Wasn't she married to Sid James in Bless this House?
No wonder Sid pegged out early
An amalgamation of the 2, actress Diane Coupland played Jean Abbott........
Wasn't she married to Sid James in Bless this House?
No wonder Sid pegged out early
Yes, I must admit my first thought was 'pretty bad hedging then'. I suppose they must sell dollars forward which means they are not getting the benefit that they would otherwise have had, but why this should result in such losses I don't understand. Can any of our FX gurus explain this?
You think it sounds fishy? Pass me the chips!No offence to this article but something fishy is going on in this article.
Thats the point though. Even if they forward FX hedged it
To use some figures
Revenue $150 when converted to £ is 100
FX Sell $150, Buy £100 at 1.5 GBP/USD
to lock in your revenue at £100
FX Falls to 1.0 (lets say)
Your FX deal has lost £50 as you can get £150 from the $150 you sold earlier.
However you still have your $150 that is worth 150 quid now on paper which is a gain of £50.
Overall your revenue is still at £100. You haven't made or lost any money because of the currency fluctuation although when looking at the FX deal you have made a 'loss'.
Be interesting to know the exact details but i don't care enough to go research
Tramore watch the BBC program 'After Brexit' on catch up. It was on Thursday. That will tell you all you need to know about the EU future.As an aside re the Euro and EU it would seem that the brown stuff would really hit the fan if Marie La Pen wins the French election later this year as she is threatening to pull France out of the Euro in a very short space of time thereafter and France's debt is eyewatering and makes the debts of original "PIIGS" Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece & Spain look like small change.
That is worrying.......
You're assuming a very simple hedge with this. Most hedging these days are a lot more complicated including options, rate swaps etc. Also a large part of the loss is fines that was levied on them by the US and UK governments.
Tramore watch the BBC program 'After Brexit' on catch up. It was on Thursday. That will tell you all you need to know about the EU future.
I watched a bit of the Live European Parliament yesterday and I could not believe the amount of MEP's from various countries that were knocking the EU. Seriously I thought it was only Farage. The whole thing is in trouble and the usual suspects are walking around in an EU bubble with their fingers in their ears.
Before people knock our Brexit voters they should see the amount of Europeans that want out as well.
Agree also with your point in that France will be in the S22t.
You don't need to watch the program as you say it all here.Have to try and load a proxy thingumy on my laptop so that I can view BBC Player, damn things knows I'm not in the UK.......
You're right about the number of other member states that want out of the EU, the Dutch, French, Danes, Italians, Greeks, it's becoming bit of a shambles and those in charge seem to be oblivious to it. It's not so much the free trade, freedom of movement etc that's causing the amount of unrest but the creeping federalism and the increasing powers that the EU wants to take from the member states.........if they went back to the single market and nowt else alot of the unrest would stop, plus the one size fits all fiscal policy that they imposed with the Euro was doomed from the start, in reality they should have allowed each country to maintain it's own right to decide on interest rates rather than imposing the rates that only really suited Germany but caused fiscal problems elsewhere. As an example if the Central Bank here in Ireland had been allowed to set interest rates the crash we had in 2007 would more than likely not occured, but because rates were so low the banks were phoning customers to see if they wanted to take out new loans to buy, cars, kitchens, houses etc........true it wasn't all the banks fault because people lost the run of themselves, they could have said no. The rest as they say is history.
was sad to hear the Italian saying the adverse effect the closure of the Fiat factory had on the local population. Another factory moved to Poland, no wonder they love the EU so muchTramore watch the BBC program 'After Brexit' on catch up. It was on Thursday. That will tell you all you need to know about the EU future.
I watched a bit of the Live European Parliament yesterday and I could not believe the amount of MEP's from various countries that were knocking the EU. Seriously I thought it was only Farage. The whole thing is in trouble and the usual suspects are walking around in an EU bubble with their fingers in their ears.
Before people knock our Brexit voters they should see the amount of Europeans that want out as well.
Agree also with your point in that France will be in the S22t.
It's the same in France you see loads of old derelict factories that were probably once the hub of the community. It's all geared up to make Germany richer while everyone else struggles.was sad to hear the Italian saying the adverse effect the closure of the Fiat factory had on the local population. Another factory moved to Poland, no wonder they love the EU so much
Have to try and load a proxy thingumy on my laptop so that I can view BBC Player, damn things knows I'm not in the UK.......
You're right about the number of other member states that want out of the EU, the Dutch, French, Danes, Italians, Greeks, it's becoming bit of a shambles and those in charge seem to be oblivious to it. It's not so much the free trade, freedom of movement etc that's causing the amount of unrest but the creeping federalism and the increasing powers that the EU wants to take from the member states.........if they went back to the single market and nowt else alot of the unrest would stop, plus the one size fits all fiscal policy that they imposed with the Euro was doomed from the start, in reality they should have allowed each country to maintain it's own right to decide on interest rates rather than imposing the rates that only really suited Germany but caused fiscal problems elsewhere. As an example if the Central Bank here in Ireland had been allowed to set interest rates the crash we had in 2007 would more than likely not occured, but because rates were so low the banks were phoning customers to see if they wanted to take out new loans to buy, cars, kitchens, houses etc........true it wasn't all the banks fault because people lost the run of themselves, they could have said no. The rest as they say is history.
Actually Greece could be the biggest problem with $7billion to be repaid in June and no hope of finding it.
Flanagan and Allen - remember that strike duo?My Irish ancestry goes a little too far back for me to qualify, otherwise I'd apply.
I see the Minister for Foreign Affairs shares my surname - must be a cousin.
I don't think many of them are going to move here. Obviously some people are thinking ahead and trying to obtain dual nationality if they can whilst they remain where they live now.Cake and eat it? Grandpa Donal has never been more useful
(bet a lot of them are Brexiteers -you may end up living next to one, Fing!)
Flanagan and Allen - remember that strike duo?