Alistair20000
Very well known Exeweb poster
I don’t think so lad. He done you a good ’un there.You need goal-line technology, ref.
I don’t think so lad. He done you a good ’un there.You need goal-line technology, ref.
Not really. Just two different opinions with neither yet proven to be true. I still maintain that if the financial sector is hit badly then I will not jump up and down with joy if many lose their jobs.I don’t think so lad. He done you a good ’un there.
Further to that, he did say his behavior had "fallon short".I don’t normally quote from The Sun but Fallon His Sword was quite amusing.
Who will be the next ?
You may not be worried, but every major international player is preparing plans to move business abroad in the event of a no deal. It won't happen overnight (because it's a complicated process), but as soon as that no deal looks more likely than less, things will start moving.I do work in the financial sector but I'm not worried one bit. All the current veiled threats are simply bunkum.
The biggest threat I've faced is globalisation and offshoring. I've already seen my job go East twice and West once, long before Brexit was even a word.
I've heard it on good word that the UK Finance world is much more concerned now about Corbyn & McDonnell getting their hands on the tiller at short notice than any potential Brexit no deal. Brexit is the perfect smokescreen of course but it'd be foolish not to be considering contingency plans at this juncture.You may not be worried, but every major international player is preparing plans to move business abroad in the event of a no deal. It won't happen overnight (because it's a complicated process), but as soon as that no deal looks more likely than less, things will start moving.
Mine is on the list. No big surprise there, he has a nineteenth century attitude towards women.I don’t normally quote from The Sun but Fallon His Sword was quite amusing.
Who will be the next ?
That's not what I've heard, but then we're probably both dealing with confirmation bias.I've heard it on good word that the UK Finance world is much more concerned now about Corbyn & McDonnell getting their hands on the tiller at short notice than any potential Brexit no deal. Brexit is the perfect smokescreen of course but it'd be foolish not to be considering contingency plans at this juncture.
Besides, you hear it all the time. HSBC have been making waves about leaving the UK for nearly 10 years now, but here they still are despite all the guff.