Archive for the ‘Finance’ Category
The peculiar incoming links continue: mostly banking and finance
The run of peculiar incoming links to this blog continue.
Every time I mention something finance related, a whole raft of blog aggregation blogs pick up the post and republish it. The theory is that they’ll make money on the ads on their site and, of course, they don’t have any nasty work to do once they set up the aggregator.
I write a fair bit on various finance topics so I can understand them monitoring this blog for any appropriate key words and then picking up on them. Or is it simply the category “banking & finance” that they are picking up on? Well, this entry is tagged with that as an experiment so I’ll know better tomorrow.
Other places are a bit more unusual. For example, my piece on The Color Purple was picked up by a literature aggregator and the one on building your own house by a home aggregator. I’m very tempted to play games with them to see just what they’ll pick up 🙂
Still, it does help the incoming links which is all to the good.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Another government guarantee: the missing CDs
It looks like the UK government is shaping up to provide yet another unconditional guarantee with an open-ended cost for the taxpayers.
Last time it was Northern Rock for which they have kindly guaranteed that everyone in the UK will pay £1300 to support a bank that should simply have been allowed to fail. This time, it’s potentially even more than that as they appear to be about to guarantee that they will cover any losses incurred by any of the 25 million people who are not potentially at risk to identity fraud thanks to action by the government.
Still, at least they are directly responsible for that this time around.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.A new blog is born
Wendy’s about to make a start on Mums Finance after finding out that there’s money in tham thar hills, especially if you’re writing a finance related blog.
I imagine that it’ll be a day or two before she gets going in that we don’t even have the software loaded nor the database set up as yet. She’s busy picking out a new template for it at the moment though.
Sometimes I think we’re getting a bit carried away with the blogs but then we look at the money flowing in from them.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Take care in your selection of location for any “money laundering” bank
I’m reliably informed that the place to go locally to launder some money is a small bank branch in a town just over the border.
Or at least that’s where my informant banks his cash.
The only problem with his choice is that he’s in France and the bank is in Spain. No problem with the currency but what he’s not taken into account is that all European countries have a co-operation agreement in place which means that this bank account will be reported automatically to the French authorities.
I suspect that it will take quite a long time before that attitude of money becoming invisible when you use a bank just over the border changes. It’s been pointless for the Germans to drive over to Luxembourg with a suitcase of cash for quite some time (a very popular pastime apparently).
Anyway, if you’re considering a spot of money laundering, you’ll usually go rather further than just over the border these days.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.The accounts are almost up to date now…
We are just rubbish at choosing accountants. It’s not that we don’t ask for recommendations because we do.
It’s that the first accountant recommended as “brilliant” to us turned out to be fine when they did the work but they just never got around to it with us.
The second came with an even more glowing recommendation and indeed she was that good. What she didn’t tell us was that she was going to be leaving the firm just a matter of months later and that the firm (apart from her) left quite a bit to be desired.
In fact they were so bad that when she left they never even bothered to open the files on her clients that she, of course, left behind. Net effect of that was that we (ie all such clients I imagine) only found out about her departure when we started getting threatening letters from the tax people saying that they were going to apply all kinds of penalties.
That was in September of last year. They finally completed the 2005 accounts just a few weeks ago (ie two years late) and still haven’t completed the 2006 accounts which is, of course, bringing in more penalty notices and quite laughable demands for money.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.