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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If Seamus Milne really is going then that could help effort

SystemSystem Posts: 12,114
edited September 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If Seamus Milne really is going then that could help efforts to help unify Labour

We don’t know yet whether the highly controversial Milne is actually going but judging by the Tweets that’s been the buzz from Liverpool overnight.

Read the full story here


«1345

Comments

  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071
    First!
  • It depends on who replaces him. But Milne is a ridiculous waste of space, not only in his current job but also as a journalist generally. He delivers zero value.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,704
    edited September 2016
    This quote from the above text sums up a lot of the causes of the problems of the left:

    'He appeared to have all the power of Alastair Campbell at his peak but without the skills '

    Given the corrosive effect of Mr Campbell and his alleged bullying ways, I can't think of a bigger insult to use than those words above to describe anyone.
  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    edited September 2016
    I agree with tim, although it wouldn't surprise me at all if paul mason is milne's replacement - that's if he'd take the job.

    Labour - and the corbynite idiots - need to lose an election before they understand how screwed they are.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    edited September 2016
    The sack is the best thing for Milne, he's done nothing but get negative press for Corbyn since he's been there. Even the Grauniad are moving away from supporting Labour, let him go back there and pick up his six figure salary for writing about how we should keep the poor, poor.

    Oh, and antics like changing someone's speech without telling him, by editing the autocue as he's about to go on stage - not big and not clever, especially when your boss is going on about party unity.
  • Sandpit said:

    The sack is the best thing for Milne, he's done nothing but get negative press for Corbyn since he's been there. Even the Grauniad are moving away from supporting Labour, let him go back there and pick up his six figure salary for writing about how we should keep the poor, poor.

    And just what political system do you know of that would abolish poverty?

  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    edited September 2016
    tim really shouldn't be giving them ideas! The only way he could top it would be with @paulmasonnews.
  • He delivers zero value.

    To the gaiety of the nation and the fortunes of the Tory Party?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    Vain not vein.
  • Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @paulwaugh: Corbyn's 8.10am @BBCr4today interview was pre-recorded yesterday, partly cos he's 'not a morning person'.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169

    Sandpit said:

    The sack is the best thing for Milne, he's done nothing but get negative press for Corbyn since he's been there. Even the Grauniad are moving away from supporting Labour, let him go back there and pick up his six figure salary for writing about how we should keep the poor, poor.

    And just what political system do you know of that would abolish poverty?
    Getting the poor educated well, in jobs and paying less tax when they do is a good starting point, one where bloody good progress has been made since 2010. It's the politics of aspiration.

    Oh, and silly "relative" "poverty" definitions are bollocks. Making the rich less rich doesn't make those at the bottom any better off, nor does just handing them cash as supplicants of the State.

    There are a tiny number of people in the UK living in actual poverty, as the rest of the world might define it. Someone is not "in poverty" because they have last year's iPhone or because their satellite TV is only 42" instead of 55.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,676
    Reading that Graun piece on Sam makes me even more irritated at the seeming incompetence of yet another sports governing body.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Seumas will be greatly missed by me, he's so incredibly crap at his job. He's always the story, looks like he'd icepick his enemies with a bloodless smile, and somehow manages to create pointless controversy.

    I think Mr Mid-Life-Crisis would be fabulous. He talks in loony lefty pamphlet language and is incredibly angry. He's just placard away from a rant these days.

    Of course - Dr Eoin would be ideal - he's a one man wonder at fact checking too.
  • PlatoSaid said:

    Seumas will be greatly missed by me, he's so incredibly crap at his job. He's always the story, looks like he'd icepick his enemies with a bloodless smile, and somehow manages to create pointless controversy.

    I think Mr Mid-Life-Crisis would be fabulous. He talks in loony lefty pamphlet language and is incredibly angry. He's just placard away from a rant these days.

    Of course - Dr Eoin would be ideal - he's a one man wonder at fact checking too.

    Maybe Alistair might want his old job back?
  • TonyETonyE Posts: 938

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
  • Morning all

    I thought Seumas Milne’s one year contract was up, er that’s it. – No sacrificial lamb, no olive branch sacking for party unity, just not very good at the job, as Mandelson predicted.

    And soon to be return to the Guardian by all accounts?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    Not entirely sure why Corbyn needs a sacrifice given his comfortable victory, unless one counts the innards of various PLP members. And I think one of Corbyn's few redeeming features is a lack of superstitious beliefs. That said getting rid of Seamus is a good idea in its own terms because the man is a useless pillock.

    Paul Mason would be a terrible replacement. Increasingly unhinged and unconnected to reality I think even Syriza in its pomp might have hesitated to employ a cannon that was quite that loose.
  • Another Disabled 'unarmed' Black man is shot dead in the USA.

    Who exactly is running the South African USA police. They seem to be acting more like the Selous Scouts under Uncle Ron ('oil leak') Reid Reddy?


    http://dailym.ai/2dqxdVw
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And they've already told Italy that bailing out banks is a no-no.

    The only way a bank the size of Deutsche is getting bailed out is if the ECB "print" several hundred billion Euro, which is against every rule in the book. But not doing it risks a domino effect, with Commerzbank next to fall.

