Tangled up in Blue
Certified Senior Citizen⭐🦐
Gordon Gekko is one of my heroes.
"Lunch is for wimps." :winking:
Gordon Gekko is one of my heroes.
I'm a firm opponent of any extreme and myopic views. On exactly that basis, the day I worry about what YOU think I sound like is the day I'll cease wanting to breathe.
This is all very after the fact. These people took some initiative and put their own money at risk. They may equally have lost money.
i don't understand this "rewards for all (except bankers)" and the notion that something of benefit to A must be at the expense of B. I don't care who got shares because it doesn't affect me as a taxpayer. I don't care about the income distribution of who purchased shares because everyone had the opportunity to do so. If people wanted to purchase shares but couldn't afford it then tough. There are plenty of things I would like to do but can't afford. Either be more realistic about your ambitions or find some more money.
as to the price, I don't know who valued it or how they did it. I do know two things though: the first is that the taxpayer had to take on the the Royal Mail pension obligations. Without that it would have been worth precisely zero. I do care about that as a taxpayer because it is a direct cash cost to me.
the second thing is that public offerings are a dangerous moment for a company. If the offer price is too high and the offer is under-subscribed then the price tanks and the company gets a reputation for being unwanted. Most offerings make sure they are fully subscribed by fixing the price accordingly.
could they have increased the price to say 400? Probably, but that is easy to say with hindsight.
The point is, that shares in the Royal Fail were effectively given away at below their real market value, thus depriving the British taxpayer of a fair return, for what Harold Macmillan (when describing Thatcher's privatisations in the 80's) called "selling off the family silver."
http://www.channel4.com/news/royal-mail-share-sale-privatisation-free-money-investors
So in your opinion, whoever bought shares in the Royal Mail are greedy people who are on high income?
I see you've ignored my point about demand and supply...
The point is, that shares in the Royal Fail were effectively given away at below their real market value, thus depriving the British taxpayer of a fair return, for what Harold Macmillan (when describing Thatcher's privatisations in the 80's) called "selling off the family silver."
http://www.channel4.com/news/royal-mail-share-sale-privatisation-free-money-investors
a sale that was only possible because the taxpayer took on the pension obligations of the employees. What about the pure greed of the union, Barna, and their ceaseless attempt to extract ever more money from the taxpayer for an increasingly poor service?
Actually,(as you yourself have mentioned),once the Post Office Employees pension pot was hived off
How would you describe people making a quick buck by buying (what they knew to be) underpriced shares,in what was essentially a b and b operation?
You sound like a Gordon Gekko fan to me.
Why would anyone buy shares that were not (in their opinion) underpriced?
It wasn't "hived off", it was rescued by the taxpayer. The Royal Mail pension scheme has effectively been bailed out by the taxpayer. The pension scheme has a massive deficit that no private company would have ever taken on so the taxpayer had to. That pension obligation will have to be paid by taxpayers over the next 40 odd years I.e. me.
I don't know what the pension arrangements are going forward but I really hope that scheme has been closed to further accrual otherwise the taxpayer will continue to bleed cash at levels that dwarf the was it/wasn't it under-valued debate.
As Nye Bevan said:-
"We know what happens to people who stay in the middle of the road. They get run down."
Nye Bevan always was a closed-minded ****.
You don't get run down if you think for yourself. The great thing about an open mind is that you get to choose which side of the road to go down and when to do so.
The only people standing still or getting left behind are the ones spouting their irrational vitriol from the payments and gutters at the far left and far right.
(Interesting Freudian slip by the way). :winking:
Well if they do, as a share holder, I vote to sack them.Perhaps then you could explain why Post Office employees are widely expected to vote for strike action next week?
The point is, that shares in the Royal Fail were effectively given away at below their real market value, thus depriving the British taxpayer of a fair return, for what Harold Macmillan (when describing Thatcher's privatisations in the 80's) called "selling off the family silver."
http://www.channel4.com/news/royal-mail-share-sale-privatisation-free-money-investors
The more significant question for me is why were the shares underpriced in the first place?
Any idea where this profit might be invested next? What usually happens when people receive a windfall? What have you been arguing this country needs right now[/B][/B]?[/QUOTE
I'd imagine that even you can probably appreciate that there's a significant difference between a few hundred thousand or so punters spending their windfall profits on whatever takes their fancy and the Government spending on targeted,focused infrastructure projects,as they've been advised to do by the IMF and others.
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