Donate SIGN UP

b & b

Avatar Image
BertiWooster | 15:05 Mon 29th Sep 2008 | News
35 Answers
Any sympathy out there for the ordinary Joe, with his / her 250 shares in Bradford & Bingley ?
Gravatar

Answers

21 to 35 of 35rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by BertiWooster. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Yep - shares in anything are a risky business. It's only a more legitimate form of gambling, and no-one has any sympathy for the gambler who loses all on the 3.45 at Haydock. You're told, when you buy shares, that the value can go up or down. They are never a secure investment.

And surely, if you are given shares, then you are at liberty to sell them if you don't want to take the risk?

What I resent is paying my taxes to bail out an organisation that's lost gone bust through lending too much money to debtors who were allowed to get in over their heads, especially when I, as a previous bad debtor, have worked so da**ed hard to get out of it!
well if you must invest in northern companies you have to face the consequences
Of course helpmetoo the fact that this is a northern company is what has caused all the problems! What a stupid person you are if you truly believe that!!!
How about reading the thread jno?

This isn't about investors this is about windfall recipients

I was one for Halifax too.

I think I'm showing my caring side by being more concerned for the hundreds of people who'll lose their jobs over the couple of hunred shares that I got simply for having a mortgage with them.

As it happens I'm a lot further down on stocks on the US market over the last couple of weeks but I'm not on here bleating about it while some people's lives are crumbling around them!

If you can't take losses you shouldn't invest in the stock market
My fiance works in a bank and I have to say the current situation is making us very nervous about his prospects for staying in employment.
I was also a shareholder with B&B as they gave them to me when it became a bank. Don't have a clue how many I had, or much I have lost. Save the sympathy for really injured people!
dear daffy,

takes the bait again,

sense of humour bypass,














(actually i do believe it and through hard bitten experience will do everything i can not to deal with northern companies)
Not a sense of humour bypass,just really fed up of people slagging off Northerners.I am not a Northerner by the way but I do live in the North West and I find the people here to be lovely,genuine and friendly.
daf,

i notice you didnt include praise regarding work ethic and efficiency and business excellence,

i rest my case
I'd have the exact same amount of sympathy if someone was given a grand's worth of Gary Glitter memorabilia in 1997 but found that it were rendered worthless when he was arrested for downloading child porn weeks later.
As with all parts of the UK and indeed the world the work ethic etc. varies from company to company and individual to individual,the Southern part of the country does not have all the best workers/companies and neither does the Northern part
mm,

financial institutions in bother...

northern rock,
halifax,
bradford and bingley,

sound southern outfits, i apologise.
I've got some Bradford and Bingley shares which I inherited from my brother when he died.I'm wondering what to do with them.
The people critcising share purchases and the ike seem to have forgotten that the majority of pension funds, even in the public sector, are reliant on their shareholdings and dividends for income, since contributions do not get anywhere near the payout figures.
Irt needs, too, to be remembered that this situation is a government engineered one. the share prices had dropped. So what. It's a paper loss. the directors would quite possibly have sorted the problem out, but Gordon Brown had to show how clever he is with money. Having spent twelve years running Britain into the ground and selling off anything profitable, felt he had to show he actually understood what was going on, which of course he didn't.
Slowly but surely he wants to take banks into public ownership, even though many of the banks are now owned by foriegn groups. The decision to go along the route he has taken was political, not sound financial judgement. He hasn't actually got any sense of judgement.
To jno I'll buy a copy of the big issue from you where is your pitch ?

21 to 35 of 35rss feed

First Previous 1 2

Do you know the answer?

b & b

Answer Question >>