    It could quite conceivably wreck the Euro as a currency, Deutsche is way too big to fail.
  • Paul_BedfordshirePaul_Bedfordshire Posts: 3,632
    edited September 2016
    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And as the mail explains, this is principally because the Germans refused to countenance the idea - to the extent that Cyprus savers had their savings confiscated - because if they end up Bailing Out Italys £350 billion in hock banks it is goodnight Vienna, the lights will go out all over Europe.

    I liked the final sentence of that article:

    "Here, in Britain, we should surely be thankful that, after the Brexit vote, we are preparing to jump clear of the clattering train as it heads for a ravine"

    - although landing on railway ballast at 40mph will not be unpainful.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
  • eekeek Posts: 27,939
    Sandpit said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And they've already told Italy that bailing out banks is a no-no.

    The only way a bank the size of Deutsche is getting bailed out is if the ECB "print" several hundred billion Euro, which is against every rule in the book. But not doing it risks a domino effect, with Commerzbank next to fall.

    It could quite conceivably wreck the Euro as a currency, Deutsche is way too big to fail.

    it's a question of when not if. Merkel's refusal to bail them out on Monday won't help the inevitable happening sooner
  • MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

  • RobD said:

    RobD said:

    vik said:

    Trump gains net 2% from the Debate in Gravis flash poll, even though Clinton "won" the debate 48% to 44%.

    "Two percent of voters, previously undecided, switched to Trump after the debate. No undecideds went to Clinton. One percent switched from Trump to Clinton, and one percent switched from Clinton to Trump."

    http://www.breitbart.com/2016-presidential-race/2016/09/26/debate-flash-poll/


    Today's movement in the LA Times tracking poll will be interesting & the first sign of how other polls could move as a result of the debates.

    If the Gravis poll results are also reflected in other polls, then the Liberal media is going to have a total meltdown. :)

    Oh I am hoping somehow Trump keeps rising in the polls. He won't.. but that can't stop a man wishing!
    Do you realise that there is quite a lot at stake here for all of us, much more than just the outcome of some trifling betting positions?
    Who said I was betting on anything?
    I was giving you the benefit of the doubt.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    edited September 2016
    eek said:

    Sandpit said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And they've already told Italy that bailing out banks is a no-no.

    The only way a bank the size of Deutsche is getting bailed out is if the ECB "print" several hundred billion Euro, which is against every rule in the book. But not doing it risks a domino effect, with Commerzbank next to fall.

    It could quite conceivably wreck the Euro as a currency, Deutsche is way too big to fail.

    it's a question of when not if. Merkel's refusal to bail them out on Monday won't help the inevitable happening sooner
    Indeed. As someone noted here yesterday, Deutsche's share price is now purely a gamble on the willingness of the German govt and ECB standing behind the bank. Every comment that suggests that might not happen, pushes the bank one inch 2.54cm closer to the precipice.
  • DavidL said:

    Not entirely sure why Corbyn needs a sacrifice given his comfortable victory, unless one counts the innards of various PLP members. And I think one of Corbyn's few redeeming features is a lack of superstitious beliefs. That said getting rid of Seamus is a good idea in its own terms because the man is a useless pillock.

    Paul Mason would be a terrible replacement. Increasingly unhinged and unconnected to reality I think even Syriza in its pomp might have hesitated to employ a cannon that was quite that loose.

    Mason is building a media brand - the maverick commentator who "gets" the insurgency on the left. He would be ill-advised to take the Labour job if offered because (1) it would mean a pay cut and (2) because it would keep him off the TV and away from social media. If it were offered, though, it would inflame tensions within Labour even further and would be the clearest possible sign that Corbyn has no interest whatsoever in unity. I rather hope it happens.

  • MikeKMikeK Posts: 9,053

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    Oh, is he running for president, I didn't know that.
  • Paul_BedfordshirePaul_Bedfordshire Posts: 3,632
    edited September 2016
    <
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    Its not just politically toxic because of Italy. Far more toxic, last time Germany did that they ended up with a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of Bread, going all Godwins and everyone losing everything including their sons and the roof over their head and half the women in Prussia raped by Soviet Troops.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    eek said:

    Sandpit said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And they've already told Italy that bailing out banks is a no-no.

    The only way a bank the size of Deutsche is getting bailed out is if the ECB "print" several hundred billion Euro, which is against every rule in the book. But not doing it risks a domino effect, with Commerzbank next to fall.

    It could quite conceivably wreck the Euro as a currency, Deutsche is way too big to fail.

    it's a question of when not if. Merkel's refusal to bail them out on Monday won't help the inevitable happening sooner
    We are back in 2008 with EU banks once again exposed to market apprehension and, unlike their UK counterparts, with no obvious lender of last resort standing behind them to give confidence. The ECB will not stand behind them because that involves spending non German money or at least pledging non German credit. The Bundesbank has the power and financial resource to do so but not the legal responsibility. The rulebook (which is about to be jettisoned again) stops the German State from doing so.

    What a crock the Euro system is.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    edited September 2016

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
  • Hasn't Merkel been leader since 2000 and Chancellor since 2005? Longer than Maggie.

