it will sooner or later. but noone knows when. i guess it takes a bit more time to unload from professionals to the public.
edit: just take a closer look to platin sometimes. it is a much better indicator to crisis than gold.
it will sooner or later. but noone knows when. i guess it takes a bit more time to unload from professionals to the public.
edit: just take a closer look to platin sometimes. it is a much better indicator to crisis than gold.
I completely agree…
Hey everyone again. Just read the news and guess what) Brexit main supporter Nigel Farage resigns. haha! What do you think about this?:48:
He’s resigned because his job is done. No surprise
yes! Pipme Happy! great post right here! I have read that the official voting will start on Monday 0915 GMT. what do you think? how they will decide to handle the process?
the hard work is only coming now. but no popularity to gain in the next few years of hard work. so no surprize he resigns. too much effort in sight.
frankfurt is going to say “no” over issues of where the headquarter will be. planned is in London but Frankfurt is not going tp agree with this term since then it would be outside of EU. -Thats the news over here in germany.
the BaFin (german bank authority) will not agree to London as headquarter.
They could merge and relocate some operations to Dublin?
If the vote is no, I expect the FTSE to drop
Yes, Jessica, he has no job to do because the UK will now be independent and he will become (technically) unemployed haha
Jessica, I have no insight…what do you think?
i know i sound like a downer and pessimist the last few days. but wait a few days. this deal is agreed by the shareholders of the london exchange. thats 1 out of 3 parts. now frankfurt has to agree to it again as thibgs habe changed with the brexit (and they wont) and the BaFin will not allow the headquarter of the german biggest stock exchange to be located in a foreign country outside of the EU.
what the ldse share holders agree to today was a deal made and created a year ago under different environmemt. in german news the spokesperson of the fra s e already announced that changes must be made to thid deal and a new share holder agreenmemt must be taken.
I agree…
I was just being an optimist…
The FtSE100 is actually sliding, as though this bit of news had no effect…
unfortunately it doesnt. its clear that that deal they agreed to today is not available anymore. the vote was only pro forma so to say and had no legally binding effect.
they two will merge. they both want it. but it will take much more time and new negotiations to do so. thats all im saying.
Well, in the meantime, a quiet trading day, with the US holiday…
Hi.
Also, as he will have no place in Government (he isnt even a sitting MP) there is nothing left for him
hi.
yes i know he has no job. but its the symbolic charackter of his action(s) that is beeing laught at from continental europe.
heres a translation of süddeutsche zeitung headline.
sorry im too lazy to translate it properly myself so google did the job “not so good” but the massage/mood of the headline is beeing (the opinion about him and his actions) transmitted even through the bad translation.
and the funny thing aswell is that its his 3rd resignation within 2 years. cant seem to make up his mind.
quote:
Farage shirks the responsibility
Nigel Farage is protected after the announcement of his resignation as party Chief of bodyguards
Glass shatter, they can do that. But sweeping the mess together, others will do it. With his resignation, Nigel Farage shows what to keep is by populists.
It is hard not to lapse into cliches: laugh or cry after me the deluge, worse policies such as in kindergarten, a farce are always,. Fits all. And yet not sufficiently enough describes how British politics presents itself in this post-Brexit days. This Monday again: Nigel Farage, the eloquent leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), the UK Independence Party, resigns. And, indeed, because “I want to have my life back”, as he says in the morning
Well, he’s a Member of the European Parliament (and with a very high attendance record, too, compared with many), for another couple of years or so.
His second, in 7 years, it seems to me.
Last year his attempted resignation was rejected by the party, and he agreed not to resign. The time before that was back in 2009, when someone else led the party for under a year until Farage was re-elected later the same year.
He took them from basically “nowhere” to getting nearly 4 Million votes in a general election(!), and [I]winning [/I]the last MEP European elections in the UK. An amazing achievement.
My guess is that if the next UK Prime Minister is a Brexiter, he’ll get a peerage so that he can advise the government in some official capacity over EU negotiations. He’s been an active MEP for 17 years, after all, and would be pretty well-placed to do so.
(I [I]hope[/I] Douglas Carswell will replace him as UKIP leader, but I think it’s unlikely.)