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>> No. 7208 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 1:00 am
7208 Loved this diagram
I think it puts into perspective some of the furore around bitcoin.
5 posts omitted. Expand all images.
>> No. 7216 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 7:05 pm
7216 spacer
>>7214
Lean away from the screen.
>> No. 7217 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 7:08 pm
7217 spacer
>>7214
marple is getting old and his eyes aren't what they were.
>> No. 7218 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 7:40 pm
7218 spacer
>>7214
It is an optical illusion, they look fine to me.
>> No. 7219 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 8:03 pm
7219 spacer
>>7218
They used to be about 400x400 but now they're up to twice that.
>> No. 7220 Anonymous
17th December 2017
Sunday 8:09 pm
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>>7219
They're getting smaller. I think we'll be okay.

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>> No. 7182 Anonymous
2nd October 2017
Monday 3:57 pm
7182 Personal development/study options going forward
Hullo britfa.gs been a while. I would be grateful for your bright ideas on how to get ahead in life and career. This is a bit /job/ and /uni/ too but fundamentally it all comes down to investing in myself so thought this board is the most relevant.

I've just finished my 3 year 'graduate programme' with my current employer and I think I have it in me to be good at all this business malarky - I have done stints in the marketing/communications and business development bits of the business and some other bits. However I studied an arts degree and training/development at my current firm is a joke. I want to go back to some kind of school and spend a while getting a firmer grip on how to be a productive manager and general 'doer' at work. I am envious of a housemate who did a full on financial management bachelors, who's now working his way up in a technology firm doing his CIMA.

Going back to uni and doing a Bachelors would seem way too OTT, so I looked at MBA programmes, particularly in the Netherlands (cheap fees and tuition is in English). However, those require you to have a relevant Bachelors, and good practice in statistics/analysis, which I don't. I would be happy to shell out for a short course, even something online, which could help.

I have about £11,000 in savings and legacies from deceased relatives that I can invest in my personal development. If I were to do a full time qualification I'd work part time to help pay bills. With something less full on I'd stick it out with my current employer.

Starting to feel a bit trapped here. Could any of you offer some tips on what kind of services I could turn to for advice, or what you would do in my situation?

Cheers lads.
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>> No. 7183 Anonymous
2nd October 2017
Monday 4:41 pm
7183 spacer
You don't need another degree. After a few years in the workplace professional experience/qualifications count for far more than a degree.

You don't need to do a finance degree in order to work in a finance department and study to be a chartered accountant via CIMA.

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>> No. 7024 Anonymous
14th June 2017
Wednesday 2:18 am
7024 Should people with less than perfect language skills be trusted?
I can't quite come up with a satisfying answer to this. On the one hand, you'd expect someone you're potentially employing to carry out skilled work to at least be able to throw together a grammatically correct and properly spelled sentence in an email. On the other hand, a lot of skilled tradesmen and craftsmen, especially in niche fields, seem to be terrible at email but personable in real life, and their trade skills can make up for their poor communication skills. On yet another hand, can you really trust someone to carry out a job requiring attention to detail if they don't have the attention to detail to ensure their grammar and spelling are correct in their emails and letters to you?
12 posts omitted. Expand all images.
>> No. 7139 Anonymous
30th August 2017
Wednesday 11:19 pm
7139 spacer
>>7136 This is now getting off topic. Yes I want a nurse or whatever to document correctly, but as for whether they talk proper or can construct beautiful written pros is entirely redundant as to whether they are trust worthy or good at their job. I know shit doctors who can write a great letter and I know great doctors who write shit letters and I know which ones I prefer to work with.
>> No. 7140 Anonymous
31st August 2017
Thursday 12:52 am
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>>7139
The one that writes great letters?
>> No. 7141 Anonymous
31st August 2017
Thursday 9:05 pm
7141 spacer
>>7139

I think we've simply answered the question by now frankly. Depends on the job.

They don't have to be William Shakespeare, but I think the capability of at least a certain level of attention to detail and clarity is absolutely neccesarry in certain jobs.

I wouldn't expect grammatical competence from a bricklayer, unless he somehow misplaces his decimal place and accidently orders half a brick instead of 500.

Neither of these have much bearing specifically on how far I'd trust them or rate their competency; that's boiling it down far too much.
>> No. 7142 Anonymous
31st August 2017
Thursday 11:48 pm
7142 spacer
I used to collaborate in several past jobs with teams in Bangalore, the top tier investment bank was fine, they had clear diction. But the other company was just awful, I understood maybe 50% of what was said and had to piece it together. I had to find ways to get everything in emails because otherwise the ambiguity made my job undoable.
>> No. 7143 Anonymous
1st September 2017
Friday 2:40 am
7143 spacer
>>7142

The number of international video/conference calls I'll been on where I've basically just zoned out and asked everyone to confirm all the action points via circular email is probably very close to 100%.

