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.
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 18:08
- 55762 of 81564
Question - Would much have been said on here if he indeed joined the Labour party?
:-))
cynic
- 25 Jan 2015 18:08
- 55763 of 81564
not sure if i have missed anything but the usual drivel during the day but prob not .....
anyway, the greeks looked to have voted in the anti-austerity mob, which is no great surprise
what that means for € and eu in general, i really have no idea, but i cannot imagine that it will be greeted with cheers by the markets in the morning
Fred1new
- 25 Jan 2015 18:20
- 55764 of 81564
Napoleon,
Why does a man of your obvious omniscience read any postings, other than your own, but still seem to return more and more often to this thread?
Interesting addiction and plea.
"I can't help it my lord."
==========
But having said that.
Population of Greece approx 11 million population of Euro-zone 335 million
GDP of Greece as percentage of Eur-ozone GDP about 2%.
Economically, I guess little effect.
Politically, may be a wake up call.
I would have thought a slight wobble, but tightened my SBs stops and widened share stops on Thursday.
Again will be up early to-morrow.
--------
cynic
- 25 Jan 2015 18:26
- 55765 of 81564
because fred, every so often there is something worth reading here, like your latest
greece of itself may not be important for it is a small entity, but if it decides to abandon eu or eu decides to abandon greece, then the ripple effects will probably be serious, though confess i am not sure in what direction .....
i guess a couple of banks may be pretty "embarrassed", but i think it will be more far-reaching than that .....
a domino effect maybe?
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 18:35
- 55766 of 81564
I think Greece's massive interest payments that are scheduled in the second half of the year are going to cause a few headaches, especially if they default.
MaxK
- 25 Jan 2015 18:36
- 55767 of 81564
Ma Merkel won't give toss about Greece, but will sure as hell care about the other sunset countries.
Haystack
- 25 Jan 2015 18:39
- 55768 of 81564
The Geeks are dreaming if they expect the EU to forgive some of their debt. The precedent would bring serious problems. There is an obvious list of other EU countries that would want the same treatment. The same applies if the terms of their debt was altered. In an ideal world, they would devalue their currency and as a result boost their exports as well has having tourists flocking there for the cheaper holidays. In reality they are stuck with having to have an over valued currency from their point of view and no wiggle room. Their interest rates are set by the ECB and so is the exchange rate.
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 18:44
- 55769 of 81564
I think the European Union and the International Monetary Fund will have to swing for some of the debt. The country is never going to recover. The interest payments are not going to be met.
cynic
- 25 Jan 2015 20:03
- 55771 of 81564
saudi arabia is certainly held under a repressive and fundamentalist (wahabi) religious regime ....
more importantly, the saudi monarchy is nothing like as stable and revered as so many like to believe
however, there is no question that saudi has been a very good ally of the west - and of course the major supplier of oil
whatever the rights and wrongs, it would have been the most extreme political harakiri to have done other than at least go through the motions of respect and mourning for the late king
hard cheese all you bleeding hearts, but you need to learn the hard lessons of living in the real world and thus the necessity of political prudence and lip service or even expediency from time to time
doodlebug4
- 25 Jan 2015 20:07
- 55772 of 81564
Dreamcatcher - post 55758, I drive an Audi and there is absolutely no chance that I will vote for Labour in the GE !: :-)
cynic
- 25 Jan 2015 20:09
- 55773 of 81564
moi aussi!
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 20:20
- 55774 of 81564
doodlebug4 I have a few friends with £60k + Audi's and I am sure they won't be voting Labour . :-))
Haystack
- 25 Jan 2015 20:22
- 55775 of 81564
I don't have a car. I borrow one when needed. I will be voting Liberal.
doodlebug4
- 25 Jan 2015 20:23
- 55776 of 81564
I was at a party last night where most of the guests were TVR owners and none of them will be voting for Labour either DC !
doodlebug4
- 25 Jan 2015 20:25
- 55777 of 81564
Haystack, I always thought of you as the owner of a Rolls Royce.!
Haystack
- 25 Jan 2015 20:29
- 55778 of 81564
cynic
I agree with you regarding Saudi. Keeping up dialogue with countries with poor human rights will achieve more than confrontation. Saudi is a sovereign state and has its own laws and customs. They are changing, although slowly. Syria and other similar countries are examples of what happens when dictatorships lose control suddenly.
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 20:35
- 55779 of 81564
Your just one of the awkward ones d4. :-))
Ed Miliband's masterstroke to beat the floods? Let's call in a fleet of oil lorries to 'vacuum up' water
What can I say. :-))
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2924955/Ed-Miliband-s-masterstroke-beat-floods-Let-s-call-fleet-oil-lorries-vacuum-water.html
dreamcatcher
- 25 Jan 2015 20:37
- 55780 of 81564
From the above -
'Help!' cried Ed. 'I'm locked out and stuck in my garden... I'll be late to see Gordon': The further excruciating misadventures of Calamity Ed from the blistering memoir that's got Labour squirming
CAROLYNE DRESSES AIMLESS ED
Thursday, March 17, 2005. Our house
Ed has asked Carolyne to listen as he rehearses his speech for about 150 members of the local Labour Party at Sunday’s Election candidate selection meeting. He is up against five others.
After making a few constructive comments, Carolyne asks Ed: ‘What are you wearing?’
Just as I am having to play the role of disciplinarian dad to get Ed to do his political homework, Carolyne has been forced to play the role of the mother getting her son ready before the start of a new term.
‘I thought I’d wear my brown corduroy suit and a blue shirt with a button-down collar?’
‘You’ll look like a music teacher – have you got anything smarter?’
‘I have another jacket with patches on the elbows.’
‘No. You’ll look like a geography teacher. First impressions count. These are good, honest South Yorkshire people you are talking to. You need to look the part: classic, good-quality business attire.’
‘Do I have to buy a new suit?’
‘Yes.’
‘Can you help me then?’
‘Yes. You have lovely skin and you will look terrific in a crisp white shirt,’ Carolyne reassures him. ‘It will show off your eyes.’ She agrees to take him to the shop Suits You at the Yorkshire Outlet, an out-of-town shopping centre near Doncaster.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2924955/Ed-Miliband-s-masterstroke-beat-floods-Let-s-call-fleet-oil-lorries-vacuum-water.html#ixzz3Prr8p9Yw
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Haystack
- 25 Jan 2015 20:38
- 55781 of 81564
Hate RR. Love Bentleys.
Cars that I have owned in order
Mini grey
MG Midget bl
Morgan 4/4 Brunswick green
1956 Citroen Big 15 (Fench built, also called 11B Normale) white
Porsche 924 white
Rover 2000 tan (inherited)
BMW 325i red
Renault Espace blue
Porsche 944 Turbo Guards Red
Ford Galaxy
Plus lots of others for short periods and a couple of racing cars.