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.
grannyboy
- 31 Oct 2016 08:28
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As i've stated in the recent past, the 'remoaner's' are really pissed that a
foreign business has committed themselves to the UK, and are confident
enough to invest and produce their new models in the north east of England.
You can feel how desperate the 'remoaner's' are getting in their rabid rantings
that they spew out on a daily constant basis the nearer it gets to the triggering
of article50...
Laurenrose
- 31 Oct 2016 08:45
- 74351 of 81564
democrats tried to stop e mails being leaked and tried to bribe certain people
she must not be allowed to be president ,she is a very dangerous woman and not in a clever way .
if the yanks vote for her then it tells you all about the usa as a site hole
Fred1new
- 31 Oct 2016 08:53
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Manuel,
Actual, possible or probable circumstances?
cynic
- 31 Oct 2016 09:33
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certainly not actual - ie as of where it all currently stands - but certainly possible verging on probable
mentor
- 31 Oct 2016 10:04
- 74354 of 81564
Directors pay
name and shame those who over do the take home salaries....
one comes in mind for years... greedy sod.... WPP >>> CEO M.Sorrel
Martin Sorrell, the long time CEO of advertising giant WPP, made £70 million in 2015. That's 1,444 times the average pay of the company's 125,000 employees. Sorrell's basic salary was a relatively modest £1.15 million. On top of that, he was paid a £4.3 million annual bonus. But the biggest chunk of his remuneration came from a five-year bonus program worth £62.8 million
British investment trade body calls on companies to disclose pay ratios
LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - The Investment Association stepped up a campaign on Monday to persuade Britain's top companies to address concerns on boardroom pay by publishing a new set of principles it hopes will shape the way businesses remunerate bosses.
In an open letter addressed to constituents of the FTSE 350 index, the trade body called on companies to disclose pay ratios between the CEO and the median employee salary and to provide investors with greater context to understand the scale of pay and bonuses.
The IA, members of which manage more than 5.7 trillion pounds ($6.9 trillion) of assets, hopes its new principles will pave the way for simpler, more flexible remuneration structures and "clear justification" around CEO pay.
The renewed push follows recommendations from the industry-led independent Executive Remuneration Working Group and a pledge by Prime Minister Theresa May to crack down on excessive executive pay as part of a plan to tackle growing social inequality in Britain.
"Issues surrounding executive pay are a growing concern for investors, politicians and society as a whole," Andrew Ninian, the IA's director of corporate governance and engagement, said in a statement.
"It is vital that companies have the opportunity to choose the right structure for their business and this must be done in close partnership with their shareholders."
The IA has also called for improved shareholder consultation on remuneration issues and demanded that businesses focus on demonstrating to investors how their pay plans fit with company strategy.
To aid compliance, the IA said that its corporate governance research unit, IVIS, will monitor companies against the new principles and highlight areas of concern to investors ahead of voting at company meetings
cynic
- 31 Oct 2016 10:25
- 74355 of 81564
imo, martin sorrell is one of the very few who fully deserves his large wheelbarrow of loot
it is primarily - some would say almost entirely - thanks to his vision and entrepreneurship that WPP is the significant international force that it is
for some to complain (even if true) that MS's remuneration package is "1,444 times the average pay of the company's 125,000 employees" - i think the workforce may be closer to 200,000, but no matter - ignores the fact that most companies within the WPP network are outside UK (85% of WPP income is non-£)
again (a guess) a large proportion are in 3rd world (developing) countries where salaries, but also cost of living, are very much lower than in UK
Dil
- 31 Oct 2016 11:32
- 74356 of 81564
The government has no need to give any financial backing to Nissan. Any tariffs have been more than offset by the fall in the £.
Nissan are loving it here and don't Toyota have a big plant in Derby ?
This is a massive boost for our negotiating team.
Laurenrose
- 31 Oct 2016 15:21
- 74357 of 81564
thousands of americans over the years have been charged and jailed for a lesser crime than HER E MAILS WHICH WERE AGAINST THE USA RULES IT STINKS SHE SHOULD BE CHARGED AND JAILED FOR LIFe , or does the law in the states only apply to the poor
grannyboy
- 02 Nov 2016 08:02
- 74359 of 81564
Marvelous isn't it??.. The French authorities are supposed to have bulldozed
the Calais 'jungle' last week, but it would appear that they have managed to
find 1500 women and children still at the camp...
Its a fecking joke, and subterfuge is at play, and the publics being taken for
fools AGAIN, the UK government after saying they were only going to take a
certain amount and age group, now after being cajoled and bullied by the French
and the bleeding heart liberals have capitulated, but it shouldn't surprise anyone
after all the EU said they wanted all EU countries to take their share, but the UK
wanted to make themselves out to be controlling immigration, when nothing of
the kind is happening, the UK are just doing the EU's bidding and 'taking' their
'share' of these immigrants ...
IN OTHER WORDS..LYING DECIEVING C***!!!
Fred1new
- 02 Nov 2016 08:38
- 74360 of 81564
Perhaps, the UK will accept its humanitarian responsibilities.
Fred1new
- 02 Nov 2016 08:40
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2517GEORGE
- 02 Nov 2016 09:02
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As I've mentioned previously how many are Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, U.A.E. taking?
Why does it seem that this is just for Europe to solve?
2517
cynic
- 02 Nov 2016 09:21
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charity begins at home as is truthfully said
==========
george - taking in shia refugees?? ...... that is indeed an interesting concept :-)
Dil
- 02 Nov 2016 09:51
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Most of them aren't even refugees.
Fred1new
- 02 Nov 2016 10:00
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Manuel's Charity Home?
grannyboy
- 02 Nov 2016 10:07
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The UK does more then enough, and have no reason other then to fulfill the
EU dikdat for eu countries to 'take in their share', the governments original
response of funding the refugee camps near their own countries, where billions
of pounds are spent from the overseas budget on the refugees that remain there,
was the correct response.
These 'refugees'?? are already in a SAFE, FREE country, they HAVE travelled
through SAFE, FREE countries to get to Calais, the reason they don't want to
register in the first free country they arrive in is because they would have to
remain in that country, instead of attempting to get to the land of milk and
honey(the UK)..
And how many of these immigrants are christian, who DO get persecuted
in these muslim countries?.... Not many, if any at all..
grannyboy
- 02 Nov 2016 10:09
- 74368 of 81564
Once these 'refugees' reach europe they're no longer 'refugees', they are
then economic migrants...
Or Fifth column islamist....
iturama
- 02 Nov 2016 10:17
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or shite-hawks as my old dad used to say. Not that I would use such a term...