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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.

cynic - 13 Feb 2015 16:20 - 56566 of 81564

the dreaded/dreadful ADVFN it would seem

ExecLine - 13 Feb 2015 16:24 - 56567 of 81564

Let us build our country into the most powerful one in the world, into a people's fairyland, as wished by the great Comrades Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il!

If you like that saying and find it stirs your patriotism, there's more at:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-31446387

(Which is obviously one of the other places I go for a read)

Fred1new - 13 Feb 2015 16:25 - 56568 of 81564

OR the BOX!











Deep down below!

Fred1new - 13 Feb 2015 17:04 - 56569 of 81564


What surprised me about the article is that Germany economy has bounced upwards and yet the trade with Russia has been "sanctioned", or has it, or is it a false bounce?




Euro zone economy accelerates thanks to German 'thunderbolt'
BY PHILIP BLENKINSOP AND ALEXANDRA HUDSON
BRUSSELS/BERLIN Fri Feb 13, 2015 4:48pm GMT

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/02/13/uk-eurozone-economy-idUKKBN0LH0MC20150213?feedType=nl&feedName=uktopnewsearly

Fred1new - 13 Feb 2015 17:05 - 56570 of 81564

. I wish my finger would stop bouncing!

cynic - 13 Feb 2015 17:13 - 56571 of 81564

i had trouble believing that too

MaxK - 13 Feb 2015 18:08 - 56572 of 81564

Ma Merkel is taking care of business, German business, and to hell with everyone else.

Why do you think the €urobun is still around?

Stan - 13 Feb 2015 18:22 - 56573 of 81564

Don't watch QT usually now but did last night.

Who's that useless Susanne Evans when she's at home?

Fred1new - 13 Feb 2015 19:54 - 56574 of 81564

Max.

I am sure that Putin would be impressed with a UK outside the EU and bow his head and curtsy to PM like Cameron or Farage if that was so

He would consider them errand boys.

If you noticed Cameron for all his rants was not at the table with Putin. His opinion wasn't asked for.

-=-==-=-=-=-

Farage is just huffing and puffing.

Fred1new - 13 Feb 2015 20:08 - 56575 of 81564

Stan,

I thought it was Farage's girl friend.

dreamcatcher - 13 Feb 2015 21:31 - 56576 of 81564

A guy walks into a bar and sits down next to a good-looking woman and starts looking at his watch. The woman notices this and asks him if his date is late. "No," he replies. "I've just got this new state-of-the-art watch and I was just about to test it."

"What does it do?"

"It uses alpha waves to telepathically talk to me."

"What's it telling you now?"

"Well, it says you're not wearing a bra or panties."

"Ha! Well it must be broken then, because I am!"

"Darn thing must be an hour fast."

Stan - 13 Feb 2015 22:43 - 56577 of 81564

Post 56576.

Max who on earth is it? she was absolutely useless.

ExecLine - 14 Feb 2015 09:33 - 56578 of 81564

Happy Valentine's Day.

required field - 14 Feb 2015 10:50 - 56579 of 81564

That Ukraine peace treaty won't last 5mn.....

Stan - 14 Feb 2015 11:20 - 56580 of 81564

A bit like your attention span RF, how long you been over here now?

Fred1new - 14 Feb 2015 13:22 - 56581 of 81564

Oh, what a lovely party.

Finks blustered and ducks like Cameron.

Mind he is their beloved leader!


Fred1new - 14 Feb 2015 13:26 - 56582 of 81564

I wonder if any in the cabinet have pass keys?

Also, wonder how many of the party euro-phobes have similar?

ExecLine - 14 Feb 2015 15:44 - 56583 of 81564

Now that is a good cartoon.

cynic - 14 Feb 2015 17:09 - 56584 of 81564

and unless it looks too much like hard work - eg the guy who had assets etc in uk but hadn't paid tax for 24 years

much easier to issue fines of £100/150 for marginally late returns

i also note that hmrc is effectively self-regulating when it comes to complaints - just like the police and the law society

Chris Carson - 14 Feb 2015 17:40 - 56585 of 81564

We need more City firms to speak out on Labour’s economics

Bank of America has so far led the way in nailing its colours to the mast




By Allister Heath

7:59PM GMT 13 Feb 2015

Follow

CommentsComments





Bland, boring and eminently binnable: that is the only way most political research from investment banks can be described. When it comes to general elections and political parties, City analysts are usually too scared to be punchy and don’t want to offend or fall out with anybody.


It may be understandable for straightforward, short-term commercial reasons - but it means that those who rely on this sort of research, including our top businesses and the financial markets, tend to have a poor understanding of domestic and global politics.


They tend to believe that the most sensible solution, at least from a technocratic perspective, will always triumph. As a result, they are often wrong-footed or at least politically tone-deaf.


Every so often, however, the City does get it right, or at least pins its colours to the mast. Many banks openly took sides during the Scottish referendum, and one or two are now breaking ranks on the general election.


The best so far is a note from Bank of America. Its authors, Gilles Moec and Sebastien Cross, believe that a Labour government would “seriously interfere with the private sector”. There would be a return to a 50pc income tax rate, a mansion tax and yet another bonus tax.


There would be endless interference in other industries, including via an energy price cap. Labour would also be likely to “massively” increase the minimum wage, they argue, taking it to the level - relative to the median wage - now seen in France.

The authors don’t really explain what this would mean, so let me do it for them: it would help some low-income workers but would almost certainly reduce opportunities for younger and lower-skilled workers. That certainly has been France’s disastrous experience.

The two economists are also right about the Blair/Brown years. As they point out, for all the pro-market, centrist rhetoric, the role of government under so-called New Labour expanded dramatically. Public spending as a share of GDP “quickly converged to the average observed in the Euro area”, they rightly observe.

Sadly, far too few observers realised this at the time. The Blair/Brown governments were able to reap the benefits of the Tory supply-side reforms of the 1980s and 1990s, as well as of the Great Moderation, otherwise known as the giant bubble of the 2000s.

The private sector was encouraged, as were foreign investors; globalisation and a buoyant private sector meant greater tax receipts for the Labour government to spend on its core supporters.

As Bank of America puts it, “under New Labour the UK was looking towards Europe on public spending, and towards the US on the way the private sector operated”.

All of this is now well and truly over: Ed Miliband’s Labour party is openly socialist and wants not just to spend more than the Tories but also to regulate and tax much more heavily.

It is worth pointing out, for the sake of fairness, that the authors aren’t keen on the Tory policy on the EU (they are wrong on this, but that is a debate for another day).

Bank of America’s take on the slow but steady deleveraging of corporate Britain is also worth highlighting.

Eurozone non-financial companies remain burdened with a heavy debt load, they point out, making them vulnerable to the stagnation that is still affecting France and Italy.

The region’s non-financial corporate debt has stabilised at 200pc of corporate output. In stark contrast, the same metric in the UK has seen a near 50-percentage point collapse to 140pc in the third quarter.

A reduction in debt combined with lower interest rates means that the corporate sector’s average net interest charge has fallen to just 2pc, a very low number that is significantly below the levels seen in the 1990s.

Families and individuals haven’t reduced their debt burden by anything like as much, unfortunately, but the UK private sector could clearly bear a moderate increase in interest rates.

But while rate rises will be manageable, a left-wing labour party, potentially propped up by the Scottish nationalists and intent on waging war on the successful and the City, will be an entirely different matter.

allister.heath@telegraph.co.uk
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