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Friday, July 6, 2012

More Poetry, Please writes Malcolm Stacey in the ShareCrazy Dawn Call

Read Malcolm Stacey, Tip of the Day, the Book of the Week, and today's papers
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Friday 6 July 2012
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

More poetry, please

Hello Share Shifters,

As it's a bit quiet on the old Footsie front at the mo, I thought I might return to the theme of a week or so ago - the poet Longellow.

Now as a Crazy, you might be a bit too practically-minded for poetry, but we can learn a lot from the old masters. They were often wiser, then.

Among Longfellow's works is one which says 'There are no birds in last year's nest'. What can we glean from this? Well, if a share does well for a year, it might not realise big profits in the nest next time round.

Click here to view the rest of the article


Paper Round

Sinners, BP, North Sea

A group of 172 leading economists have written an open letter to Angela Merkel warning her that her decision to agree to allow Eurozone bail-out funds to support sinner states was "wrong". The economists, who included Hans-Werner Sinn, head of Ifo, the influential think tank, argued that the German chancellor had taken a dangerous step towards a "banking union". More specifically, in the letter, published by the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the economists said: "Banks' debts are nearly three times higher than government debts . . . the taxpayers, retirees and savers in the so-far solid countries of Europe must not be made liable for backing these debts, particularly since gigantic losses are foreseeable from financing the southern countries' inflationary economic bubbles." They added that they viewed the "step toward a banking union, which means collective liability for the debts of the banks of the eurosystem, with great concern", The Telegraph says.

Barclays was last night preparing for a showdown with former chief executive Bob Diamond over his potential GBP25m pay-off. The bank's board called a late meeting to review the terms of his contract and decide the bank's legal position in regard to Mr Diamond's GBP18m of unvested share options and GBP4m-plus of benefits. He is also due more than GBP2m in lieu of a year's salary and pension after being ejected from the bank on the direction of the Bank of England Governor over the Libor scandal. A source close to the board said: "Barclays needs to establish where it stands legally with regards to Bob's contract and entitlements. The bank is fully aware of the high emotions around this and the need for there not to be any false moves," The Telegraph writes.

The Kremlin has taken revenge on the oligarchs who wrecked BP's Arctic alliance with the Russian oil group Rosneft, according to analysts. Recent developments could even pave the way for President Putin to assume control of TNK-BP, the Russian joint venture that BP owns with AAR, the oligarchs' consortium, they said. Rosneftegaz, a state-run company whose assets include the Russian Government's 75% stake in Rosneft and part of the gas group Gazprom, has revealed that last year it transferred GBP480m of deposits it held with Alfa Bank, which is part of the AAR empire, to the state-owned Gazprombank. The transfer was made after AAR had broken up BP's proposed alliance with Rosneft to explore the Arctic, unveiled in January last year. The oligarchs claimed that the tie-up broke the shareholder agreement between TNK and BP and secured a High Court injunction to block it weeks later, The Times explains.

Google plans to release its much-hyped new tablet computer in Britain without access to music, television shows and magazines, in a major blow to the company's pretensions of taking on Apple's iPad. The new device, called the Nexus 7, has been pitched as a smaller, cheaper alternative to Apple's bestselling tablet computer. But it appears Google has not been able to close deals with broadcasters and publishers in time to launch the device in Britain with the same suite of media that is available to American customers. The device, Google's first own-brand tablet, comes with a 7in screen, starts at GBP159 and goes on sale in the UK on July 19. When it was first unveiled, experts lauded the Nexus 7 as a cheaper and more portable alternative to the iPad, as Apple's device comes with a 9.7in screen and starts at GBP399, The Times says.

Ryanair, under threat of High Court action from the Office of Fair Trading, has agreed to act over its hidden credit card charges. The budget airline, under threat of High Court action from the Office of Fair Trading, has agreed to act over its hidden credit card charges — one of the biggest running sores among the numerous complaints levelled against it. The budget airline has promised to withdraw the charges for online transactions, which are added as a final insult on top of taxes, flight fees and the added costs of baggage, insurance, seat reservations and priority boarding. The move has prompted the OFT to issue a blanket industry ruling that all debit card charges, even if they are dressed up as administration or handling fees, will have to be disclosed upfront by airlines operating out of the UK, The Times reports.

The North Sea oil and gas industry was last year hit by its biggest ever fall in production with another slide in output forecast for 2012. A further fall would be a blow to the UK government as lower oil and gas production took its toll on industrial output in the first three months of the year, and was one of the reasons why the economy entered "double-dip" territory. Industry figures yesterday revealed that output plunged by 19% in 2011 to 656m barrels of oil equivalent (boe) - half the rate of production in 2005. It equates to some 1.8m barrels per day, according to Oil & Gas UK's latest economic report. The fall in production has been primarily blamed on a combination of platform shutdowns to address safety and maintenance issues with ageing infrastructure, and a slowdown in bringing new fields on stream. Industry leaders warned yesterday that production is again struggling this year and could fall further, The Scotsman reports.


TIP OF THE DAY

Retail Special

from top chartist Zak Mir of Zaks-TA.com

Burberry (BRBY) Calling a top in Burberry on the hope of say, a hard landing in China, has so far proved to be a rather painful exercise. However, buying the dips has not exactly been a smooth ride either. The view at this point is that a November uptrend line should be strong enough at 320p to trigger a rebound if only back to the June 1,372 gap over the next couple of weeks. Nevertheless, the likelihood is that only an end of day close back above the June gap would really be enough to deliver a sustained / sustainable retest of the April 2012 resistance zone through 1,500p.

Click here to view the rest of the article


THE LATEST ON THE CRAZY BOARD

The top 5 hot company threads on the Bulletin Board:

Falkland Oil & Gas

Borders & Southern

Port Erin Biophrama

Norseman Gold

Running trading thread

Click here to discuss shares with other ShareCrazy members


BOOK OF THE WEEK

The Hedge Fund Mirage: The Illusion of Big Money and Why It's Too Good to Be True

By Simon Lack

A book review by Luka Lukic of t1ps.com

Hedge funds have always been the talk of the town. Every year we read about the billions paid to top 10 hedge fund managers and investors rush to give their money to them in the hopes of exceptional return. However, in this brutally honest book, industry insider Simon Lack looks to strip away the facade and reveal the cold truth about the profits hedge funds actually make. In the first sentence of the book he writes: "If all the money that's ever been invested in hedge funds had been put in treasury bills instead, the results would have been twice as good." A staggering statement which leads us to question why they have been placed on a pedestal.

Click here to view the rest of the article


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ShareCrazy Poll
Which will be the first country to leave the Euro ?

Germany
Greece
Portugal
Ireland
None will leave

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