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>> No. 7123 Anonymous
11th August 2017
Friday 2:20 pm
7123 UTF8 should be back
Which means the URL of this board should contain the right characters. Sorry about that chaps. Its working fine on the limited number of browsers I can test with, but please report in.
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>> No. 7124 Anonymous
11th August 2017
Friday 3:02 pm
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good stuff

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>> No. 7091 Anonymous
27th July 2017
Thursday 7:42 am
7091 Tales of frugal regret.
Any good stories relating to when you/they should have just forked out that little bit extra?
20 posts omitted. Expand all images.
>> No. 7114 Anonymous
30th July 2017
Sunday 5:05 pm
7114 spacer
>>7113
That's really not the case. Not that it matters, since it doesn't really impact on the cost. Spare parts and repairs don't magically cost more at MOT time. The tyres and brake pads won't be cheaper to fix earlier or more expensive to fix later. In the past, I've had to get £200 worth of welding done to get a 10yo through the MOT. No "anticipation" possible there.
>> No. 7115 Anonymous
30th July 2017
Sunday 5:23 pm
7115 spacer
>>7113 Well, yeah. I anticipated _something_ going wrong with my 140Kmile Astra. Changing everything that could possibly go wrong, though, would have been insanity. Suddenly, the wretched thing goes into spanner mode on first acceleration, and it ignores the throttle from then on - just sits at (smooth, healthy sounding, happy but powerless) idle. Toss. Can't even get it to admit error codes but pressing pedals before turning the key. Double-toss. Can't limp it to the garage on a 700rpm idle. Triple-toss.
>> No. 7116 Anonymous
30th July 2017
Sunday 6:37 pm
7116 spacer
>>7115

Any whistling noises or air blowing from the engine? My first guess would be head gasket trouble. Though if your ECU was detecting that and putting it in limp mode it'd almost certainly be throwing up a code.
>> No. 7117 Anonymous
30th July 2017
Sunday 8:26 pm
7117 spacer
>>7116 Interwebz suggests MAF sensor, EGR clogged or turbo bollocksed.
There has been a light whistling noise on boost sometimes. I've been driving very gently for teh last month, trying to get 600 miles out of each tank, so I may have killed it by not ragging it - would be annoying if so.
Coolant is pristine-clean, and oil is normal-mucky, no sign of the two mixing. Head gasket would seem unlikely.
Anyway, not yet sure if I regret my purchase.
>> No. 7118 Anonymous
30th July 2017
Sunday 9:05 pm
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>>7117
Even if you don't care about fixing it, it's always handy to have one of those bluetooth OBD sensors on hand. You can get a knockoff Chinese one for a fiver off ebay, and use it with Torque app on your phone to read the error codes.

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>> No. 6744 Anonymous
8th December 2016
Thursday 11:54 pm
6744 spacer
Lads who started their own businesses, could you give me a walk-through of some the things you did to make it? From the idea, to the settled daily grind and money making part?
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>> No. 6872 Anonymous
1st February 2017
Wednesday 9:15 am
6872 spacer
>>6871
Currently trying to partner with an oil & gas company through accelerator programmes so I wouldn't have to worry about that among couple other things. Every bloody thing is regulated in this industry.
>> No. 6873 Anonymous
1st February 2017
Wednesday 10:15 am
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>>6872
If only they would let you make money with no restrictions. It's not like anything disastrous has ever happened on an oil rig.
>> No. 6874 Anonymous
1st February 2017
Wednesday 8:01 pm
6874 spacer
>>6872
If its going to be in open air or in a hazardous area on the rig then it will probably fall under the DSEAR regs and a significant source of ballache later down the line.

Completely off topic, but I can offer some pointers if you'd like.
>> No. 7055 Anonymous
18th July 2017
Tuesday 12:47 pm
7055 spacer
This is probably relevant to this thread... How do I find a good accountant? Pick a reasonably priced one from google results and hope it works out?
>> No. 7056 Anonymous
18th July 2017
Tuesday 2:54 pm
7056 spacer
>>7055

Personal recommendation. If you don't know any local businesspeople, get in touch with your local Chamber of Commerce. They will run free or cheap business networking and training events.

http://www.britishchambers.org.uk/find-your-chamber

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>> No. 7026 Anonymous
22nd June 2017
Thursday 2:50 pm
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Hello .gs,

I'm not sure if this is /emo/, /£$€¥/ or /job/ but I'm throwing my lot in here.

I've just moved into a situation for the first time in my life where I'll be able to make a start at making savings. I've just finished up with the university student life, and I've been lucky enough to land a job that pays a a pretty high salary (18.5k take-home, not including overtime). It's a job I can do well, and I can see myself putting at least 5 years into it.

