|
-
The best reason to cancel Brexit
https://inews.co.uk/news/tory-donor-...o-deal-brexit/
.......in the hope he and his ilk goes bust, if he makes money others have lost and who are they - probably our Pension Funds.
Last edited by Alikado; 05/08/2019 at 10:24 AM.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 1 Likes, 0 Dislikes
Check Todays Deals on Ebay.co.uk
Check Todays Deals On Amazon.co.uk
-
I agree - it's all just a game to these rich Tories, and the people who'll get damaged are the ones who vote for them!
You'd also think that with that kind of money he could afford a better wig
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 1 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Best quote in that article was "IT STINKS".
Financial treason through greed.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 1 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by Alikado
The guy is a hedge fund manager - he is already a billionaire and that is without Brexit. It is his job to hedge bets on which companies are succeeding and which are not. Some of those are obvious, e.g. Companies that have been constantly losing profits over the past few years - so I do not think Brexit will affect these any. I am willing to bet that the same guy knows which businesses are likely to succeed after Brexit too!
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Disaster capitalists. This is why the hard Right have been so rabid about Brexit. The plutocrats are pulling the strings. The ultra-rich are playing games with us. The kleptocrats fleecing us under the guise of austerity and wholesale cuts. And the first thing Johnson does is promise the ultra rich lots of tax cuts to fleece us further.
All the anger that should be reserved for the billionaires, and their puppets in government, is redirected by buffoons like Johnson and Farage (and Trump, Bolsonaro etc) towards scapegoats and imaginary enemies. Immigrants, Feminists, Jews, Muslims, the EU, BAME, gays, anybody that can deflect the attention away from them.
You think that Brexit is a rebellion by those who feel left behind, when it's actually been arranged all along by rich capitalists. It's a big con.
They are clever people with convincing arguments. And it has worked. There's a recession coming and the 1%ers will be rubbing their hands together. Who paid when the bankers screwed up the global economy in 2007-8? Wasn't the bankers, was it?
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 5 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by steve
Best quote in that article was "IT STINKS".
Financial treason through greed.
It should be illegal to sell something that you don't own or is not ' on order'.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 3 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
This demonstrates what Brexit is really all about, nothing to do with so called freedom for the country, but purely open house for the arch capitalist, the equity fund vultures, the money moguls, all backed up by Johnson, with his attendant hyenas all just waiting to scavenge on the body of this country.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 5 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Do you have to be thick to be taken in by this story or just myopic ?
Crispin Odey is reportedly betting against at least 16 firms
reportedly waged a £300m bet against some of Britain’s biggest businesses on the implication their share prices will crash after Brexit.
Mr Odey’s company reportedly increased its “short” position in the high street lender Metro Bank.
Mr Odey is said to have backed shares in UK firms
The mind boggles at the lack of financial markets knowledge, does anyone seriously think people only trade in stock price rises ?
But glaring out from the piece is the multiple use of the word reportedly;
reportedly
/r??p??t?dli/
Learn to pronounce
adverb
according to what some say (used to express the speaker's belief that the information given is not necessarily true).
No wonder the remoaners are fearful of brexit they didn't understand what they were voting for.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by local
Do you have to be thick to be taken in by this story or just myopic ?
Crispin Odey is reportedly betting against at least 16 firms
reportedly waged a £300m bet against some of Britain’s biggest businesses on the implication their share prices will crash after Brexit.
Mr Odey’s company reportedly increased its “short” position in the high street lender Metro Bank.
Mr Odey is said to have backed shares in UK firms
The mind boggles at the lack of financial markets knowledge, does anyone seriously think people only trade in stock price rises ?
But glaring out from the piece is the multiple use of the word reportedly;
reportedly
/r??p??t?dli/
Learn to pronounce
adverb
according to what some say (used to express the speaker's belief that the information given is not necessarily true).
No wonder the remoaners are fearful of brexit they didn't understand what they were voting for.
Clearly you didn't know what you voted for, warnings have been sounded right from the start regarding the financial vultures, why do think Mogg is such an avid supporter of no deal Brexit?
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 2 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by Toodles McGinty
Disaster capitalists. This is why the hard Right have been so rabid about Brexit. The plutocrats are pulling the strings. The ultra-rich are playing games with us. The kleptocrats fleecing us under the guise of austerity and wholesale cuts. And the first thing Johnson does is promise the ultra rich lots of tax cuts to fleece us further.
All the anger that should be reserved for the billionaires, and their puppets in government, is redirected by buffoons like Johnson and Farage (and Trump, Bolsonaro etc) towards scapegoats and imaginary enemies. Immigrants, Feminists, Jews, Muslims, the EU, BAME, gays, anybody that can deflect the attention away from them.
