So we should be OK for Boomerangs and Kangeroo Steaks.
And boat peopleApparently the new PM has been chatting with the Australian PM about a 'Free Trade Deal' after Brexit.
So we should be OK for Boomerangs and Kangeroo Steaks.
Meanwhile there is salesmen knocking on the back door looking for free trade deals.
Everything is going to plan. Let's hope we have something to sell and some money to buy with if the pound devalues further.
Apparently the new PM has been chatting with the Australian PM about a 'Free Trade Deal' after Brexit.
So we should be OK for Boomerangs and Kangeroo Steaks.
My father's best friend made a living playing poker in Las Vegas for the best part of 40 years. He lost his teaching job in the mid-60's due to his anti-Vietnam war stance and the only way he could make a living at the time was to play poker against the usual mix of tourists and professional players. He said that there was always at least one "mark" at every table who would be cleaned out by the professional players. If you couldn't see who it was, then it was you.
I get the distinct feeling that the UK will be the "mark" at the trade negotiations table but our overconfidence in the size of our economy, our misplaced opinion in our position at the international table and our complete overestimation at our ability to cut a deal will mean that we get comprehensively fleeced![]()
That sounds all too probable to me.I get the distinct feeling that the UK will be the "mark" at the trade negotiations table but our overconfidence in the size of our economy, our misplaced opinion in our position at the international table and our complete overestimation at our ability to cut a deal will mean that we get comprehensively fleeced![]()
I think the EU willl be on to that sort of scheme. Home-grown kangaroo would be one thing, re-boxed antipodean marsupial-meat quite another.Let's hope we can sell them to the EU at a cheaper price than they can buy them for already.
Because Australia's desire to cut a deal is evidence of all those things?I get the distinct feeling that [ . . . ] our overconfidence in the size of our economy, our misplaced opinion in our position at the international table and our complete overestimation at our ability to cut a deal will mean that we get comprehensively fleeced![]()
I think the EU willl be on to that sort of scheme. Home-grown kangaroo would be one thing, re-boxed antipodean marsupial-meat quite another.
Because Australia's desire to cut a deal is evidence of all those things?
I was looking at a pair of shoes in LK Bennett which were nice and expensive. Then just as I had convinced myself to splash out, the shop put them on sale at -15% off.
No way am I buying them now they're probably going to hell in a hand cart. In fact if they reduce the price any further as in "end of sale clearance" I'm probably going to have to dump the other pair I bought from there last season, those already feel rather soggy.
With the shoe price in freefall? Are you crazy. Markets aren't wrong.
What is your definition of "wrong"? There are times when "don't buy - stay out!" is good advice. 3 September 1929, NY stock market, for example.With the shoe price in freefall? Are you crazy. Markets aren't wrong.
I prefer to think of it as my fairly large dollar position making 22%.
Because Australia's desire to cut a deal is evidence of all those things?
Already done.would you fancy taking a gamble and transferring your dollar to sterling just before article 50 is triggered ?