Jump to content

Recommended Posts

He left a message about 'news on the position'. I was hoping it

would be about an interview...but I dont think it was!!


Perhaps you miss heard Weegee and said 'watch the news on our position'


You dont need the news when you have ed forum because Ladygooner had the full SP on hbos and Lloyds first.

mockney piers wrote:-so not sure why the thought of AIG going tits up or lloyds 'folding' would be so welcome.


Not at all welcome as far as I am concerned mockers,

when these things collapse, no one knows the depth to which it will fall, and re-starting the economy from a position of debt makes it more difficult to rescue.


When a bank gets bailed out like Northern wreck, it is tougher to save the next one, so now they just merge and hope that the all important confidence, is maintained.


A few years ago Lloyds brokers were in the news when they had a number of syndicates go to the wall and it was described as a house of cards due to lots of reinsurance business being connected, no one realised how shakey it all was.


I personally much prefer to maintain the status quo rather than any dangerous financial failures.

Well, I'm probably going to lose my job, but due to the bank I work for being taken over rather than this week's events.


Worth bearing in mind that investment banking is massively regulated, and compliance with regulations is an ever-present topic and obligation. In this country the regulations are set by the FSA. Maybe give a thought to their role in this?

Ms B Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Well, I'm probably going to lose my job, but due

> to the bank I work for being taken over rather

> than this week's events.

>

> Worth bearing in mind that investment banking is

> massively regulated, and compliance with

> regulations is an ever-present topic and

> obligation. In this country the regulations are

> set by the FSA. Maybe give a thought to their role

> in this?



Hmmm


not in my ( long ) experience


The cynic would say The FSA is a de facto trade group, funded by the banks themselves - regulation is usually a reaction to a scandal, as the banks cry fould when anyone tries to get involved in their "rightful" business - there is a great deal of pussyfooting arou8nd - the Banks Bully the regulators and bully their auditors, knowing they can get away with it


The big few auditots have less idea of how to value a complex product that the babks do, and a bit of back testing ( based on the banks own information ) is usually enough to get the audit signed off - remember Enron? better to tuern a blind eye than lose a contract


The markets themselves are usually SRO's - self regulators and if anyone has experinced compliance issues with , for example, the base Metals markets, you will understand that they are toothless when it comes to forcing anyone of influence, to tow the line


The products that have gone pear shaped are hardly regulated, just because of the obtuse nature of the product and the inability to determoine accurate valuations, often due the to the opaque nature of these illiquid contracts


Compliance isn bandied about, but the reality is that making ? take priority

The FSA have as sharp a teeth as the government allows them, and this government have indulged the city by leaning on the teeth to have blind eyes...or something.


The likes of Gordon Brown, Northern Rock et al have been far too optimistic that the good times will roll on, and of course they never do. But noone seems to have sufficiently planned for that. Hedging is not saving after all is it.


I liked Hislop on Question Time the other night, pointing out that Northern Rock and Halifax used to be building societies, and their bespectacled model of lending what you had may have been boring but at least it was safe. Then said that a couple of years ago Lloyds were being criticised for playing it too safe and falling behind their competitors; but who had to bail out HBOS...?

The FSA has not much bite

Anyone with any ability in FS (but no morals, so that's most) has spent the last 10 years earning squillions rather than working for a toothless ineffective regulator getting paid peanuts (relatively)

All the brains are with the bankers who run rings round the toothless, 2nd Rate, FSA.....


...er that's it....

I know one person who works for the FSA. He is a total fud. Whether he is a lazy fud, I don't know, but I do know he is a childish, selfish, preening, obnoxious, bigoted, prep-school-hero-kind of a fud.


So I don't think merely lazy cuts it at the FSA. Sorry to disappoint you, Brendan.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Why is the name a big of a red flag? Blighty is a common name for the UK whatever people might think.
    • The only election which counts is the General Election.  There is still strong resentment for fourteen year's of Conservative rule. They squeezed the working class's way to hard, then they squeezed the middle class, but somehow the upper class never got touched, funny that.   There is also new resentment for Labour because of the utter balls up they've made of things since coming to power nine months ago. The majority of the population (or at least those with an ounce of common sense) want these clowns out of office ASAP because they see the damage they are doing to UK plc. They squeezed the pensioners, then the farmers and then business. They made and broke promise after promise, or just didn't tell the truth or say what they where going to do, otherwise known as merely lying to get elected. Inflation may be falling but the cost of things in the shops and utility bills keep on rising, the direct opposite of what they promised. They will never be trusted once they are ousted from power in about four and a half years time.   Everything they do and touch causes further harm, led by three stooges, Rayner, Reeves and balls'less Starmer, who couldn't fight his way out of a paper bag. He still thinks he's a solicitor at the DPP. Rather than spending week upon week getting involved in international politics he needs to be sorting out the UK's issues, sadly he's not up to the job and nor are his Cabinet.  Society needs a mix of people with different skills to prosper, not more and more graduates who can't get jobs in what they studied in.   Reform is the current anti establishment party, which will hopefully wither away back to where it came from.  The Liberals and Greens, well what can you say apart from using them as another alternative vote of dissatisfaction, but neither will come to power.  The country seriously needs stability and a Government that stands up for and represents it's people, not what MP's want but what the constituencies want and need.  Government needs to become far more open and transparent, it needs to be seen to be doing its job, doing what MP's are elected to do,  working for the people in the constituencies, getting back to basic principles and rebuilding the trust which has been lost by successive party's immaterial of them being, red, blue, light blue, yellow, green or some other colour.     
    • That’s very insulting! You are basically calling 17 million people that voted to leave the EU ‘thick’.        Brexit happened Sue.  Boring graphs!  Calling Nigel Farage a plastic patriot is also very insulting seeing as he and the Reform Party have had a landslide victory all over England.
    • These charity collectors are often classed as chuggers.  It can be scandalous that the charity/admin may keep a huge percentage of your donations and a tiny percentage is  actually given to the charity.   I can not speak for individual collectors - but it common practice.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...