has led to more than 124,000 arrests, more than £126 million of stolen goods being recovered and more than £301 million of drugs being seized.
MaxK
- 10 Jun 2014 23:57
- 42191 of 81564
A lucky man....
Second-hand Volvo clocks up a million kilometres with no break-downs
Hire driver praises his ten-year-old Volvo which has done nearly one million kilometres without ever breaking down

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/10889173/Second-hand-Volvo-clocks-up-a-million-kilometres-with-no-break-downs.html
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 03:13
- 42192 of 81564
Post..........42190
Im afraid not Hays Maggie thatcher was the architect of Local Management Of Schools....see below.
Public services
Thatcher's neo-liberal policies affected not only industry and commerce but also public services.
Conservative legislation sought to drive neo-liberal principles into the heart of public policy. An emphasis on cost reduction, privatisation and deregulation was accompanied by vigorous measures against the institutional bases of Conservatism's opponents, and the promotion of new forms of public management. The outcome of these processes was a form of governance in which market principles were advanced at the same time as central authority was strengthened.
Thus the twin aims of Margaret Thatcher's education policies in the 1980s were to convert the nation's schools system from a public service into a market, and to transfer power from local authorities to central government.
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 03:13
- 42193 of 81564
repeat.....
Thus the twin aims of Margaret Thatcher's education policies in the 1980s were to convert the nation's schools system from a public service into a market, and to transfer power from local authorities to central government.
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 03:45
- 42194 of 81564
REVEALED: How 6 in 10 won't get the full £155 a week new flat-rate state pension
By JAMES CONEy
PUBLISHED: 00:36, 11 June 2014 | UPDATED: 00:36, 11 June 2014
Around six in ten workers will miss out on the full £155-a-week new flat-rate state pension when it is introduced in 2016, Money Mail can reveal.
Despite Government promises that anyone who stayed in employment their whole working life would be able to get the full state payout, official figures show that just 250,000 men and women will be receive the maximum weekly amount.
In total, 58 per cent of workers retiring in 2016 will get less than £155. More than two decades after the scheme is introduced, one in five will still fail to qualify for the full weekly payout.
Broken promise: In total, 58 per cent of workers retiring in 2016 will get less than £155
The revelation will be a blow to millions of people in their early 60s who have no time to build up extra qualifying years for the new pension.
The worst affected will be women, and anyone who spent years employed by a company that allowed them to save into a final-salary pension. They won’t get the full payout because they were allowed to pay reduced National Insurance contributions It will also hit teachers, nurses, servicemen and civil servants.
Today, Money Mail can also reveal that every worker is to get a personalised statement showing precisely how much they will receive in the new pension.
The figures are now being calculated by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and will be available in the autumn for the first 2.5million men and women who hit state retirement age after 2016. This will be the first time workers will see just how much they’ll get — but many will be sorely disappointed.
Pensions Minster Steve Webb told Money Mail: ‘I am sorry if the message people have been getting has not been clear enough. For the sake of simplicity and to help people get a grasp of the issue, I have been saying everyone will qualify for the full flat-rate state pension if they had paid 35 years of National Insurance contributions.
‘Perhaps what I should have made clear was that they should have paid 35 years of National Insurance contributions at the full rate.
‘We are going to attempt to make it absolutely clear to people what they will be entitled to, and what they can do about it. And we plan to make a priority for those people retiring in the first five years of the new pension coming in.’
Reform: Pensions Minister Steve Webb has said he should have made it clear that people should have paid 35 years of National Insurance contributions at the full rate to qualify for the full flat-rate state pension
Currently, anyone who has 30 years’ worth of National Insurance contributions qualifies for the basic pension of £113.10 a week. However, many don’t claim the full amount because they had gaps in their employment history.
Women, in particular, are left on far worse pensions. Under the existing system, there are also various top-ups and credits retired people can claim.
But from 2016, a new flat-rate pension will be introduced. You will need 35 years of National Insurance contributions to qualify for the full payout. Though the official figure has not been released, this is likely to be around £155 a week.
When it announced this policy two years ago, the Government said that anyone who had a full National Insurance record would be guaranteed to get the new higher deal. But a fortnight ago, a Money Mail investigation proved this wouldn’t be the case.
Under the current scheme, higher earners could add to their pension by accruing benefits in a top-up scheme, called the State Second Pension (previously known as Serps), which can boost the weekly payout by an extra £165 a week.
Historically, workers in final-salary schemes didn’t claim the State Second Pension because their company pension was so generous. This process is known as contracting out. In return for taking this burden off the state, employees and employers were allowed to pay a reduced amount of National Insurance contributions — most recently for workers, 10.4 per cent instead of 12 per cent.
Now, under the new flat-rate pension, anyone who paid this lower rate will have a deduction made for the years they were contracted out. A hideously complicated equation will be made which involves calculating a ‘Foundation’ amount of pension someone could claim, and then deducting contracted-out years from this sum.
Essentially, it could mean someone who worked for 35 years, but spent 20 years at a company that had a final-salary scheme, being left with just 15 years of qualifying National Insurance contributions for the new pension. How much this would reduce the full £155-a-week pension is not yet clear.
It will be a devastating blow for all those led to believe they would get £155 a week. Many workers also might not realise they were contracted out because this was often done automatically by employers.
In theory, the new pension is supposed to make it much easier for everyone to understand. But because of the complicated calculations over what they can claim, it is almost impossible for ordinary workers to understand what they will get.
Money Mail has been swamped with calls and letters from readers who are utterly baffled. The official figures from the Department for Work and Pensions show just how many will miss out. In 2016, just 42 per cent of pensioners will get the full £155-a-week payout. The figure rises to 52 per cent in 2018 and 73 per cent in 2026. However, this still means that a decade after the new state pension is introduced more than one in four retired people will be claiming less than the full amount.
By 2040, 83 per cent of workers will claim the full amount. In a bid to end the confusion, the DWP is to give everyone the chance to have a personalised pension statement. They will be able to get this online or over the phone.
The DWP says that — except for very rare cases — even when people aren’t able to claim £155 a week, they will still be getting a bigger pension than they would have been entitled to under the current system.
Personalised pension statements will eventually be available to all workers, but those retiring in the first five years are being given priority.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/pensions/article-2654291/REVEALED-How-6-10-wont-155-week-state-pension.html#ixzz34ILDRHpM
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goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 03:46
- 42195 of 81564
TALK ABOUT BEING DUPED.
DWP in a shambles once again.
Claret Dragon
- 11 Jun 2014 07:30
- 42196 of 81564
Too many on this small Island chasing the same pound coin.
The cake has to be divided up into even smaller segments.
Its only going to get worse in my opinion.
MaxK
- 11 Jun 2014 08:09
- 42197 of 81564