Class
Dan Prick tugs our coat and tells us: "I'm enormously middle class, and was once dragged along to a bingo club by a former girlfriend and her mum. It's incredible the fury you can whip up in a room of old biddies winning a fuckton of money and telling them 'This is a load of old shit, really'". Like Pulp's Common People, have you ever tried to act down, or act up?
( , Thu 20 Mar 2014, 15:29)
Dan Prick tugs our coat and tells us: "I'm enormously middle class, and was once dragged along to a bingo club by a former girlfriend and her mum. It's incredible the fury you can whip up in a room of old biddies winning a fuckton of money and telling them 'This is a load of old shit, really'". Like Pulp's Common People, have you ever tried to act down, or act up?
( , Thu 20 Mar 2014, 15:29)
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wait a minute
Why would you hold this much geared investment when the yields are correlated with a low risk strategy?
Any investor with any nous would be investing in a balanced aggressive portfolio of mainly UK smaller companies, Euro property funds and investment grade corporate bonds and be looking at annual investment growth of about 15 to 20%, with reinvestment of income only magnifying the growth. It's far more in line with your attitude to risk, apparent capacity for loss and is infinitely more tax efficient than direct investment in residential property.
Aside from the clear bullshit around getting the credit in breach of established underwriting limits, your property investment story is totally unsuitable. If you were truly of a higher class then your financial adviser would have been through all of this with you.
( , Fri 21 Mar 2014, 19:28, 1 reply)
Why would you hold this much geared investment when the yields are correlated with a low risk strategy?
Any investor with any nous would be investing in a balanced aggressive portfolio of mainly UK smaller companies, Euro property funds and investment grade corporate bonds and be looking at annual investment growth of about 15 to 20%, with reinvestment of income only magnifying the growth. It's far more in line with your attitude to risk, apparent capacity for loss and is infinitely more tax efficient than direct investment in residential property.
Aside from the clear bullshit around getting the credit in breach of established underwriting limits, your property investment story is totally unsuitable. If you were truly of a higher class then your financial adviser would have been through all of this with you.
( , Fri 21 Mar 2014, 19:28, 1 reply)
yeah it was from this point here that he deleted.
Quite a lot of people saw the deleted section.
It doesn't make him look any more believable.
( , Wed 26 Mar 2014, 19:00, closed)
Quite a lot of people saw the deleted section.
It doesn't make him look any more believable.
( , Wed 26 Mar 2014, 19:00, closed)
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