The trouble is, I have no idea where to start when it comes to savings beyond immediately getting out of the student overdraft. I have no credit card debt or any other kind of debt beyond the overdraft, into which I am about 1.5k deep.

I don't know anything about investing and I don't expect to learn anything in-depth about it from an imageboard - instead I'm looking for anecdotal advice, stuff that's worked personally for people.

tl;dr

I have about ~£150-200 a week that I can save/invest after I clear my overdraft. What should I do with it?

P.S
Message too long. Click here to view the full text.
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>> No. 7050 Anonymous
26th June 2017
Monday 7:03 pm
7050 spacer
>>7048
You're clearly not as middle class as you think.

>>7049
What's wrong with Sandra?
>> No. 7051 Anonymous
26th June 2017
Monday 10:11 pm
7051 spacer
>>7050
She won't stop sending me baby pictures I mean they're not even her babies I don't understand.
>> No. 7052 Anonymous
29th June 2017
Thursday 12:17 pm
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>>7050
What's that supposed to mean? I though inherited wealth and education made me middle class, not being an entitled cunt about it.
>> No. 7053 Anonymous
29th June 2017
Thursday 5:11 pm
7053 spacer
>>7052
If a dog is born in a stable it doesn't make it a horse. Money doesn't give you class, you filthy new money scum.
>> No. 7054 Anonymous
30th June 2017
Friday 3:13 am
7054 spacer
>>7053

Going out and grafting hard to earn a bit of butty is what it's all about.
Nobody is entitled to anything apart from those that can't work for their butty.
Anyone taking a butty will be shot.

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>> No. 7013 Anonymous
12th June 2017
Monday 11:36 am
7013 Lifetime ISA
These a good idea, boys?

The basics:
>18-39 to open one
>pay in anything upto £4k per tax year
>25% hmrc top up on payments in that year each april
>can pay in every year up to 50 years old
>can only withdraw the money with no penalty for a first time property buy or upon turning 60 years old
>25% penalty for withdrawing at any other time for any other purpose, effectively a 6.25% penalty on what you initially paid in
>counts towards your overall £20k a year isa allowance

I've been toying with the idea of starting to save seriously for buying a house but I've been unconvinced that it's the best investment for me. However, this makes it seem like it may be the best option now. I've got £4k to stick in one right now then I should be able to put £1-2k a year for the next few years too which should get me a decent deposit. I'm highly unlikely to need to take the money out for any reason so the penalties don't concern me, and even if I do the penalty is manageable.
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>> No. 7018 Anonymous
12th June 2017
Monday 7:20 pm
7018 spacer
>>7017
Is there any reason to be concerned about the lack of providers? I've been looking at the Skipton product, I can't conceive of any reason to not go for it. I think they offer a 0.5% interest rate if I remember rightly, which is mostly irrelevant because the only reason anyone is doing it is for the government bonus. From what I understand, if I invest with Skipton, then more providers offer the Lifetime ISA in future, then I can freely transfer my balance with no penalty to another Lifetime ISA.
>> No. 7019 Anonymous
13th June 2017
Tuesday 5:37 pm
7019 spacer
>>7018
If the take up rate is low then they're more likely to be pulled, be that by the FCA, the government or providers themselves.
>> No. 7020 Anonymous
13th June 2017
Tuesday 5:48 pm
7020 spacer
>>7019
What would happen to my investments in that instance?
>> No. 7021 Anonymous
13th June 2017
Tuesday 5:50 pm
7021 spacer
>>7020
You would lose 6% of it.
>> No. 7022 Anonymous
13th June 2017
Tuesday 6:43 pm
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>>7020
I imagine they'd either let existing investors continue or stop them from contributing in future years but with everything built up so far preserved.

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>> No. 7009 Anonymous
4th June 2017
Sunday 11:13 pm
7009 Online or High Street Estate Agents?
I'm looking to move house soon. I've got a mortgage on a little two up two down, looking to move to a three bedroom somewhere nearby.

My question is; how should I go about selling it? The options seem to be to sell it yourself (which I'm not going to be doing), to go with an online only estate agent, or to go with a high street estate agent.

On the face of it, it seems like the best option, money-wise, to go online-only (say, with purplebricks.com or something). You can arrange a fixed fee to be payed after the house is sold, generally it does work out cheaper. You do pay something like a grand and a half more with a high street estate agent (variable).

I can't escape the nagging suspicion, though, that you get more for your money with high street estate agents. I'd like to know that there's somewhere I could go to kick up a fuss if something goes wrong; I'd like someone to give people tours of the house when we're not in; I'd like someone who I can ring up and ask daft questions after because I don't know anything about selling a house and they know everything.

