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The influence of the EU on Britain.

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  • Sorry but this was too good to miss....

    There is another thread running devoted to pensions. There, an Independent Financial Adviser makes the following comment (with my emphasis in bold):

    Transfer values have never been so good - but that doesn't mean you should transfer away your benefits into a PP that could be ravaged by Brexit over the next few years.


    And the identity of this perceptive and alert IFA?

    Why, none other than one of this thread's most resolute Brexiteers....

    step forward @golfaddick

    :-)

    I think that's a little unfair @PragueAddick to quote that out of context from the Pensions thread.

    He says "could".

    There are many variable scenarios and @golfaddick was providing a balanced answer on pension transfers. Off course the pound could tank with interest rates and gilt yields rising and transfer values could on the other side of the coin halve in value?

    I don't recall Black Wednesday and the erm debacle being terribly smooth.

    Maybe now is an excellent time to transfer if Armageddon is upon us. Transfer out for cash!!
  • I think that's a little unfair @PragueAddick to quote that out of context from the Pensions thread.

    He says "could".

    There are many variable scenarios and @golfaddick was providing a balanced answer on pension transfers. Off course the pound could tank with interest rates and gilt yields rising and transfer values could on the other side of the coin halve in value?

    I don't recall Black Wednesday and the erm debacle being terribly smooth.

    Maybe now is an excellent time to transfer if Armageddon is upon us. Transfer out for cash!!
    I don't think that is unfair at all, especially if you are a regular visitor to this thread and therefore party to Golfie's comments here.

    If a journalist asked a leading Brexit politician whether Brexit could "ravage" the value of personal pension pots he would froth at the mouth and screech "there, Project Fear again"

    Would he not?

    All that said, there was a smiley, as the main goal was to gently wind Golfie up.



  • Sorry, but it wasn't incumbent on any particular individual to day How wr should because no-one knew when joining how difficult it was to leave. Also, we joined when there were only 7 other countries & it was the "Common Market".

    I reckon Trump was right......we should sue them for mis-representation. (joke)
    You don't think it was incumbent on the leader of the single issue party pushing for independence from the EU to set out how things would work in practical terms if we voted for his party?

    It's academic anyway because many of those behind Brexit told us exactly how to achieve it. They told us, back then, to be like Norway...
  • I don't think that is unfair at all, especially if you are a regular visitor to this thread and therefore party to Golfie's comments here.

    If a journalist asked a leading Brexit politician whether Brexit could "ravage" the value of personal pension pots he would froth at the mouth and screech "there, Project Fear again"

    Would he not?

    All that said, there was a smiley, as the main goal was to gently wind Golfie up.



    I am sure the public love journalists and Ifa's in equal measure. Only marginally ahead of estate agents and used car salesman.
  • if you honestly believe that a "project fear" exists, you're an idiot. It's the same as people who believe theres some wild conspiracy going on to SMEAR (tm) corbyn or that theres a fake news conspiracy to stop us all from falling in love with trump.

    All use the exact same tactic of trivialising criticism in order to hide their "side's" incompetence or, worse, hide the more sinister bits of policy behind.
  • I notice that the Brexit blame game has started in earnest with Liam Fox saying its the EU’s fault negotiations are going badly because of their intransigence.

    This from the man that says a “no deal” is now 60/40 on the back of saying in 2016 that a deal with the EU would be “the easiest in human history”

    Moron

    Insulting to the vast majority of decent morons to be compared to Liam Fox.
  • Insulting to the vast majority of decent morons to be compared to Liam Fox.
    And there was me (he said, subtly reaching for his coat), thinking that he was signing off his message.... as me.


  • I think that's a little unfair @PragueAddick to quote that out of context from the Pensions thread.

    He says "could".

    There are many variable scenarios and @golfaddick was providing a balanced answer on pension transfers. Off course the pound could tank with interest rates and gilt yields rising and transfer values could on the other side of the coin halve in value?

    I don't recall Black Wednesday and the erm debacle being terribly smooth.

    Maybe now is an excellent time to transfer if Armageddon is upon us. Transfer out for cash!!
    don't worry, I can handle myself on here.

    The comment on the pensions thread was purely to suggest there were different scenarios to think about when transferring out of a secured final salary scheme into a defined contribution scheme. Investment markets being the main one. I purely picked Brexit as possibly being a factor to think about in such a case. I wasn't saying it would be a bad thing, merely just something to add into the mix.

    Just remember what happened after the vote on June 2016. The FTSE soared the very next day & has climbed around 15% since.
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  • Reflects how weak sterling is.
    And it is getting weaker thanks to DR Fox!
  • That's right. The FTSE 250 is a better measure of the performance of UK owned companies and it did not perform anything like as well as FTSE 100. Since the referendum most major markets globally have performed well too. And funny enough not because all the companies are rejoicing about Brexit.
  • Sorry but this was too good to miss....

    There is another thread running devoted to pensions. There, an Independent Financial Adviser makes the following comment (with my emphasis in bold):

    Transfer values have never been so good - but that doesn't mean you should transfer away your benefits into a PP that could be ravaged by Brexit over the next few years.


    And the identity of this perceptive and alert IFA?

    Why, none other than one of this thread's most resolute Brexiteers....

    step forward @golfaddick

    :-)

    I’d rather take financial advice from Bernie Madoff.
  • Be interesting to see how low Sterling will go if we don't make a decent Brexit deal. Parity with the Euro seems to be a possibility?

    Anyway due to go abroad later this year has a difficult decision over when to change currency?
  • Be interesting to see how low Sterling will go if we don't make a decent Brexit deal. Parity with the Euro seems to be a possibility?

    Anyway due to go abroad later this year has a difficult decision over when to change currency?

    And goodness knows where fuel prices will end up with the combination of a weakening currency and Trumpie doing his Bertie big bollox with Iran!
  • Be interesting to see how low Sterling will go if we don't make a decent Brexit deal. Parity with the Euro seems to be a possibility?

    Anyway due to go abroad later this year has a difficult decision over when to change currency?

    Easy. ..use your brains.
  • Chaz Hill said:

    And goodness knows where fuel prices will end up with the combination of a weakening currency and Trumpie doing his Bertie big bollox with Iran!
    I know...blame brexiters.
  • Easy. ..use your brains.
    Thank you for your amazing insight.
  • I know...blame brexiters.
    Do you understand anything?
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  • Just bought my holiday euros... My god the exchange rate is cack
  • McBobbin said:

    Just bought my holiday euros... My god the exchange rate is cack

    How low?
  • How low?
    Bass
  • How low?
    about £4.5 to €5. Crap. And that was after shopping about
  • https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/aug/09/britains-richest-man-to-leave-uk-for-tax-free-monaco

    Yet another rich ‘patriotic’ Brexiteer leaving his beloved homeland to avoid paying his taxes!

    Talk about “do as I say and not as I do”.
  • edited August 2018

    Funny enough, I distinctly recall remainers everywhere - in the pub, on the tele, here on CL, telling people who intended to vote leave, over and over and over, of some of the potential pitfalls (we didn't know all of them at the time). As mentioned elsewhere, HM government told you their advice was to vote remain. You ignore it, and then blame them?

    If you chose to ignore lots of people's advice, how can anyone be to blame but you?
    Cameron told the world he was going to get concessions then got nothing. He then wrote a 1st past post ballot instead of a say 5% majority, with none of the various options of type of Brexit.

    It was incompetent.
This discussion has been closed.

Roland Out Forever!