    Why wouldn't she want to stand down? And who would replace her?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    philiph said:

    This quote from the above text sums up a lot of the causes of the problems of the left:

    'He appeared to have all the power of Alastair Campbell at his peak but without the skills '

    But without the charm ?
    :-)
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    So did Mr Hilter at the
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    Its not just politically toxic because of Italy. Far more toxic, last time Germany did that they ended up with a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of Bread, going all Godwins and everyone losing everything and half the women in Prussia raped by Soviet Troops.
    Isn't it a bit early for Godwin?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    MikeK said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    Oh, is he running for president, I didn't know that.
    Point being you seem to be falling for the Tony Benn fallacy.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    I think you could do a forced recap.

    But Merkel doesn't want to do that so the EU is a convenient whipping boy
  • Pong said:

    I agree with tim, although it wouldn't surprise me at all if paul mason is milne's replacement - that's if he'd take the job.

    Labour - and the corbynite idiots - need to lose an election before they understand how screwed they are.

    You are wrong on two counts. Firstly, plenty in Labour already realise that the party is screwed, just not quite plenty enough. And secondly the Corbynites won't realise that even after losing a general election. For the far left, it's always someone else's fault.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654

    MikeK said:



    So did Mr Hilter at the
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    Its not just politically toxic because of Italy. Far more toxic, last time Germany did that they ended up with a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of Bread, going all Godwins and everyone losing everything and half the women in Prussia raped by Soviet Troops.
    Really, that is nonsense. There is no inflation at all in Germany, indeed prices are falling. The State runs a surplus and has been paying down debt. Their economy is very strong and can easily handle this. Its just out of step looking to do this in 2016 rather than 2008 and the Germans have been the ones insisting on a rule book that creates artificial barriers to doing so.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    edited September 2016
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    Quite. What's German for "Hoist by their own petard"?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    I think the Germans have a rather excellent word for it which I am not going to try to spell at this time in the morning.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    edited September 2016

    DavidL said:

    Not entirely sure why Corbyn needs a sacrifice given his comfortable victory, unless one counts the innards of various PLP members. And I think one of Corbyn's few redeeming features is a lack of superstitious beliefs. That said getting rid of Seamus is a good idea in its own terms because the man is a useless pillock.

    Paul Mason would be a terrible replacement. Increasingly unhinged and unconnected to reality I think even Syriza in its pomp might have hesitated to employ a cannon that was quite that loose.

    Mason is building a media brand - the maverick commentator who "gets" the insurgency on the left. He would be ill-advised to take the Labour job if offered because (1) it would mean a pay cut and (2) because it would keep him off the TV and away from social media. If it were offered, though, it would inflame tensions within Labour even further and would be the clearest possible sign that Corbyn has no interest whatsoever in unity. I rather hope it happens.

    Doesn't Corbyn's press officer have to be someone of this ilk though? As a matter of principle Corbyn seems to refuse to countenance compromising on his views on anything for the sake of the electorate and/or the (tabloid) media. Any press officer who tries to make him see sense on that is going to quit within a few months out of frustration. Someone like Owen Jones (who might have been perfect) would be an example of this.



  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    If the UK was able to bail out the cream of it's banking sector, one would have thought that the Germans could manage? Or is the extra support provided by the BoE the difference?
  • Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    DavidL said:

    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    I think the Germans have a rather excellent word for it which I am not going to try to spell at this time in the morning.
    Schadenfreude?

  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    alex. said:

    DavidL said:

    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    I think the Germans have a rather excellent word for it which I am not going to try to spell at this time in the morning.
    Schadenfreude?

    That's the one. Show off.
  • PlatoSaid said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    So did Mr Hilter at the
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    Its not just politically toxic because of Italy. Far more toxic, last time Germany did that they ended up with a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of Bread, going all Godwins and everyone losing everything and half the women in Prussia raped by Soviet Troops.
    Isn't it a bit early for Godwin?
    Alas when the ghost of Mr Hitler is stll casting a long shadow over Germany and influencing policy decisions Godwin is part of the equation.

    Similarly the German refugee crisis is a direct result of Eight Million Germans being expelled from parts of Germany annexed by Russia, Poland and Czech after World War 2 and fleeing west as refugees. While that was within living memory Germany would never have stood aside as another refugee crisis unfolded in southern Europe.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    DavidL said:

    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
    LOL no, I just live in the middle of the desert!

    It was just a rare (from me anyway) comment on the number of posters mindlessly ramping one side or the other, in an election where almost no-one on this board is actually voting. There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular who has commented 300 times on nothing else, almost certainly a waste of the DNC's cash.

    Sure, we all have an opinion as to the relative merits (or otherwise) of the two most unpopular candidates in history, but most of us here are just looking for a betting angle - given there's nothing we can do to affect the result of the contest.
  • DavidL said:

    MikeK said:



    So did Mr Hilter at the
    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    Its not just politically toxic because of Italy. Far more toxic, last time Germany did that they ended up with a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of Bread, going all Godwins and everyone losing everything and half the women in Prussia raped by Soviet Troops.
    Really, that is nonsense. There is no inflation at all in Germany, indeed prices are falling. The State runs a surplus and has been paying down debt. Their economy is very strong and can easily handle this. Its just out of step looking to do this in 2016 rather than 2008 and the Germans have been the ones insisting on a rule book that creates artificial barriers to doing so.
    I never said it is the right course of action. Just that it is unthinkable because of Weimar. We are animals not computers.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    alex. said:

    DavidL said:

    Not entirely sure why Corbyn needs a sacrifice given his comfortable victory, unless one counts the innards of various PLP members. And I think one of Corbyn's few redeeming features is a lack of superstitious beliefs. That said getting rid of Seamus is a good idea in its own terms because the man is a useless pillock.

