mitzy
- 10 Oct 2008 06:29
Master RSI
- 02 Oct 2009 15:20
- 907 of 5370
blackdown
thanks, corrected,
I do go too fast and by the sound more than the right spelling
Master RSI
- 02 Oct 2009 15:27
- 908 of 5370
FTSE
Recovering fast as the DOW is doing much the same
tabasco
- 02 Oct 2009 15:31
- 909 of 5370
Ok.its Friday.Ill be in the piss then.
Master RSI
- 02 Oct 2009 15:36
- 910 of 5370
LLOY 2nd on the volume, but for the wrong reason, as is lower, but today almost everyone is down ..........
1 RBS Royal Bank Scot 109,686K
2 LLOY Lloyds Grp. 91,061K
3 VOD Vodafone Grp. 49,643K
tabasco
- 02 Oct 2009 15:41
- 911 of 5370
Master RSIgotcha.you are Palestinian.Tabasco gets his man in the end
tabasco
- 02 Oct 2009 15:48
- 912 of 5370
Master RSI Hiteen Nasheed Group... I have all his CDs
Fred1new
- 02 Oct 2009 16:01
- 913 of 5370
Marni, With your confidence, why not go short and hold until 3I0p. I dare you, My guess is you haven't the guts even with the lea way given to you, you haven't the guts to back your prophesy.
But I may have or thinking of opening a little short.
Fred1new
- 02 Oct 2009 16:02
- 914 of 5370
Blackd. I had a proof reader like you. Quite demoralising.
tabasco
- 02 Oct 2009 16:06
- 915 of 5370
Master RSI all those famous Jewish posters on the GAZA topic being very forthright and to my knowledge you did not post oncefare play to you
Master RSI
- 02 Oct 2009 16:28
- 916 of 5370
tabasco
You seem a lonely man, and I am not sure if to feel sorry for you or pity.
Have a " siesta " you will feel better afterwards, anyway the market is almost close and LLOY only managed to pull back 1/3 of the lossers to 95.30p but recovering fast anyway as is closing time
Master RSI
- 02 Oct 2009 16:57
- 917 of 5370
finished with a spread of 95.38 / 95.46p but the "UT" gave a final price of 94.75p. one of the things of the order book.
------------------------------Intraday --------------------------------------------------- 3 month ------------------------
tabasco
- 02 Oct 2009 16:57
- 918 of 5370
Master RSI thanks for reminding me that I am currently sitting here on my ownbut luckily not for longwhat are you advising on lloybuysellholdor perm any two from threewith an e/w treble in for the saver.tasharrafnahave a good weekend all.
Dil
- 03 Oct 2009 00:40
- 919 of 5370
Yeah too right cynic but Mr tosser dont recommend anything he just highlights stocks that are moving (his words).
I would just like to highlight that all the stocks in the ftse 100 will move next week ... lets say down. Any that don't I will no longer post about but all those that do I will claim credit for.
Wish me luck.
jkd
- 04 Oct 2009 02:31
- 920 of 5370
cynic
i have high regard for you but little regard for anyone who posts abusive language coupled with abusive pictures which attempt to deride and put down anyone who disagrees with his point of view. i.e. the postings of MRSI.
you have yours , i have mine, i have never read a post from Dil that has ever used that word, although i have read several posts from others that have. they know who they are and i will never condone it,
regards to you.
jkd
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 21:01
- 921 of 5370
jkd
Its a funny world, and a weird one to.
I will put down anyone not for disagreing with me but trying to make fun of my selection of shares that I give reason for that, they dont just talk nonsence.
Your defending "Dil" is OK for me, but before you do that maybe you should has follow what he/she has done .........is a STALKER, next time you family will be the one to suffer the consequences most likely.
Used of bad language
How hypocrites most of YOU .....it seems is alright to say that to the Prime Minister and many other politicians but not to "Dil" who behave like a propper C#nt. ( yes I said it again )
It is not he right words I used in real life, but maybe I do not meet people like "Dil" in my day to day life.
Self preservetion is my motor, I can tell you I seldom loose this type of battles, and in most times will used anything availabe in the net ( cartoons inclusive ), most likely some of you will use fire arms instead.
The ball is on you side now, keep kicking at it.
I already toll you off on the past, so you just getting together with the gang, you just need to cover you face or is the head now before atacking anyone.
Stalker kicked on the face
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 21:04
- 922 of 5370
Lloyds Banking Group -- LLOY
02-Oct Execution Buy 94.75p - - Reiteration
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 21:11
- 923 of 5370
FTSE
opening higher tomorrow and with that LLOY
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 21:48
- 924 of 5370
From The Sunday Times -- October 4, 2009
Lloyds banking group to reignite bosses bonus row
LLOYDS BANKING GROUP is expected to stir up a fresh outcry over banking bonuses as it draws up plans for a multi-million pound incentive programme for its top managers.
The bonus plan is the first to be put in place since the banking giant was created from the merger of Lloyds TSB and HBOS and subsequently bailed out by the taxpayer.
Earlier this year the Lloyds board, led by chief executive Eric Daniels, who earned a basic salary of 1m last year, agreed to waive bonuses in the face of a public backlash.
