scooter1
How soon is now?
It’s by no means advice. It’s a gamble, albeit a very small one. And for me, so far it’s paid offThat could be the worst financial advice since the beginning of time. Or Kwasi talking to Truss.
It’s by no means advice. It’s a gamble, albeit a very small one. And for me, so far it’s paid offThat could be the worst financial advice since the beginning of time. Or Kwasi talking to Truss.
Well, hopefully you had a fixed rate of interest payable on the loan otherwise that equation has changed pretty rapidly over the last month or so.This.
in simplistic terms, I borrowed 5 grand on a 3 year loan to put towards my current car. I put the 5 grand I was going to use into premium bonds, and so far have earned more in prizes than I have paid in interest
Yep. I had to accrue over £295 in winnings over a 3 year period to cover the interest. As mentioned, it was a very low level gamble, and one that I could afford(as every gamble should be)Well, hopefully you had a fixed rate of interest payable on the loan otherwise that equation has changed pretty rapidly over the last month or so.
Not always. One of the most active credit departments I’ve ever seen in a bank was when I worked in private banking - extremely wealthy individuals leveraging assets to invest in more assets, to make more money. Completely normal - safe business for the bamk because of the asset-backing, cheap rates for the customer for the same reason.I'm too thick to understand this.
Its not a good look is it? You borrow money if you're broke don't you?
People with money never use their own money. Unless they absolutely have to.Agreed - but what’s the rate on 10s of Millions ? Was just a bit surprised we’d be taking commercial lending rather than from Bloom.
That said I believe most of his wealth is from commercial property and with the impact of covid not surprised if he’s taken a hit personally last few years
For a business that has lost £241 million in the last decade the tax deductible status of the interest is an irrelevance.Totally normal business operation. Interest is tax deductable and until recently, borrowing was dead cheap.
Ah ok, that's totally different then. Not been in that position (fortunately) so not sure about the tax side of it in those circumstances.For a business that has lost £241 million in the last decade the tax deductible status of the interest is an irrelevance.
Suspect it is a rollover of a previous borrowing arrangement. Albion have total financial liabilities of £411 million but 'only' £37 million of that is owed to the bank.
For an economic illiterate like me does financial liability mean debt? And if it does and only 37m is to the bank does that mean the rest is to Bloom? And does it mean that if we sold a player for 37m we could pay off that debt and only owe money to Bloom?For a business that has lost £241 million in the last decade the tax deductible status of the interest is an irrelevance.
Suspect it is a rollover of a previous borrowing arrangement. Albion have total financial liabilities of £411 million but 'only' £37 million of that is owed to the bank.