    Paul Mason would be a terrible replacement. Increasingly unhinged and unconnected to reality I think even Syriza in its pomp might have hesitated to employ a cannon that was quite that loose.

    Mason is building a media brand - the maverick commentator who "gets" the insurgency on the left. He would be ill-advised to take the Labour job if offered because (1) it would mean a pay cut and (2) because it would keep him off the TV and away from social media. If it were offered, though, it would inflame tensions within Labour even further and would be the clearest possible sign that Corbyn has no interest whatsoever in unity. I rather hope it happens.

    Doesn't Corbyn's press officer have to be someone of this ilk though? As a matter of principle Corbyn seems to refuse to countenance compromising on his views on anything for the sake of the electorate and/or the (tabloid) media. Any press officer who tries to make him see sense on that is going to quit within a few months out of frustration. Someone like Owen Jones (who might have been perfect) would be an example of this.



    Mr Deacon was quite good here
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/27/ignore-the-talk-of-labour-unity--tom-watson-just-humiliated-jere/
  • tim really shouldn't be giving them ideas! The only way he could top it would be with @paulmasonnews.

    david icke is also available I imagine
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    alex. said:

    If the UK was able to bail out the cream of it's banking sector, one would have thought that the Germans could manage? Or is the extra support provided by the BoE the difference?

    It is now impossible within the EU to have state bailouts of the banking sector. The bank recovery and resolution directive (BRRD) has changed the game. It means that taxpayer money is no longer available with retail bondholders and uninsured depositors taking the haircut to save the bank. That's ordinary investors and people's life savings being hit by 10-15% in order to save the bank. If it even looks as if that is going to happen there will be a run on Deutsche as people empty their life savings and put them in a local bank. Eventually the government will impose the haircut on the remaining balance.
  • Seamus parting gift?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3XwsPvu6yI&feature=youtu.be

    Those vox pops look really genuine.........
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,654
    alex. said:

    If the UK was able to bail out the cream of it's banking sector, one would have thought that the Germans could manage? Or is the extra support provided by the BoE the difference?

    It is the critical function of lender of last resort. In the UK the BoE met that function doing whatever it took to keep UK banks operating so there was no systemic risk. The ECB playbook does not really allow them to fulfil that role (since it involves spending other peoples' money) which was a major part of the 2008 crisis.

    Eventually after a lot of unnecessary damage it did but the Germans have been adamant that that should not happen again with their "bail in" ideas. Having German citizens being amongst the first to suffer this (after Cyprus where the biggest victims were Russian gangsters so no one cared) was not a part of the plan.
  • MaxPB said:

    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    What do you think the rules should be, and specifically who do you think should be losing out to protect people who bought the bank's bonds?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216
    DavidL said:

    eek said:

    Sandpit said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    And they've already told Italy that bailing out banks is a no-no.

    The only way a bank the size of Deutsche is getting bailed out is if the ECB "print" several hundred billion Euro, which is against every rule in the book. But not doing it risks a domino effect, with Commerzbank next to fall.

    It could quite conceivably wreck the Euro as a currency, Deutsche is way too big to fail.

    it's a question of when not if. Merkel's refusal to bail them out on Monday won't help the inevitable happening sooner
    We are back in 2008 with EU banks once again exposed to market apprehension and, unlike their UK counterparts, with no obvious lender of last resort standing behind them to give confidence. The ECB will not stand behind them because that involves spending non German money or at least pledging non German credit. The Bundesbank has the power and financial resource to do so but not the legal responsibility. The rulebook (which is about to be jettisoned again) stops the German State from doing so.

    What a crock the Euro system is.
    Merkel might be forced into a position where she has to break the same rules that Germany crucified the Southern European economies to enforce. That is just not going to fly.

    It makes the Sarkozy plan look an interesting possibility (should he manage to get elected, of course...).

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    MikeK said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    Oh, is he running for president, I didn't know that.
    Hardly relevant to the point, which was people can draw a mighty crowd and still lose. In fairness Corbyn hasn't lost yet, and it does not follow that just because we think he will trump, who also draws crowds, will lose, but it doesn't mean he will do well either.

    On Milne, he's fantastic at his job. No one else is so adept at keeping his boss in the news or dragging a story out for days and days. Ok, usually it's for negative reasons, but he's on the right track.

    Corbyn might well have wanted him gone awhile ago for all I know, or others of the Corbynistas brand. If so, they probably didn't want to appear weak and do do before Corbyn was internally secure. Which they now are.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,216

    Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.


    He does seem to find encounters with people who have the temerity to question him perplexing in the extreme.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Nigelb said:

    Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.


    He does seem to find encounters with people who have the temerity to question him perplexing in the extreme.
    Not at all,he welcomes questions. So long as it is on the subject he wants to talk about.

