Gausie
- 26 Nov 2008 13:36
cynic
- 17 Dec 2008 17:58
- 93 of 297
i agree with harry ..... outlook for housebuilders (and WOS) remains grim
cynic
- 17 Dec 2008 18:23
- 95 of 297
.
skinny
- 18 Dec 2008 16:36
- 96 of 297
Seymour Clearly
- 18 Dec 2008 16:49
- 97 of 297
Have you read the comment from Mr Euro on the Mike / B'share thread: I'm at the front end of blue chip European business, a leading indicator if ever there was one, and things are bad, very bad. I dont want to go overboard but to say big business is suffering is a huge understatement.
lelael
- 19 Dec 2008 16:20
- 99 of 297
Tesco the High St Bank ? see RNS, certainly on a breakout today.
skinny
- 19 Dec 2008 16:36
- 100 of 297
cynic
- 19 Dec 2008 17:08
- 101 of 297
personally, i am very happy that my portfolio overall is probably short, and certainly is if i strip out IEC ..... though ther markets always look 6/12 months forward, i think there is so much bad news in the offing, that it cannot conceivably all have been discounted ...... for instance, even if US car makers get bailed out, as will almost certainly happen, it will be at the cost of huge cuts in their workforce (unions are too strong, but that is another story) and no doubt their suppliers will be told they will only get paid at say 120 days ...... uk unemployment is still rising sharply, and euroland bureaucrats still refuse to own up to the total shit their own empire is in.
the above will do as examples
halifax
- 19 Dec 2008 17:18
- 102 of 297
cynic there is a great deal of chatter about countrys rushing to devalue their currencies to enable them to ride out the recession. Does this mean (flash I saved the world) Gordon will order Merv to start buying gold!
skinny
- 19 Dec 2008 17:26
- 103 of 297
Well its nearly 10 years since he sold it at
rock bottom prices.
cynic
- 19 Dec 2008 17:30
- 104 of 297
as i am a thicko, please tell me why devaluing your currency helps you through the recession, or is it merely at the cost of billowing and bellowing inflation 2/3 years hence?
skinny
- 19 Dec 2008 17:33
- 105 of 297
I guess the only upside is to make our exports cheaper.
halifax
- 19 Dec 2008 17:36
- 106 of 297
cynic its a short term "sticking plaster" applied by desperate politicians to enable them to fool the (poorly educated) electorate and achieve re-election.
cynic
- 19 Dec 2008 17:43
- 107 of 297
so i take it that the answer was "Yes"
halifax
- 19 Dec 2008 17:55
- 108 of 297
common sense suggests yes, they are " banking" on a sudden increase in interest rates to head off inflation in a year or so.
But for investors there may well be opportunities in buying gold miners if you can identify actual producers with mines in countrys with low political risk/interference. Unfortunately it seems to us most producing goldmines are located in countrys which are politically high risk.
cynic
- 19 Dec 2008 18:12
- 109 of 297
for a tiddler, it might be worth looking at CEY
halifax
- 19 Dec 2008 20:28
- 110 of 297
CEY looks promising but there may well be teething problems with the start up, Egypt has been reasonably politically stable under Mubarak but he is not getting any younger and the ME is still a simmering pot.
cynic
- 19 Dec 2008 20:47
- 111 of 297
nothing in this life is certain except death and taxes