England News England Business and General News

26Apr/10Off

Golden Root Complex Express

The golden root complex express website is a new website promoting the use and purchase of the effective natural herb, that helps with erectile dysfunction.

We are building the traffic up on the site and we will be selling all of the associated products on there, once we have suppliers and accounts sorted.

We will also be selling Golden root wholesale.

Filed under: Business Comments Off
26Apr/10Off

Buying my will online

I have lost many friends over the last few years, I am getting to the age where death is starting to be a part of our lives.  I decided to protect my children's inheritance by making an online free DIY wills which is very cheap and convenient to do. You must get your personal finances set up, you want to make sure that your family don't have the arguments and to make sure that your property and finances are equally dished out.

Check out the free Wills guide.

Filed under: Business Comments Off
12Oct/090

October Postal strikes hit 44 depots

Monday October 12th

Postal strikes will hit large areas of London and southern England this week. Postal workers will stage one-day strikes at 44 depots across south-west London, Essex and Bristol today, with further strikes expected later.

The executive of the Communications Workers Union is meeting today to decide whether to call a national strike. The CWU said on Thursday that postal workers had voted 76 per cent in favour of national action to protect jobs, pay and services. However, it has set no date for the industrial action, which must be notified seven days in advance.

A CWU spokeswoman said today's meeting was expected to last well into the evening, with no announcement in office hours. The union is due to meet Royal Mail's negotiators on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in an attempt to avert a national stoppage.

In the meantime, postal workers will go on strike today in London at Earl's Court, Wimbledon, Mortlake, Barnes, Battersea, Stockwell, South Kensington, Fulham, Streatham, West Wimbledon, and Wandsworth.

In the Bristol district they will strike at five central offices, Clevedon, Yate, Keynsham, Portishead, Clifton, Kingswood, Nailsea, Woolavington, Avonmouth, Fishponds, Westbury on Trym and Axbridge.

In Essex, affected areas are Chelmsford, Maldon, Ongar, Sawbridgeworth, South Woodham Ferrers, Stansted, Witham, Brentwood, Billericay, Bishop's Stortford, Braintree, Dunmow, Harlow and Boreham.

October postal strikes

4Oct/090

Banks ‘show first recovery signs’

Financial firms may be recovering, with business volumes growing for the first time in two years, a survey has shown.

Business increased in three months to early September, said 7% of those surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers and business organisation the CBI.

But business volumes at building societies and life insurers dropped, suggesting an economic recovery is far from a done deal.

"Future demand is still a major concern," said the researchers.

On balance, 36% of financial services firms are more optimistic about the general business situation than in June.

"For the first time since June 2007, banks are experiencing an upswing in confidence," said Andrew Gray, head of financial services consulting at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

"Confidence is, in part, offset by concerns of further impairments and the impact of 'tougher' regulation."

The UK's five largest banks recently accepted curbs on bonuses agreed by G20 leaders at the recent Pittsburgh summit, and stronger rules on overall banking are likely to follow.

'Happy' traders

Securities trading - behind much of the toxic waste that almost brought down the financial system last year - rose as well, driven by a record level of growth in dealings with financial institutions and "healthy" growth in business with overseas customers.

"Securities traders are enjoying life again," said Pars Purewal, who looks after UK asset management at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

"For the first time in the survey's 20-year history, all respondents are feeling optimistic about their business situation, a reflection of the rebound in equity markets."

Mr Purewal said caution remained over the "threat of regulation" and whether demand would keep holding up.

The survey showed profitability at building societies was "broadly flat" over the three months, with a resumption of declines expected in the current quarter.

"Confidence among the building societies has fallen as funding difficulties continue to put pressure on profitability," Mr Gray said.

"Signs of stabilisation in the housing market, however, have provided some cause for 'cautious cheer'."

But he added that almost all were cutting operating costs and staff.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8289407.stm

3Oct/090

Customers ‘blamed for card fraud’

Consumer groups are calling for banks to change their approach to card fraud when a customer's Pin has been used after the theft of a purse or wallet.

Banks usually reimburse fraud victims, unless the customer acted fraudulently or without "reasonable care".

But some banks are now turning down claims, saying customers must have left a copy of the Pin with their card.

The banking industry says Chip and Pin is secure and each dispute is judged on its own merits.

Richard Elphick, a chartered surveyor, told Radio 4's Money Box he had his wallet stolen while he was eating outside a central London restaurant in July.

Although he cancelled his cards within the hour, the thief still had time to withdraw £100 cash from an ATM using his Natwest credit card, and make other purchases and withdrawals using his Natwest debit card. In total the fraud came to £2,300.

Question of liability

Natwest refunded the £100 Mr Elphick lost on his credit card, saying that as he had used the card that day it was credible his Pin might have been observed.

But it refused to repay the money taken from his debit card, arguing there had been no explanation for how the Pin number became known to the fraudster.

"Mr Elphick's debit card had not been used for 13 days prior to the theft," said Natwest.

"His exact debit card Pin was successfully used for all the fraudulent transactions. We can only conclude that Mr Elphick kept a record of his debit card Pin in his wallet."

But Mr Elphick emphatically denies his Pin number was in his wallet.

Richard Elphick

Richard Elphick wants Natwest to refund the stolen money

"They weren't written down anywhere and I don't know how anyone could get access to them," he said.

"It makes no sense to me at all, the rules should be the same for both."

The Banking Code says a customer is only liable for the first £50 in cases like this, unless the bank can prove the customer acted fraudulently, or "without reasonable care."

The banking umbrella group, the UK Payments Administration, agrees that its members must abide by the code.

"The bank or card company must be able to demonstrate that the customer has either been negligent with their cards details, or that they are a knowing party to the fraud, before turning down a customer's fraud claim."

Cathy Neil from the consumer organisation Which believes banks need to rethink how they interpret these guidelines.

"There are just too many cases like this for it to be people actually being careless," she said.

"If people are saying they haven't been careless, you have to call into question the kind of proof that they're using."

Chip and Pin security expert Stephen Murdoch from the University of Cambridge believes there are a variety of ways fraudsters could obtain Pins, from compromising Pin entry devices in shops to bank staff divulging customer details.

Natwest insists it is not possible for a fraudster to read the Pin on any of their cards, nor for their staff to ever know someone's Pin number.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8287783.stm

29Sep/090

Brits Travelling Abroad

With all the unemployment around England and the mistrust of Banks, alot of Brits have decided to travel abroad to seek there riches or to escape the fallout.  Many people are retraining and switching jobs, its a perfect opportunity to those that have saved their cash for this sort of problem.

A personal friend of mine has been studying SEO and has fully trained themselves to be able to use Xsitepro website builder. SEO takes 30 minutes a day per site, or more depending how competitive your niche is. One of my friends went off to Pattaya because the cost of living is cheaper and its easier to build a business with a low income coming in!

One of my pals has starting selling Kamagra to the UK market, the profit margins are very high, its important to sell genuine stock and on time! The only issue at the moment is the UK postal strike.