    Ok in fairness again that's most politicians too, he's just awful at not seeming offended at being asked.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    MikeK said:

    Good morning all.

    Two pictures sez it all really:
    https://twitter.com/mitchellvii/status/780934964607062016

    Yes, it says someone is lying given the Trump venue fire safety certificate was for 7500.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,169
    kle4 said:

    Nigelb said:

    Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.


    He does seem to find encounters with people who have the temerity to question him perplexing in the extreme.
    Not at all,he welcomes questions. So long as it is on the subject he wants to talk about.

    Ok in fairness again that's most politicians too, he's just awful at not seeming offended at being asked.
    Most successful politicians can find a way to answer the question they wanted to have been asked. Corbyn seems mightily offended if the questions stray from those he was expecting on the subject.
  • mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    Sandpit said:

    DavidL said:

    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
    LOL no, I just live in the middle of the desert!

    It was just a rare (from me anyway) comment on the number of posters mindlessly ramping one side or the other, in an election where almost no-one on this board is actually voting. There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular who has commented 300 times on nothing else, almost certainly a waste of the DNC's cash.

    Sure, we all have an opinion as to the relative merits (or otherwise) of the two most unpopular candidates in history, but most of us here are just looking for a betting angle - given there's nothing we can do to affect the result of the contest.
    The rare pro-Hilary comments are somewhat outweighed by the relentless pro-Trump, anti-Clinton commentary. Few add much to the sum of human knowledge.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518

    MaxPB said:

    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    What do you think the rules should be, and specifically who do you think should be losing out to protect people who bought the bank's bonds?
    I would let each country get on with it as they see fit. If they want to wipe out the shareholders then that's fine (see RBS, Lloyds and Northern Rock), if they want to hit uninsured depositors, that's fine and if they want to go after the bond holders that's fine as well. Tbh, it's the imposition of the rules on everyone rather than the rules themselves I find most egregious. I am looking forward to the German government having to explain to ordinary people why their savings have been confiscated, or to other EU nations as to why it was fair for them to pump €150bn into Deutsche but others can't do the same for their banks. After years of preaching from Berlin about how awful our banks are and how awful Southern European economies are it is a delicious irony that Germany finds itself in this situation. €600bn in derivatives exposures, over here that would not be possible.
  • Good morning, everyone.

    I hope he isn't replaced with someone more competent (Milne, that is, not Corbyn).
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    edited September 2016
    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Nigelb said:

    Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.


    He does seem to find encounters with people who have the temerity to question him perplexing in the extreme.
    Not at all,he welcomes questions. So long as it is on the subject he wants to talk about.

    Ok in fairness again that's most politicians too, he's just awful at not seeming offended at being asked.
    Most successful politicians can find a way to answer the question they wanted to have been asked. Corbyn seems mightily offended if the questions stray from those he was expecting on the subject.
    Oh indeed. If you can't do that, don't do what he did though. That 'can we have a question on the NHS'? Repeated angrily several times was laughable. Just go 'oh, are we still on (that nonsense topic)? A shame. Very well, (answer).

    You show disappointment they are not focusing on what you want when you have more important subjects, without seeming too entitled.

    Once again yes minister taught us all about not answering questions. Sure it's a formula we see overused, but clearly it works or they wouldn't keep doing so. The old ' I think the real question is...' 'That's not the question...' Works at press conferences rather than interview since the journalist will not be as able to cone back at your evasion.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,676
    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    Yes a bit like A50. Sounds great on paper but, like any battle plan, doesn't survive the first contact.

    Note: @kle4 one for you to assess.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,654
    edited September 2016
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    What do you think the rules should be, and specifically who do you think should be losing out to protect people who bought the bank's bonds?
    I would let each country get on with it as they see fit. If they want to wipe out the shareholders then that's fine (see RBS, Lloyds and Northern Rock), if they want to hit uninsured depositors, that's fine and if they want to go after the bond holders that's fine as well. Tbh, it's the imposition of the rules on everyone rather than the rules themselves I find most egregious. I am looking forward to the German government having to explain to ordinary people why their savings have been confiscated, or to other EU nations as to why it was fair for them to pump €150bn into Deutsche but others can't do the same for their banks. After years of preaching from Berlin about how awful our banks are and how awful Southern European economies are it is a delicious irony that Germany finds itself in this situation. €600bn in derivatives exposures, over here that would not be possible.
    You were saying the rules were crazy, that implies that there's some alternative set of rules that isn't crazy. What are you actually advocating?
  • Alistair said:

    MikeK said:

    Good morning all.

    Two pictures sez it all really:
    https://twitter.com/mitchellvii/status/780934964607062016

    Yes, it says someone is lying given the Trump venue fire safety certificate was for 7500.
    Trump draws crowd in GOP stronghold shocker....

    Trump probably doesn’t have to worry much about winning Melbourne and surrounding Brevard County, solidly Republican territory where GOP voters outnumber registered Democrats by about 40,000.

    http://miami.cbslocal.com/2016/09/27/trump-goes-from-debate-stage-to-sunshine-state/
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383

    tim really shouldn't be giving them ideas! The only way he could top it would be with @paulmasonnews.

    david icke is also available I imagine
    TBH, Icke without the lizards probably talks more sense.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 42,139
    edited September 2016
    Sandpit said:

    DavidL said:

    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
    LOL no, I just live in the middle of the desert!