You think that Brexit is a rebellion by those who feel left behind, when it's actually been arranged all along by rich capitalists. It's a big con.
They are clever people with convincing arguments. And it has worked. There's a recession coming and the 1%ers will be rubbing their hands together. Who paid when the bankers screwed up the global economy in 2007-8? Wasn't the bankers, was it?
Considering the trade deficit with the EU while trading outside the EU has a a trade surplus - would you not think it a wise move to trade more outside the EU?
Would you not also think it wise for the UK to attract more wealth into the country by creating a semi tax haven in the UK? That would create more business and reduce the unemployment. More people employed would increase the tax income to the Government.
It is obvious that this would happen,
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by silver fox
Clearly you didn't know what you voted for, warnings have been sounded right from the start regarding the financial vultures, why do think Mogg is such an avid supporter of no deal Brexit?
Well as usual a swerve and a half when someone points out the specious underpinnings of the original post.
Still going on to Rees Mogg as you chose to mention him why do you think a money man wants to send the UK to hell in a hand cart, it would certainly reduce the pickings for him from SCM.
Oh erh reportedly..........
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by local
Well as usual a swerve and a half when someone points out the specious underpinnings of the original post.
Still going on to Rees Mogg as you chose to mention him why do you think a money man wants to send the UK to hell in a hand cart, it would certainly reduce the pickings for him from SCM.
Oh erh reportedly..........
Financiers want a free and easy finance market, the majority don't give a toss for the population or country they operate from, the fate of a company whose shares they use as gambling chips is of no importance just as long as they profit from the transactions.
The days are long when buying shares in a company was an investment in that company, now the shares themselves are the trading commodity, connections with the parent company are very often tenuous or non existent.
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
It is always good to take a step back and view how commentator's not going to be affected by Brexit view European machinations.
Quote
"Britain’s idea of a united Europe has never been more than a free-trading area.
In spite of that, the Germans and the Dutch liked the prospect of sharing the European Union membership with British free-traders, apparently as a counterweight to overbearing French state interventionists.
Having twice vetoed in the 1960s the British entry into what was then called the European Common Market, France eventually relented and agreed to Britain’s accession in 1973.
Soon, however, France and other EU members had to deal with British “opt-outs” from legislative and regulatory provisions London was finding contrary to its government traditions and requiring sovereignty transfers to unelected officials running the European Commission in Brussels.
Nearly three years after the successful referendum to leave the EU, Britain is now in the final stages of negotiating its exit.
Germany planted the seeds of destruction
Although the form of the British exit from the EU is often presented as a reductionist binary choice — “a no-deal exit” or “a deal the U.K. and the EU can live with” — London has in effect restated the fundamental question of what is a European project: A Europe of sovereign nation states, or a federal European super-state.
The disastrous fiscal austerity policies imposed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel on sinking euro area economies at the beginning of this decade, and her subsequent disorderly open-door immigration waves in 2015 have been a catalyst and a detonator of strong centrifugal forces throughout the European Union.
In response to cataclysmic shocks of the Great Recession, Merkel set out to teach a lesson to euro area “fiscal miscreants” and those unable to control their banks (Spain). In the process, she rebuffed American President Barack Obama’s request to ease up on her devastating fiscal austerity, because Washington was rightly concerned that a deep and intractable European recession would hit hard one-fifth of American exports.
To those calling for some European solidarity, Merkel retorted that it’s everybody for themselves, with Germany continuing to live off its trade surpluses with the euro area partners while pursuing a “black zero” budget balance.
Presidential candidate and later President Donald Trump understood all that. He told Merkel that trade free-riding on the U.S. was over, and so was Washington’s total underwriting of German security. Apparently shocked by the lack of American solidarity (stupidity), Merkel’s response was that “Europeans truly have to take our fate into our own hands.” In other words, never mind, Germany will continue to bilk Europe.
That, however, was too late for Merkel and Germany. Her policies have led to the extreme-right xenophobic Alternative for Germany (AfD) shooting up from zero votes in 2013 to the country’s third-largest political party now.
And that was also an eye opener for some smarter Europeans. When the Hungarians saw that Merkel was going to direct refugees their way, Budapest said it didn’t want Berlin to decide who was going to live in Hungary.
Berlin and a Berlin-run European Commission were outraged at that lack of Hungary’s European solidarity. Worse, an arrogant German EU budget commissioner publicly threatened that he would cut off regional development funds to which Hungary was entitled.
