Give me your bank details and I guarantee you will be £5million richer this time next week. I have a contact who works in a Nigerian Bank and one of his best clients is a tribal prince who is desperate to get his cash out of the country. Whisper me with your details - we don't want any old Tom, Dick or Djimi getting in on this action.
[quote][cite]Posted By: Off_it[/cite]Give me your bank details and I guarantee you will be £5million richer this time next week. I have a contact who works in a Nigerian Bank and one of his best clients is a tribal prince who is desperate to get his cash out of the country. Whisper me with your details - we don't want any old Tom, Dick or Djimi getting in on this action.[/quote]
He`s only a new poster and I`m skint and prepared to help, so let me, go on you know you want to!! P.S this is totally genuine isnt it? your not just scamming ;-)
Clarrie the Cat was saying invest in gold in the old NetAddicks days (which is actually a prophecy that has come true...)
Gold is always a safe bet. Mining and steel production stocks seem to be reasonably safe (considering the growth in demand coming from India & China), or you've got oil/gas...I probably don't need to explain that one!
[cite]Posted By: Goonerhater[/cite]Copper,aluminium and steel next five years will only go up and up. People just cant understand how big the Chinese race for developement is.
I doubt it very much. If the depression in the economies of the developed world continues for much longer commodity prices will fall quicker than they went up.As for China there is growing evidence of a slowdown in growth highlighted by three consecutive months of lower inflation, a trend I expect to continue.
copper rose in price by 70% even with a slow down over here the rate of developement and thirst for raw materials will not mean a significant slow in the China area. If you have savings in a medium term saving plan you will get 8/10% return .Over 5 years invested in copper ? maybe 20% minium, possibly much more. Its not the developed world that is driving the price of commodities. Slow down against what ? the rate of econmic growth in China dwarfs anything else.
The thing is if you have spare cash then there is alot of money to be made in a recession(sic). Its a case of where , what and timing.
[cite]Posted By: Goonerhater[/cite]copper rose in price by 70% even with a slow down over here the rate of developement and thirst for raw materials will not mean a significant slow in the China area.
If you have savings in a medium term saving plan you will get 8/10% return .Over 5 years invested in copper ? maybe 20% minium, possibly much more.
Its not the developed world that is driving the price of commodities. Slow down against what ? the rate of econmic growth in China dwarfs anything else.
The thing is if you have spare cash then there is alot of money to be made in a recession(sic). Its a case of where , what and timing.
You are right when you say the developed world is not driving commodity prices but a further turn down in its economy will have a major effect. I expect oil for instance to be $80/$90 this time next year.
some people might say property is quite a good bet or will be shortly particularly in good areas which might be briefly undervalued. I think it will bounce back, but you probably won't see the ridiculous levels of growth all over the UK as prevoiusly.
[cite]Posted By: razil[/cite]some people might say property is quite a good bet or will be shortly particularly in good areas which might be briefly undervalued. I think it will bounce back, but you probably won't see the ridiculous levels of growth all over the UK as prevoiusly.
Long term property is a sound investment and has been for many years.
Not quite sure that the "property market has crashed". Seems like a much needed levelling out of a over heated market IMHO.
unless you speak to a FSA regulated advisor.......take everything with a pinch of salt.
Before any advice is given the FULL details of you & your current/future history needs to be known - something which may be good for one person might not suit another.
advice is personalised - so unless the advice giver knows your EXACT requiremnets, forget it.
Agree 100% with Brunello. Sticking your toe in commodities is a mugs game now. Most of the people on here giving you advice were the same numpties buying into the property myth a couple of years ago (why TwoSheds got such abuse i've no idea). The only sure bet is that Labour will lose control of both inflation (deliberate policy) and the pound. If you accept this then your investment strategy is clear.
S.
btw Alex you sound like the shoe shine boy giving stock tips and there's a moral to that story.
[cite]Posted By: Brunello[/cite]Why is this being sunk? Its the most interesting thread for a while and the first one I know anything about as i know nothing about football.
Comments
Quality Offy
He`s only a new poster and I`m skint and prepared to help, so let me, go on you know you want to!!
P.S this is totally genuine isnt it? your not just scamming ;-)
Gold is always a safe bet. Mining and steel production stocks seem to be reasonably safe (considering the growth in demand coming from India & China), or you've got oil/gas...I probably don't need to explain that one!
The only thing to do at present and for the near short term future is to stay in cash and ensure you are not over exposed (£30k) to one bank.
I doubt it very much. If the depression in the economies of the developed world continues for much longer commodity prices will fall quicker than they went up.As for China there is growing evidence of a slowdown in growth highlighted by three consecutive months of lower inflation, a trend I expect to continue.
If you have savings in a medium term saving plan you will get 8/10% return .Over 5 years invested in copper ? maybe 20% minium, possibly much more.
Its not the developed world that is driving the price of commodities. Slow down against what ? the rate of econmic growth in China dwarfs anything else.
The thing is if you have spare cash then there is alot of money to be made in a recession(sic). Its a case of where , what and timing.
You are right when you say the developed world is not driving commodity prices but a further turn down in its economy will have a major effect. I expect oil for instance to be $80/$90 this time next year.
Then look to buy banking shares in around a few weeks/months.
It also depends on how you invest in copper etc. Some mining compaines shares are not going up some have rocketed.
Oh no, not again, pleeeeeease
Do you think it will go higher?
You are joking aren't you?
Long term property is a sound investment and has been for many years.
Not quite sure that the "property market has crashed". Seems like a much needed levelling out of a over heated market IMHO.
Before any advice is given the FULL details of you & your current/future history needs to be known -
something which may be good for one person might not suit another.
advice is personalised - so unless the advice giver knows your EXACT requiremnets, forget it.
S.
btw Alex you sound like the shoe shine boy giving stock tips and there's a moral to that story.
Who knows!