    It was just a rare (from me anyway) comment on the number of posters mindlessly ramping one side or the other, in an election where almost no-one on this board is actually voting. There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular who has commented 300 times on nothing else, almost certainly a waste of the DNC's cash.

    Sure, we all have an opinion as to the relative merits (or otherwise) of the two most unpopular candidates in history, but most of us here are just looking for a betting angle - given there's nothing we can do to affect the result of the contest.
    "There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular"

    Really? All I see is reaction to the Trump ramping and, in particular, the stupid pseudo-doctor stuff.

    I'd love to be paid to give my opinions on the Internet. How do I sign up?

    Oh, I just have. Putin's a great man. Russia's doing brilliantly helping the lovely Assad. North Korea's a great place to go on holiday. Venezuela's economy is booming. The Conservatives are evil baby-eaters. Vote TRUMP!

    :)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    TOPPING said:

    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    Yes a bit like A50. Sounds great on paper but, like any battle plan, doesn't survive the first contact.

    Note: @kle4 one for you to assess.
    Seems solid :)
  • MikeKMikeK Posts: 9,053
    https://twitter.com/CityAM/status/781022950057181184

    ..and one of the reasons is that Sainsbury's penchant for rebranding foods from other companies under their own name. People don't like it when well remembered and loved brands are made invisible. True other major supermarkets do this too - Tesco is a prime example - but Sainsbury's leads the pack.
  • MikeK said:

    https://twitter.com/CityAM/status/781022950057181184

    ..and one of the reasons is that Sainsbury's penchant for rebranding foods from other companies under their own name. People don't like it when well remembered and loved brands are made invisible. True other major supermarkets do this too - Tesco is a prime example - but Sainsbury's leads the pack.

    Aldi do it far more I suspect, but no one cares when they make it 70% cheaper.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    What do you think the rules should be, and specifically who do you think should be losing out to protect people who bought the bank's bonds?
    I would let each country get on with it as they see fit. If they want to wipe out the shareholders then that's fine (see RBS, Lloyds and Northern Rock), if they want to hit uninsured depositors, that's fine and if they want to go after the bond holders that's fine as well. Tbh, it's the imposition of the rules on everyone rather than the rules themselves I find most egregious. I am looking forward to the German government having to explain to ordinary people why their savings have been confiscated, or to other EU nations as to why it was fair for them to pump €150bn into Deutsche but others can't do the same for their banks. After years of preaching from Berlin about how awful our banks are and how awful Southern European economies are it is a delicious irony that Germany finds itself in this situation. €600bn in derivatives exposures, over here that would not be possible.
    You were saying the rules were crazy, that implies that there's some set of rules that isn't crazy. What are you actually advocating?
    Let each nation decide how to deal with its own banking sector. Nationalisation, bondholder haircuts and whatever else should all be available for governments to use at their discretion. If it were me, I'd bail out/nationalise Deutsche and then break them up. Shut down the dangerous derivatives division, sell the investment bank and shrink the retail bank until it becomes manageable and then refloat it.
  • MikeK said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.

    Oh, is he running for president, I didn't know that.
    He's running for PM.
    Theoretically.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    MikeK said:

    https://twitter.com/CityAM/status/781022950057181184

    ..and one of the reasons is that Sainsbury's penchant for rebranding foods from other companies under their own name. People don't like it when well remembered and loved brands are made invisible. True other major supermarkets do this too - Tesco is a prime example - but Sainsbury's leads the pack.

    Used Argos for the first time in years a few weeks ago. Twice In One day and got same day delivery each time, very good.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Iceland Foods
    If anyone knows Sam Allardyce, please tell him to get in touch. We could always use more store managers and yes, we can pay in pies.
  • Mr. kle4, that's Argive efficiency for you.
  • One unequivocal piece of good news for the UK today:

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2016/09/27/britain-leaps-into-seventh-place-in-competitiveness-rankings-as/

    I think a post-Brexit UK can be the number one most competitive country in the world. Let's hope Tezza is of like mind.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited September 2016
    Boo

    Seumas return to Guardian

    Significantly, he was not involved in any of the media briefing ahead of Mr Corbyn's keynote speech to the Labour conference this afternoon - a task normally carried out by the leader's most senior press spokesman.

    The party is already searching for a replacement for Kevin Slocombe, Mr Corbyn's former head of media who left his post in the summer to work for Bristol mayor Marvin Rees.
    https://t.co/EhnP7LMINQ
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Alistair said:

    MikeK said:

    Good morning all.

