required field
- 03 Feb 2016 10:00
Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....
Fred1new
- 03 Feb 2017 12:01
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Tut Tut,
Once again, Dumbo has been let out without his trainer.
What is his world coming to?
jimmy b
- 03 Feb 2017 12:48
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Up a bit late today must have wet the bed . Back to sleep old chap .
Fred1new
- 03 Feb 2017 12:57
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Dumbo,
Talking about you own problems once again.
But it does seem that you are making your own bed to lie in.
jimmy b
- 03 Feb 2017 13:19
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Fred1new
- 03 Feb 2017 14:04
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Fred1new
- 03 Feb 2017 14:05
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Exec,
You can always start a thread off for yourself and I promise not to post on it.
Chris Carson
- 03 Feb 2017 14:16
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Had enough too Exec, I'm gone.
Haystack
- 03 Feb 2017 14:39
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VICTIM
- 03 Feb 2017 14:57
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I see one legal challenge to brexit just failed .
mentor
- 03 Feb 2017 15:29
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ExecLine
re - I just want to get your continual shit out of my hair.
Some posters will tell you an easy remedy >>>> use shampoo
note: though I do not like it some times myself, I am afraid "banter" is everywhere, just to remind you this is a Financial place for shares, so you want to have it your way TALK about anything but yet of what you want.
Just to remind you once again, that is not related to that main task in this place SHARES.
Patience is a virtue, that it seems you do not have at the moment, with time everything can change just like the lather on you hair
mentor
- 03 Feb 2017 15:36
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Bank of England back in Brexit spotlight after growth rethink - By William Schomberg
LONDON, Feb 3 (Reuters) - The Bank of England is feeling the heat again after its new, more upbeat picture for Britain's economy put an uncomfortable focus back on its warning last year about a quick and sharp Brexit vote hit to growth.
Governor Mark Carney woke up on Friday to headlines in anti-European Union newspapers that accused him of leading the Bank into a U-turn. "More humble pie for Bank as economy keeps growing," the Daily Express said.
The BoE surprised investors on Thursday when it hiked its forecast for growth this year to 2.0 percent. That was up from a call of 1.4 percent made just three months ago and represented a leap from its first post-referendum forecast of 0.8 percent.
The new prediction was higher than all but one of 50 forecasts by private economists in a Reuters poll in January, raising some eyebrows in the City of London. The BoE also edged up its growth forecasts for the following two years.
At the same time, Carney and his fellow policymakers lowered their forecasts for inflation over the next three years, potentially making it easier for them not to put Britain's economy to the test of higher interest rates any time soon.
Asked by a reporter on Thursday whether he was nervous that the BoE's new projections - which influence investments in financial markets and spending decisions by businesses - might turn out to be wayward like its ones in August, Carney said things were different now.
"Last summer we were in pretty exceptional circumstances," he said.
A string of surveys in the weeks after the referendum showed a collapse in confidence among consumers and companies in July and persuaded the BoE that a slump was coming.
In fact, confidence bounced back almost immediately and Britain's economy barely flinched after the referendum.
Yet Carney was unrepentant about the BoE's decision to cut interest rates to a new record low and ramp up its bond-buying programme in August, action that he credited for some of the strong performance of the economy since then.............
Fred1new
- 04 Feb 2017 09:00
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VICTIM
- 05 Feb 2017 08:07
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I wonder if anyone reads Execlines posts , can't say i do myself any way it's just chit chat , anything serious we can go anywhere online at any time don't you know . It can be a bit of light relief . When i first started watching all i remember was endless Goldfinger verses the rest and endless Tanker every day stirring it .
jimmy b
- 06 Feb 2017 09:42
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VICTIM
- 06 Feb 2017 10:26
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Whether you like her or not , she is dead right .
grannyboy
- 06 Feb 2017 11:32
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Yes lets hope that there are enough, who not only like her but can see
the FN policies are the best for Frances future, and that needs for the
French voters to vote for the FN in the second round..
mentor
- 06 Feb 2017 17:31
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Labour MPs renew calls for Diane Abbott to resign after she misses crucial Article 50 vote with 'migraine'
Diane Abbott should resign if she is unable to be "part of the team" and support Jeremy Corbyn over Brexit, one of the party's MPs has claimed.
Caroline Flint, a centrist Labour backbencher, mocked the Shadow Home Secretary for having "Brexit flu" after Ms Abbott missed last week’s crucial Article 50 vote in Parliament having gone home early and saying she had a migraine
Ms Flint told ITV’s Peston on Sunday: “We used to have man flu, we now have Brexit flu that Diane has created.”
The former Shadow Energy and Climate Change Secretary said Ms Abbott should resign if she is unable to support Jeremy Corbyn on Brexit.
“It’s about being part of a team and I think [Ms Abbott] holds one of the most important portfolios within a shadow cabinet [or] cabinet”, she said.
“If she can’t support the leader on this then she should go.”
The Independent - Ben Kentish - 15 hrs ago
http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/labour-mps-renew-calls-for-diane-abbott-to-resign-after-she-misses-crucial-article-50-vote-with-migraine/ar-AAmDPRE?li=BBoPWjQ&ocid=mailsignout
MaxK
- 06 Feb 2017 18:22
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