Have we left yet? Ask the French to turn off the lights on the way out. That is of course if they are allowed to do that without some EU regulation?Christ on a bike...............I can't wait to get the hell out of the EU!!

Have we left yet? Ask the French to turn off the lights on the way out. That is of course if they are allowed to do that without some EU regulation?Christ on a bike...............I can't wait to get the hell out of the EU!!

Hardly think 0.85% is a plunge!And the £ plumets again, even a day before the UK's big formal bye bye letter, driven partly by Scotlands vote for a new referendum on leaving the UK,analysts say. The markets obviously think the lights have gone out in the heads of the people driving to a little England,
Pound is a bit lower than that Kiwi, 1.2436 as I post. Its more to do with the strength of the dollar rather than the weakness of Stg. Dow was up and the US Bushiness confidence was up again to a 16 year high.The FTSE 100 gained 49.92 points, or 0.68%, to 7,343.42 as the pound shed 0.33% against the dollar to $1.25170.
gotta like a good bush durbarPound is a bit lower than that Kiwi, 1.2436 as I post. Its more to do with the strength of the dollar rather than the weakness of Stg. Dow was up and the US Bushiness confidence was up again to a 16 year high.
gotta like a good bush durbar
No. The £ dropped hard against all major currencies latter part of yesterday, down 1.65% against the $, and 1.4% against the €. Let's hope that's it for now and May's letter doesn't do more damage.Pound is a bit lower than that Kiwi, 1.2436 as I post. Its more to do with the strength of the dollar rather than the weakness of Stg. Dow was up and the US Bushiness confidence was up again to a 16 year high.
with reporters everywhere (even with the briefcase).
? Hardly plummets Ossie, it's been in the $1.24 - $1.26 range for weeks, holding pretty steady despite US interest rate rise. There too many variables in play to claim x caused y with much certainty, aside from the huge changes like the Brexit vote itself. There will be other bumps along the way, but what happens to the £ does not happen in isolation. Have a look at what happens to the markets when North Korea successfully tests a long range missile.And the £ plumets again, even a day before the UK's big formal bye bye letter, driven partly by Scotlands vote for a new referendum on leaving the UK,analysts say. The markets obviously think the lights have gone out in the heads of the people driving to a little England,