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Friday, August 29, 2008

Scottish Power & NPower follow Suit!

Scottish Power has raised it's gas prices by an average of 34% and electricity price by 9 from Monday September 1st.

NPower is doing the same as of today with gas up an average 26% and electricity 14%

The follows close on the heels of E.On, British Gas, EdF and Scottish and Southern Energy.

Why is Utility Warehouse different?

Utility Warehouse is not just a Energy company it's a multi-service company
Utility Warehouse has a Triple Price Guarantee and very competitive Rates
Utility Warehouse has award winning customer service
Utility Warehouse is an awesome company and a outstanding business opportunity


Watch the video first, follow this link:-
http://www.extrapaynow.com


Call Juswant on 07917 105134 or email on juswant.rai@gmail.com if you are interested right now in taking control of your future....

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Take Action Today

Morning,

When I (jimmy) write emails , they are really for me but my life experience so far (all 39 years of them on Tuesday) I know that what makes me tick surely must relate to the majority.
There are 3 reasons why people would not want to better their lives.
1. They are Lazy.
2. They are stupid.
3. They don't give a damn.

Every day I wake up excited about what the day ahead is going to bring. Who am I going to meet, where can I go to meet new people. Not having a job I have to plan my week so I can be in places where there are lots of people I can share this exciting business with. I can't just lay around the house all day relaxing , playing tennis and enjoying myself!
I can go out as well and have lots of fun. The reactions I have had over the years when I mention what I do for a living is amazing. Guess what most are negative it's the Uk mentality most people think they re destined to be miserable and poor and do you know what most of them accept that, muppets.
They do the same thing day in day out and expect a different result at the end of the week. That's the first sign of insanity!!!
I have had quite a few come back to me now though, that's because they are short sighted. The old I'm ok I have a great job or I'm really busy attitude has changed for millions with this credit crunch thingy.
I spoke to a real close friend of mine last night who cannot visit me this weekend because he is skint. He was skint 18 years ago when I first met him! What has he done about it nothing. He in a nice way laughs at what I do for a living.
You will do this business for 2 reasons.
1. To avoid a pain.
2. To make a gain.
But whatever reason your success or failings will be down to YOU!!!!!!
There will be plenty of outside influences that will have an impact but it's the internal self motivation every single second of every single day for the rest of your life that will decide if you minimise your regrets.

Right I'm off to a brekky club now and they will all think I'm MAD because I'm paid a six figure income by the best company and business opportunity in the UK and all I have to do is be happy , speak to people and never quit!!
I knew that 7 years ago, If you don't know it yet wake up fast.
Then I'm off to Liverpool to sign up a company that develops bluetooth equipment. I will spend 2 hours in the car speaking to my happy smiley team members. I will spend the rest of the day at Sandbach with 20 happy smiley people on training and the 60 happy smiley people at the Cop tonight.

How fantastic is this business.

Be happy smiley all day, go on practice until it becomes a habit.

Have a wicked Wednesday and make it your best day ever. Speak to EVERYONE who comes within 3 feet of you today. Just smile hand them a card and say ' There you go that's about money


Jimmy SMD (08)


Watch the video first, follow this link:-
http://www.extrapaynow.com


Call Juswant on 07917 105134 or email on juswant.rai@gmail.com if you are interested right now in taking control of your future....

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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Cry for help from debt-ridden middle class

A debt advice charity is being overwhelmed by demands for help in some of the most affluent parts of the country. Transact, which represents more than a thousand organisations and individuals involved with people suffering financial hardship, said last night that the number of middle-class people wanting advice was rising dramatically.

Its alert came as a survey for The Times found that people attempting to escape the property crash by renting rather than buying face increases of as much as 17 per cent this year. At the same time a survey by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors predicted that house prices will fall by about 5 per cent and the number of housing sales could fall by 40 per cent.

Transact said that the credit crunch was leaving many professionals and homeowners unable to cope with their mounting debts, and some advice centres were having to turn people away. In affluent areas such as Haywards Heath, West Sussex, and Congleton, Cheshire, there had been a 100 per cent rise in the number of inquiries in the past year.

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At the Mid-Sussex Debt Advice Centre, which serves the Haywards Heath area, the average debt of clients — excluding mortgages — is £20,000, rising to £110,000 in the most extreme cases. Emma Russell, a debt adviser, said: “I’ve had at least two clients tell me that they would have killed themselves if they hadn’t found out that we were here.”

Jamie Elliott, the co-ordinator of Transact, told the BBC: “In the past it was almost uniquely people on benefits, people in social housing, who went to debt advice agencies. Since the credit crunch started they are seeing a big increase in professional people and homeowners coming to seek help, who have just been pushed over the edge and now can’t cope with their outgoings.”