    Two pictures sez it all really:
    https://twitter.com/mitchellvii/status/780934964607062016

    Yes, it says someone is lying given the Trump venue fire safety certificate was for 7500.
    Some of them look like they are standing outside (not that I care one way or the orget but to accuse someone of lying is pretty strong)
  • MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    What do you think the rules should be, and specifically who do you think should be losing out to protect people who bought the bank's bonds?
    I would let each country get on with it as they see fit. If they want to wipe out the shareholders then that's fine (see RBS, Lloyds and Northern Rock), if they want to hit uninsured depositors, that's fine and if they want to go after the bond holders that's fine as well. Tbh, it's the imposition of the rules on everyone rather than the rules themselves I find most egregious. I am looking forward to the German government having to explain to ordinary people why their savings have been confiscated, or to other EU nations as to why it was fair for them to pump €150bn into Deutsche but others can't do the same for their banks. After years of preaching from Berlin about how awful our banks are and how awful Southern European economies are it is a delicious irony that Germany finds itself in this situation. €600bn in derivatives exposures, over here that would not be possible.
    You were saying the rules were crazy, that implies that there's some set of rules that isn't crazy. What are you actually advocating?
    Let each nation decide how to deal with its own banking sector. Nationalisation, bondholder haircuts and whatever else should all be available for governments to use at their discretion. If it were me, I'd bail out/nationalise Deutsche and then break them up. Shut down the dangerous derivatives division, sell the investment bank and shrink the retail bank until it becomes manageable and then refloat it.
    Up-thread you were criticizing letting holders of insecured bonds get a haircut. Presumably that means you'd spend taxpayers money to pay people who bought bonds in a private bank?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    TOPPING said:

    MaxPB said:

    DavidL said:

    TonyE said:

    Housepricecrash have been following the travails of Deutsch Bank for some years now.

    Seems the media has finally latched on.

    "Germany's Banks are a Timebomb. And if they crash it will be 2008 all over again"

    http://dailym.ai/2dqzIqI

    Angela Merkel is going to have to go cap in hand to the Yanks and hope they will kick the actual payment of the fines into the long grass.

    They don't have a mechanism in the EZ to bail out banks at this level.
    That article in the DM is beyond embarrassing but that does not mean that the Germans don't have a real problem on their hands.

    The US fine is a proposed fine and it is normal to haggle about these things. The provision made might yet prove sufficient but that is not the real problem. Their real problem is how many toxic derivatives and associated insurance they are still sitting on even although they have managed to wind down some of the exposure.

    Germany can afford to bail out its banks and, unlike Greece, does not need EU help to do so. It is just going to be politically toxic to do so having failed to take that step earlier when everyone else was doing it. It may be the final straw for Merkel who looks increasingly unlikely to stand again.
    The issue isn't Germany's ability to pay for a bail out, it is the crazy EU rules that govern bailouts. The BRRD mechanisms impose haircuts on retail bond holders and uninsured depositors, i.e. the littlest of the little guys. What we're talking about is a €150bn hit on ordinary people's investments and life savings. In Germany the last time the government confiscated people's money it didn't end well.

    It seems as though the political decision to hurt Southern European countries as much as they could to keep them in line is about to come and bite them in the bum. I am personally looking forwards to it, years of holier than thou preaching from Berlin and Frankfurt has made me indifferent to their travails. If there is some blowback to the UK, we'll just have to deal with it, watching the German banks crumble or the German government enforce a "good enough for thee, but not me" approach and blow up the whole EMU is going to be quite delicious.
    Yes a bit like A50. Sounds great on paper but, like any battle plan, doesn't survive the first contact.

    Note: @kle4 one for you to assess.
    A bit like that, yes. Half baked rules seems to be a running theme with the EU. ;)
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Sandpit said:

    DavidL said:

    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
    LOL no, I just live in the middle of the desert!

    It was just a rare (from me anyway) comment on the number of posters mindlessly ramping one side or the other, in an election where almost no-one on this board is actually voting. There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular who has commented 300 times on nothing else, almost certainly a waste of the DNC's cash.

    Sure, we all have an opinion as to the relative merits (or otherwise) of the two most unpopular candidates in history, but most of us here are just looking for a betting angle - given there's nothing we can do to affect the result of the contest.
    "There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular"

    Really? All I see is reaction to the Trump ramping and, in particular, the stupid pseudo-doctor stuff.

    I'd love to be paid to give my opinions on the Internet. How do I sign up?

    Oh, I just have. Putin's a great man. Russia's doing brilliantly helping the lovely Assad. North Korea's a great place to go on holiday. Venezuela's economy is booming. The Conservatives are evil baby-eaters. Vote TRUMP!

    :)
    @619 is a new poster who is resolutely pro-Hillary but doesn't say much else.
  • F1: interesting piece by Benson, running down the season so far as regards the title and suggesting Rosberg may be favourite:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/37449771
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kle4 said:

    MikeK said:

    https://twitter.com/CityAM/status/781022950057181184

    ..and one of the reasons is that Sainsbury's penchant for rebranding foods from other companies under their own name. People don't like it when well remembered and loved brands are made invisible. True other major supermarkets do this too - Tesco is a prime example - but Sainsbury's leads the pack.

    Used Argos for the first time in years a few weeks ago. Twice In One day and got same day delivery each time, very good.
    In store is dreadful. You do all the work - ordering payingand still have to wait
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,972
    I don't see why Milne leaving makes much difference, his actions overruling Lewis on Trident were authorised by Corbyn and McDonnell and in touch with the views of the Labour membership at the moment. They also removed Lewis as a short term replacement for Corbyn given his 'Tory' views on defence
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,972
    RIP Shimon Peres. A great statesman I was fortunate to be able to ask him a question when he attended the 2003 NUS conference I was attending as a delegate
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    edited September 2016

    Up-thread you were criticizing letting holders of insecured bonds get a haircut. Presumably that means you'd spend taxpayers money to pay people who bought bonds in a private bank?

