|                                                                         	     |                                                                                                            	                                                	                                                  				                                                                                                                                                                                                                        					                                                                                                                                                    Thursday 5 July 2012                                                                                                                                                                   					                                                              	                                                                           THOUGHT FOR THE DAY                             Hello Share People,  
    With all this hoo-hah about banks and the continuing saga of the Euro crisis,   you might expect the Footsie to be at an all-time low.  
    The truth is that it has hardly moved, neither up nor down for yonks now.   This is not good for share shifters. We have come to expect over the years   that we will make good money. Sometimes - like the days of the techno boom -   we have made very big money.  
    We came to expect it - and its extremely disappointing that, nowadays, we   have to mostly rely on the dividends to make us some dosh.  
    Click here to view the rest of the article        Paper Round  						                                                                   Barclays, ECB, QE  
    City regulators raised concerns with Barclays's board in February   about a breakdown of trust with the bank over incidents including a GBP7.5bn   Cayman Islands scheme known as Protium to transfer toxic assets off its   balance sheet. Andrew Tyrie, the chairman of the Treasury Select Committee,   yesterday questioned ex-Barclays boss Bob Diamond over the Financial Services   Authority's worries about Protium and the boardroom culture more broadly.   Referring to the board meeting, Tyrie asked: 'Did they tell you that trust   had broken down between the FSA and Barclays and they didn't have confidence   in senior management?' Diamond replied: 'No sir,' The Daily Mail reports.   
    The European Central Bank (ECB) is expected to cut interest rates   today in a bid to boost progress made by EU leaders in fighting the crisis at   a summit last week. The ECB, which will hold its regular monthly policy   meeting at 12.45 (UK time), will trim eurozone borrowing costs by a quarter   of a percentage point to a new record low of 0.75%, analysts have predicted.   The move is designed to help strengthen the relatively positive sentiment in   financial markets since the EU summit in Brussels. "The ECB has the chance to   calm financial markets at least for a few months if it complements the summit   decisions with a serious effort to stimulate the economy," said Berenberg   Bank economist Christian Schulz. "We expect the ECB to cut its main interest   rate by 25 basis points to 0.75%," he added, The Telegraph writes.
    After a bruising European Union summit, Italy sought yesterday to reassure   the German Government  and, above all, the German taxpayer    that it will not need a bailout like Portugal, Ireland or Greece.   Mario Monti, the Prime Minister, meeting Angela Merkel near Rome less than a   week after his veto threat forced concessions from the German Chancellor,   reiterated that Italy was not asking for European rescue funds to support   Italian bonds  the key mechanism to which Mrs Merkel agreed in   Brussels. Italy, he said, "is not in the same situation as Greece, Ireland   and Portugal". Rather, he argued that the bond-buying mechanism would make it   more possible for virtuous governments to pursue painful reform. Aware of the   backlash in Germany against Mrs Merkel's concessions in Brussels, he said   that he and Mrs Merkel shared a commitment to competitiveness and admitted he   was very influenced by German economic thought, says The   Times.
  China has started stockpiling rare earths for strategic   reserves, a state-backed newspaper said, in a move which may raise more   worries over Beijing's control of the coveted resources. China has already   started the purchase - using state funds - and storage of rare earths for   strategic reserves, the China Securities Journal said, but did not say   exactly when the initiative was launched. The country produces more than 90%   of the world's rare earths, which are used in hi-tech equipment ranging from   iPods to missiles, and it has set production caps and export quotas on them.   Major trading partners last month asked the World Trade Organization (WTO) to   form a panel to resolve a dispute over China's export limits on rare earths   after earlier consultations through the global trade body failed, The   Telegraph explains.
    The Bank of England's quantitative easing (QE) policy has eroded   pensioners' incomes and left new retirees thousands of pounds worse off,   experts warned today. With the Bank's policymakers expected to sanction more   money-printing tomorrow, Tom McPhail, head of pensions research at Hargreaves   Lansdown stockbrokers, said the UK's pension annuity rates have been in   'meltdown' for the past four years. He said that a man with GBP100,000 in   July 2008 would have been able to secure an income of GBP7,855 whereas his   younger brother, who hits pension age today, would only be able to secure an   income of GBP5,743 - a drop of 27%, The Daily Mail reports. 
    Approximately 200,000 Britons own second homes in areas such as the   Dordogne and other parts of France, particularly those serviced by budget   airlines. Now, however, holiday home owners find themselves in the sights of   President François Hollande as he seeks to tax the better-off to   reduce France's large budget deficit. On Wednesday (July 4th), the French   government announced it was to increase taxes on foreign-owned second homes.   Tax on rental income would rise from 20% to 35.5%, and capital gains tax on   property sales would rise from 19% to 34.5%. The extra in each case is being   labelled a "social charge," The Telegraph says.           THE LATEST ON THE CRAZY BOARD  					                                                                  The top 5 hot company threads on the Bulletin Board:   					                                                                  Norseman   Gold   					                                                                  Intimas   Group   					                                                                  BTG   					                                                                  Border   & Southern   					                                                                  Running   trading thread  					                                                                
  Click   here to discuss shares with other ShareCrazy members    					                                                                     BOOK OF THE WEEK     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.      
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