Wolfgang Berndt, chairman of the remuneration committee, is working on the new scheme. He will benchmark Danielss bonus package against other bank bosses. This will include a comparison with Stephen Hester, who could earn 9.6m if he leads a turnround at the state-controlled Royal Bank of Scotland.
The executive remuneration review will be followed by an assessment of bonuses all the way down the company. Berndts proposal is expected to be put to shareholders for approval next January and February after the financial year-end but before the group posts its results. Details will be contained in the annual report. Lloyds said: We are currently in the early stages of this executive remuneration review.
Any decisions that are taken will be made within the context of last weeks announcement about executive remuneration from the Treasury, the recommendations of the Walker review and the FSA code on remuneration.
Lloyds priority remains to sort out its balance sheet. Daniels is likely to launch a 10 billion rights issue to lessen the banks reliance on the governments asset protection scheme, which could drive the taxpayers stake from 43% to 65%. At the same time, he is under pressure from Neelie Kroes, the EU competition commissioner, to carve up the group.
UK Financial Investments, which manages the governments bankstakes, is understood to have suggested to Sir Win Bischoff, Lloyds chairman, that he could reduce the size of the Lloyds board.
One plan would be for retail and wholesale executives Helen Weir and Truett Tate to step down. Tate may leave the company. It is understood that Gershon Cohen, head of Lloyds project finance team, is being groomed to succeed him.
Meanwhile, Lord Myners, the City minister, is expected to ask the top investment banks this week to sign up to the strictures on bonuses agreed at the recent G20 meeting. High street banks agreed to fall into line last week.
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 22:05
- 925 of 5370
From The Sunday Times -- October 4, 2009
ALISTAIR Darling has said the Treasury will study proposals from the International Monetary Fund for a tax on banks to provide for poor countries and offer insurance against future financial crises.
However, the chancellor, attending the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Istanbul, warned of practical difficulties and said such a tax would be rejected if it worked to Britains disadvantage.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the IMFs managing director, aims to bring forward proposals for a worldwide bank tax. He told the meetings that a Tobin tax on financial transactions, favoured by Lord Turner, chairman of the Financial Services Authority, was not practicable.
A broader bank tax, with proceeds paid into a fund for international development and to be used to mitigate the effects of future crises, could work, he said. A team under John Lipsky, an IMF deputy managing director, is to work on it.
Darlings preference has been to target the banks through higher capital requirements rather than new taxes. He conceded yesterday, however, that there was high-level interest in the idea.
Last week he struck a deal with Britains big banks to limit their bonus payments.
The chancellor also said that the G7, the group of leading advanced economies, would still have a role, despite the rise of the G20 as a larger rival body. He dismissed the idea of a smaller G4 to represent America, China, Japan and Europe.
Darling said the UK would not easily give up its permanent seat on the IMF. The UK would resist a shift in IMF voting rights to the big emerging economies greater than the 5% move agreed . G7 finance ministers and central bankers, meeting last night, welcomed signs of improvement in the global economy, but warned that downside risks persisted.
Master RSI
- 04 Oct 2009 22:34
- 926 of 5370
U.K. Treasury Seeks to Extend G-20 Bonus Curbs to More Banks
Oct. 4 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. Treasury minister Paul Myners is pressing more banks to adopt the curbs on bonus payments agreed by the Group of 20 nations and will meet with institutions including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley.
We will speak to the major investment banks with significant operations in the U.K. and urge them to endorse and act in accord with the decisions made at the G-20 and ensure that those decisions are reflected in the decisions that they make in 2009, Myners said in an interview with the Sunday Telegraph in London. A Treasury official confirmed the remarks.
The Treasury also wants to discuss the matter with officials at JPMorgan Chase & Co., Deutsche Bank AG, UBS AG and Morgan Stanley. Last week, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling got Barclays Bank Plc, HSBC Holdings Plc, Lloyds Banking Group Plc, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Standard Chartered Plc to sign up to the G-20 plan.
The measures require banks to claw back payments made to traders whose transactions go wrong. Theyre aimed at preventing pay from encouraging risky trades and weakening the capital position of institutions.
Darling wants to avoid voter anger over executive pay in the months before the next U.K. election, which must be held by June. He has said that pay should reflect the performance of traders, not the overall revenue of the bank, and that more awards should be given in stock instead of cash.
Tied to Performance
Bonuses need to be tied to performance, Darling said yesterday in Istanbul, where he is meeting other G-7 finance ministers. Having signed up to the agreement, we expect that banks, whatever they do come the bonus season, they stick to what they said.
While no U.K. banks revealed the size of their 2009 bonus pools, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. set aside a record $11.4 billion to pay compensation in the first six months of this year. The U.K. Treasury has extended 1.4 trillion ($2.2 trillion) of support to the economy including backing for Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc and loan guarantees for other programs.
Darling last week targeted what he calls greed and recklessness in the financial system, asking banks to curtail bonuses and said the rich will pay more in tax.
RBS Chief Executive Officer Stephen Hester on Sept. 29 said he supported Darlings promise to curtail banker bonuses. RBS will be less affected by Darlings proposals than other banks because the lender adopted deferred bonuses and clawbacks last year, Hester said in an interview. Regulation of bonuses will benefit RBS by creating a level playing field among banks, he said.