|     |  |    |   |     |   |   |                                                                                     Wednesday 1 August 2012THOUGHT FOR THE DAY    Hello Share Fans  
 The sunny weather is great for British holiday makers visiting the resorts of   Britain. My beautiful part of the world is full of them, filling out Tescos   and hopefully doing something to for the local economy.
 
 But the sunny skies were only temporary - after a dreadful first half of the   summer - as it is bucketing down at the moment - again. And the trouble with   rain here is that it sends British families abroad where they do great things   for foreign economies, but nothing for ours.
 
 My local hoteliers and shopkeepers are complaining noisily about the lack of   business and the local tourism chiefs have warned that some might be driven   out of business altogether.
 
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 FREE SHARE TIP OF THE DAY  A   report by Growth Equities & Company Research
 
   Quindell Portfolio is a leading provider of software, consulting and   outsourcing services to a broad portfolio of clients, primarily in the   insurance and telecommunications sectors.Through its acquired subsidiaries and services, Quindell can deliver   clients cost savings of more than 20%.Significant Growth - Quindell has made many acquisitions and announced   considerable contract wins since listing last year, with the purchase of Ai   Claims Solutions Plc in 2012 increasing annual revenues to in excess of   GBP150 million.Future Opportunities - Quindell has more than GBP500 million of contracts   currently under discussion and has cash resources available to acquire   additional value-enhancing businesses.We expect revenues of GBP154 million in 2012 and GBP247 million in 2013.   We recommend the shares as buy at 7p with a 21p target price. 
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 Paper round  BoE, Euro break-up, Tesco  
 Four leading economists have called on the Bank of England's Monetary   Policy Committee to cut interest rates from their already historic low in an   attempt to kickstart growth. The members of The Times' Shadow MPC Michael   Saunders, UK economist at Citigroup; Sushil Wadhwani, of Wadhwani Asset   Management; Sir Steve Robson, the former second permanent secretary to the   Treasury; and Charles Goodhart, of the London School of Economics urged the   Bank to cut rates by a quarter point to 0.25 per cent. "The economic outlook   has worsened since the July meeting and inflation prospects have improved   further. More stimulus is needed to prevent inflation falling below target   over time," Mr Saunders said before the MPC's two-day meeting, which begins   today. Wadhwani and Mr Saunders also voted for more money to be pumped into   the flagging economy through quantitative easing.
 
 Britain's heavily indebted economy would suffer a deeper slump than Germany's   in the immediate aftermath of a break-up of the euro, a leading   consultancy has predicted. Fathom Financial Consulting estimates that the   UK's economic output would drop by 5.2% in 2013 in the case of an implosion   of the single currency and a full-blown banking collapse. That compares with   a 5% decline in gross domestic product in Germany and a 4.3% drop in the   United States. The UK would suffer disproportionately in part because of its   large financial sector and overvalued housing market. A flood of cash into   sterling would also drive up the pound and crush exports, Danny Gabay, a   director at Fathom, said. Speaking at the consultancy's Monetary Policy   Forum, he said that the Bank of England would have to print GBP1tn in its   quantitative easing programme to stop the pound from skyrocketing, The Times   reports.
 
 The Serious Fraud Office vowed to press on with its controversial fraud   investigation into property entrepreneur Robert Tchenguiz despite   suffering a damning High Court judgment on the case. The SFO said the inquiry   would continue with "renewed focus and vigour", just hours after a High Court   judge found it had illegally obtained search warrants used in dawn raids   against Mr Tchenguiz and his brother Vincent. The decision means the   multi-million pound investigation into Mr Tchenguiz's links with failed   Icelandic bank Kaupthing could run into a fourth year. Work carried out by   the SFO in relation to the Tchenguiz investigation had already been labelled   incompetent by the judge presiding over the judicial review into their   arrests and the searches of their properties, The Telegraph says.
 
 Apple was "literally betting the company" when it introduced   the iPhone, a US court heard on the first full day of a patent trial in which   the US company is squaring up against Korean rival Samsung. The   keenly-anticipated clash has been called the 'patent battle of the century'   in which the competitors are suing each other for billions of dollars in   damages for alleged infringements of patents used in their phones. Apple   "were about to enter a field dominated by giants," Harold McElhinny, a lawyer   for Apple, told jurors at the court in San Jose, California. But its   designers created a "phone the world had never seen before." In Apple's   opening statement, jurors were shown an internal review that Samsung did of   the iPhone in late 2007 in which it is described as "beautiful" and "easy to   copy." Apple is seeking more than $2.5bn (GBP1.6bn) in damages from Samsung,   which has in turned sued Apple, according to The Telegraph.
 
 Switzerland is facing the consequences of a vow to keep the   franc weak. Figures released by the Swiss National Bank on Tuesday show that   its euro holdings have ballooned in the second quarter of the year, as the   bank battles haven demand from investors and struggles to maintain a ceiling   of SFr1.20 against the single currency. But that strategy carries risks.  One   of these is that they'll be holding an asset that's viewed as being very poor   quality says Steven Englander, foreign exchange strategist at Citigroup.   Furthermore, The SNB is also creating a headache for other central banks,   faced with rising demand for their currencies as Switzerland embarks on its   rebalancing act. "Sweden will need to set monetary policy now with the SNB in   mind," says Mr Yu. As well, Geoffrey Kendrick, foreign currency analyst at   Nomura, estimates that, even if the central bank bought no more euros, it   still needs to sell SFr20bn of euros to return to the same proportion of   holdings it had in the first quarter. Offloading that could push the single   currency sharply lower against other big currencies such as the dollar, The   Financial Times writes.
 
 Tesco was dealt a blow yesterday after   ratings agency Standard & Poor's said it was considering cutting its   credit rating and suggested that the retailer sell off businesses to cut its   debt. S&P did not alter its "A-/A-2" rating - a grade that denotes an   "excellent" business risk profile - but changed its outlook from "stable" to   "negative" due to concerns about "weakening" profits at the supermarket   giant. In January Tesco issued its first profit warning in 20 years, a shock   that was blamed on UK shoppers turning their backs on its stores. "We believe   that in light of currently difficult industry conditions, a trend of   weakening profitability and low top-line growth will continue," said S&P.   Its analysts said Tesco boss Philip Clarke's plans to revitalise the business   by hiring more staff and revamping stores would "negatively affect its   trading margins", and added: "In our opinion, market conditions will continue   to be extremely competitive, particularly in the UK, with high pricing   pressure throughout the industry," The Guardian reports.
 
 THE LATEST ON THE CRAZY BOARD  The top 5 hot company threads on the Bulletin Board:   Falkland   Oil & Gas   HSBA   Hi   Wave Technologies   Ruspetro   Running   trading thread  					                                                                
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 BOOK OF THE WEEK  By Peter   Lynch and John Rothchild
 A book review by Ross Jones
 From when   Lynch took over the management of Fidelity's Magellan Fund in 1977, until his   departure in 1990 he delivered his investors an annualised return of 29.2%,   outperforming the benchmark US markets by 13.4%, growing funds under   management from $18 million to circa $14 billion. This is pretty spectacular   and warrants investigation into how this was achieved.                      
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