The survey for The Times by Hometrack, the property data company, found that the cost of renting a home rose on average by 6.15 per cent in the year to April. In hotspots such as Oxford, Birmingham and London, rents rose by 17, 16 and 14 per cent respectively, while in Cambridge and Sheffield, tenants are paying an average 10 per cent more than they were in March last year.

Richard Donnell, the director of research for Hometrack, said: “The rental sector is a waiting room for the housing market and more people are being pushed into that waiting room just as rents are being forced up.”

Many of the people seeking help from debt advice agencies had used credit in their homes to pay for home improvements but, as fixed-rate mortgage terms came to an end and the cost of living increased, many people were finding it hard to meet repayments, even if they earned a relatively good salary.

Transact said that it expects the problem to become worse, and has called for more funding to provide debt advice.

The Hometrack data tracks rents on two-bedroom flats or houses, but the cost of tenancy is reported to be rising even more quickly for larger family homes. A survey by Paragon, a buy-to-let lender, suggested that rents for detached homes have risen by 30 per cent, compared with an average of 12 per cent across all housing types.

The survey suggests that rent rises are highest in the South West, up by an average of 42.2 per cent, and in East Anglia, where they are 31.9 per cent higher.

The Money Centre said that one third of its landlords had reported plans to increase rents within the past three months, by an average of 6.8 per cent.

The mismatch between supply and demand in homes for rent is helping to create the above-inflation increase in housing costs.

The rent for two-bedroom properties is falling, however, in some areas, including Milton Keynes, Leicester and Reading, because mortgage repayments are similar to the cost of renting. In Milton Keynes, where the rent on an average £140,700 two-bedroom home is about £177 a week, it would cost £178 to buy with a 15 per cent deposit and an interest rate of 6 per cent.



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Monday, May 19, 2008

George Soros | Soros warns global boom is over!

Billionaire investor George Soros has given his gloomiest assessment of the state of the US and world economies.

He told BBC business editor Robert Peston that the "acute phase" of the credit crunch may be over but effects on the real economy are yet to be felt.

He warned the "financial bubble" of the last 25 years could be drawing to an end and the post World War II "super-boom" era could also be over.

He predicted a "more severe and longer" US slowdown than most people expect.

And he said that the UK was worse-placed than America to weather to coming economic storm, because it had such a large financial sector and has had the biggest increase in house prices.

Gloomy bankers

Mr Soros said that the current mandate of most of the world's leading central banks - where their main focus was fighting inflation - meant there was limited scope for cutting interest rates to help economies recover.

As for the Bank of the England, he said, "it was like a Greek tragedy", because they "couldn't do a U-turn" until there was a full-blown recession, which would finally take away the price pressures.

Bank of England
The Bank of England is warning of higher inflation and slower growth

It was "inevitable" that they would keep rates too high for the good of the economy, he added.

In part, Mr Soros is echoing the gloomy forecast of the world's central bankers in recent weeks.

The head of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, recently told the BBC that the "market correction was still on-going".

Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, warned in the Bank's inflation report that UK inflation would rise above its target while the economy would slow sharply.

Moral hazard

Mr Soros believes that central bankers are partly to blame for the credit crunch because of their past behaviour in bailing out the financial sector whenever it got into trouble for over-lending, the so-called moral hazard problem.

Bear Stearns offices
In the US Bear Stearns has had to be rescued

He said that the central banks should explicitly target asset bubbles such as housing booms and try to stop them getting out of control, which is something they have resisted doing so far.

And he said that tougher but smarter regulation would be needed in the future in order to reduce the excess supply of credit in the economy.

These could include measures to force banks to put aside more reserves in good times to help cushion them in bad times.

Misguided markets

Mr Soros believes that oil and other commodities are over-priced, but he sees little chance of the price of oil coming down until there is a big slowdown in the richer economies.

Oil rig
Oil prices have risen relentlessly this year

He sees the price of oil as being driven by higher demand in developing countries such as China, where subsidised energy costs mean there is less price-sensitivity.

He also said that stock markets are still underestimating the severity and length of the economic downturn, especially in the US, and are now having a "bear market rally".

Profiting from the crisis

Mr Soros has credibility partly because he is prepared to invest his own money to back up his convictions.

The private investment fund he has resumed managing made a return of 34% last year betting that the credit crunch was more severe than many people expected.

Mr Soros was the man reported to have made $1bn in September 1992, betting correctly that the British currency would have to be devalued and leave the European Exchange Rate Mechanism.

Mr Soros has devoted much of time since then to philanthropy, especially in Eastern Europe.


Call Juswant on 07917 105134 or email on juswant.rai@gmail.com if you are interested right now in taking control of your future....

Watch the video first, follow this link:-
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