France’s ‘civil war’
Germany got its next comeuppance in Italy. Rome finally summoned the courage to say “basta!” (enough!), after being left alone for years to handle thousands of African and Middle-Eastern migrants and refugees landing on its shores. Berlin’s only response to Italian appeals for European solidarity was to criticize Rome for refusing to honor the maritime traffic laws and to secure people in danger.
To get back at Italy for refusing to follow Germany’s diktat on immigration policies, Berlin led the assault, with its French sidekicks, on Italy’s attempts to rescue its sinking economy with fiscal policies that were well within the euro-area budget rules.
Germany and its EU Commission now got exactly what they wanted: The Italian economy sank into recession late last year, and will probably remain there for most of 2019.
The story is not over, though. Italy is now teaming up with Hungary and Poland to create an anti-German and anti-French block, with unpredictable consequences for the EU’s future.
All that is happening at a time when France is split by a violent and deepening social unrest — some conservative French thinkers call a “civil war,” in a country prone to “violence” and “revolutions.” The government has no answer to three months of demonstrations and rioting of a social movement dubbed “yellow vests.” Watching an increasingly violent police warfare, the French governing elites are organizing town hall discussions, apparently believing that they can wear down, and wait out, their opponents.
But, as things now stand, there seems no end to the French political crisis. Last Saturday, for example, about 60,000 people demonstrated and rioted in all major French cities, confronted by 80,000 police in lethal combat gear.
For the time being, the French government is hanging on thanks to massive police operations and the fact that the rioting social groups have neither the leadership nor the programs that would offer viable alternatives for the transition of power in the quasi-imperial presidential system of the Fifth Republic.
By comparison, a weak and disoriented German government looks like a paragon of stability. The governing coalition forces can’t wait to see Merkel’s back, the right-of-center CDU/CSU sister parties are still settling their differences, and their hapless Socialist (SPD) partners are looking for a major leadership change.
And everybody is waiting to see what political forces will emerge from the European parliamentary elections in late May. The event is billed as a decisive showdown between established and highly contested governing circles, and what are derisively called “populist” demagogues and illiberal democracies.
Investment thoughts
That huge European mess is exactly what Trump and the U.K. need to settle their trade scores with a disintegrating European Union.
Will the euro survive all that?
The probability is very high that it will. The euro is in the hands of the European Central Bank, and no member country now has an overwhelming anti-euro constituency.
Upon reflection, the Europeans will also realize that a demise of the euro would herald Germany’s total political, economic and financial domination of a system of fragmented European states. The long pre-euro experience shows that no country could be protected from that by managed or free-floating exchange rates. The German central bank would then be on par with the U.S. Federal Reserve, and the Bundesbank’s president would reclaim its old role as a lecturer-in-chief on world economy and finance.
But many in Europe would find such a German domination unacceptable. Europe’s old demons would soon take over, and Washington would have to step in to keep the erstwhile European “brothers” off each other’s throats.
And here is how Henry Kissinger talks in his memoirs about a most humiliating history lesson he received on that topic from the towering French President Charles de Gaulle. Egged on by President Richard Nixon, during his visit to France in the 1960s, to challenge de Gaulle’s ideas about Germany, Kissinger piqued the haughty general with the question how he would prevent Germany from dominating Europe. De Gaulle’s answer was simple: “Through war.”
Commentary by Michael Ivanovitch, an independent analyst focusing on world economy, geopolitics and investment strategy. He served as a senior economist at the OECD in Paris, international economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and taught economics at Colum "
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/04/brex...ommentary.html
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 0 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
Originally Posted by said
Considering the trade deficit with the EU while trading outside the EU has a a trade surplus - would you not think it a wise move to trade more outside the EU?
Would you not also think it wise for the UK to attract more wealth into the country by creating a semi tax haven in the UK? That would create more business and reduce the unemployment. More people employed would increase the tax income to the Government.
It is obvious that this would happen,
The trade surplus / deficit is skewed by imports coming through the likes of Rotterdam.
The UK already has one of the lowest Tax Rates in Europe and the World.
https://taxfoundation.org/corporate-...s-europe-2019/
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 1 Likes, 0 Dislikes
-
-
Member Post Likes / Dislikes - 1 Likes, 0 Dislikes
|
Search Qlocal (powered by google)
Privacy & Cookie Policy
Check Todays Deals On Amazon.co.uk
Check Todays Deals on Ebay.co.uk
Booking.com
Supporting Local Business
Be Seen - Advertise on Qlocal
UK, Local Online News Community, Forums, Chats, For Sale, Classified, Offers, Vouchers, Events, Motors Sale, Property For Sale Rent, Jobs, Hotels, Taxi, Restaurants, Pubs, Clubs, Pictures, Sports, Charities, Lost Found
UK,
UK News,
|