    Probably, but I'd also impose a bank break up in the aftermath, destroying existing shareholders. The problem is that the rules are reactive rather than proactive. Hitting bondholders will make it very, very difficult for the bank to raise money in the future, it just strores up problems. Rules to limit derivatives exposures, balance sheet sizes, ring fencing of retail operations and higher capital ratios are the right way forwards. As I see it we have three of the four in the UK either in place or planned and Germany has one with no plans for any of the others.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    edited September 2016
    Well, quite:

    Brexit due to David Cameron’s ‘shit’ campaign, says senior German official

    http://tinyurl.com/j9t6uqk
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    Charles said:

    Alistair said:

    MikeK said:

    Good morning all.

    Two pictures sez it all really:
    https://twitter.com/mitchellvii/status/780934964607062016

    Yes, it says someone is lying given the Trump venue fire safety certificate was for 7500.
    Some of them look like they are standing outside (not that I care one way or the orget but to accuse someone of lying is pretty strong)
    i doubt they had thousands standing outside.

    bill mitchell is some crazy trump ramper. i wouldnt listen to anything he says.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Enormous power outage in Australia

    SA Police
    Please avoid travel if you can due to statewide power outage. Be patient and obey the direction of police manning intersections. Take care.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,494


    Similarly the German refugee crisis is a direct result of Eight Million Germans being expelled from parts of Germany annexed by Russia, Poland and Czech after World War 2 and fleeing west as refugees. While that was within living memory Germany would never have stood aside as another refugee crisis unfolded in southern Europe.

    Link? I read the German press regularly and watch German TV news coverage now and then, and I've never heard this referred to. The concern about expelled Germans was a big factor associated primarily with the fairly far right (CSU) in the 50s and it delayed recognition of the Oder-Neisse border with Poland, but because it tended to get mixed up with revanchism (give us back our lost lands) it never got broad acceptance, and when people had settled it evaporated as an issue - I've not heard it mentioned for years.

    Rather, I think the Hitler background is a factor - having been the cause of mass forced migration followed by extermination, many Germans feel that they need to be especially careful not to shut an eye to refugee misery. It's a decent fundamental outlook though of course one can quarrel with practical consequences.
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    Charles said:

    Sandpit said:

    DavidL said:

    Sandpit said:

    MikeK said:
    Jeremy Corbyn draws thousands to his rallies.
    And he'll still lose by a landslide at the general election.

    The ramping of candidates in an election where almost no-one here is voting, is pointless. Here we're pretty much all all more interested in how to make money, than in the actual result on Nov. 8.
    Do you have shares in nuclear fallout shelter manufacturers? If so, we should be told.
    LOL no, I just live in the middle of the desert!

    It was just a rare (from me anyway) comment on the number of posters mindlessly ramping one side or the other, in an election where almost no-one on this board is actually voting. There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular who has commented 300 times on nothing else, almost certainly a waste of the DNC's cash.

    Sure, we all have an opinion as to the relative merits (or otherwise) of the two most unpopular candidates in history, but most of us here are just looking for a betting angle - given there's nothing we can do to affect the result of the contest.
    "There's one pro-Hillary shill in particular"

    Really? All I see is reaction to the Trump ramping and, in particular, the stupid pseudo-doctor stuff.

    I'd love to be paid to give my opinions on the Internet. How do I sign up?

    Oh, I just have. Putin's a great man. Russia's doing brilliantly helping the lovely Assad. North Korea's a great place to go on holiday. Venezuela's economy is booming. The Conservatives are evil baby-eaters. Vote TRUMP!

    :)
    @619 is a new poster who is resolutely pro-Hillary but doesn't say much else.
    more nevertrump. He is a terrible, racist human being
  • Miss Plato, hmm. I wonder if that's cock-up or something more sinister. Hopefully it's just something going wonky rather than something being detonated.
  • Watched the Kuenssberg interview with Corbyn this morning. I find his interviews absolutely fascinating both in the way he conducts himself (generally like he's sitting on a wasp) and for the sheer head-in-the-sand-ness of it all. The immigration segment was jaw dropping.

    What could yet do for Corbyn is if Labour loses heavily in the 2017 county council and 2018 metropolitan council local elections, such that there's no longer any hiding from the fact that under him the party is going backwards compared to where it was under Miliband, and that even the 2016 local elections were a high point. According to the latest YouGov, 63% of C2DEs want tighter controls on immigration, compared to 15% wanting no change or looser control. It is indeed a head-in-the-sand approach from Corbyn, topped by extra lashings of extra political naivety by the prominent way in which he is willing to espouse such an electorally disasterous do-nothing-of-substance approach.
  • Patrick Wintour: Strategically bold. Corbyn seems to accept Brexit but wants to retain free movement, the single most unpopular aspect of EU membership
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,027
    Having listened to Corbyns radio 4 interview, he may as well just signpost labour voters to UKIP in his speech today.

    If he thinks a migrant impact fund will alleviate peoples fears on immigration, then he is deluded.
This discussion has been closed.