Has anyone else sold a house before? Did you do it with an online only or a high street estate agent? Have you done it the other way as well, before? Which is better? Do you wish you'd done it differently?

It seems like a small decision, but I can't really seem to pick one over the other. I need more input from real people to make a decision. Help is much appreciated.
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>> No. 7010 Anonymous
4th June 2017
Sunday 11:25 pm
7010 spacer
Most people look on Right Move so it doesn't really matter who you go with.
>> No. 7011 Anonymous
4th June 2017
Sunday 11:59 pm
7011 spacer
>>7010

So right move aggregates listings from all major estate agents? Is the fit traffic from high street estate agents not worthy of consideration? How do you know most people search on right move?
>> No. 7012 Anonymous
5th June 2017
Monday 12:06 am
7012 spacer
>>7011
>So right move aggregates listings from all major estate agents?
No, a lot of estate agents list their properties on Rightmove.

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>> No. 6491 Anonymous
7th August 2016
Sunday 4:59 pm
6491 Estate agents
I'm buying my first house and they have accepted an offer on the house. I was checking on the advert on right move to get some measurements and I noticed that they have updated the advert to:

PUBLIC NOTICE! William H Brown are now in receipt of an offer for the sum of £140,000 for ****************. Anyone wishing to place an offer on this property should contact ****************** before exchange of contracts.

Is this usual/legal for them to publicise the bid they've received in order to basically create an auction type situation? I've sent them a snotty e-mail asking them to not publicise the amount we have bid because that just seems pretty unfair.

Anyone have similar stories?
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>> No. 6945 Anonymous
26th April 2017
Wednesday 8:57 pm
6945 spacer
>>6944
Not him but I always assumed setting one's wife, sister or daughter up in a no-customers tanning salon was the way to clear those cocaine thousands.
>> No. 6946 Anonymous
26th April 2017
Wednesday 9:03 pm
6946 spacer
>>6943
My anecdotal evidence is that the reason Asian graduates are less likely to be employed is because they're freeloaders. If Daddy is a rich solicitor or doctor who regularly gives them money to fund their lifestyle then there's little motivation to stand on their own two feet.
>> No. 6947 Anonymous
26th April 2017
Wednesday 10:21 pm
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>>6946
Alright bigot lad, then how do you explain how almost ALL uni educated minorities are more likely to be unemployed compared to their white counterparts? Do they all have rich doctor-teacher dads too?
>> No. 6967 Anonymous
17th May 2017
Wednesday 6:48 pm
6967 spacer
>>6880
He turned out to be a lovely bloke. Moving next week.
If he was a godless bastard like me, I'd have left him a nice bottle of wine and my collection of takeaway menus, but given that he's of a Polar persuasion and already lives locally, that's not really helpful. The Mrs thinks flowers. That's not too weird, is it?
>> No. 6970 Anonymous
18th May 2017
Thursday 3:56 am
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>>6967

Everyone likes a nice box of chocs. Unless they're lactose intolerant, but a truly multicultural society should have zero tolerance for intolerance. Or vegans, but fuck vegans.

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>> No. 6948 Anonymous
12th May 2017
Friday 9:31 am
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Is it possible to set up a direct debit to a family member? And no I don't mean a standing order.
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>> No. 6965 Anonymous
17th May 2017
Wednesday 6:41 pm
6965 spacer
Wasn't the government keen on everyone having access to at least a basic bank account, regardless of their standing? Do these count?
>> No. 6968 Anonymous
17th May 2017
Wednesday 6:49 pm
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>>6964
They're not banks.
>> No. 6969 Anonymous
17th May 2017
Wednesday 7:16 pm
6969 spacer
>>6964
They're useful for situations where you might not trust the person using them, or the situation you're using them in.
For example some parents give them to teenage children for spending money, you can top it up with just however much you want them to have. They're good if you're travelling and are afraid of losing a card, there's less hassle than losing your main credit card. They're also useful for buying viagra from dodgy websites if you're into that sort of thing.
>> No. 7482 Anonymous
11th March 2019
Monday 10:16 am
7482 spacer
Some banks allow standing orders to count too instead of direct debits. If you've got a pension, chucking a few quid in there by DD would work.
>> No. 7485 Anonymous
11th March 2019
Monday 10:43 am
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>>7482
I'd hope he's not still stuck on this almost 2 years later.

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>> No. 6905 Anonymous
24th April 2017
Monday 10:18 pm
6905 Stocks and shares and funds and things
Lads, I've gone and done it. I poured all my savings into an IG ISA Shares account and went on a binge and bought shit loads of shares in different companies (see pic). Each worth about a grand.

If it goes tits up, I will just hold on to the shares until shit stabilises. I don't know how, but I want to turn £9k into £40k in a year or so.

How stupid am I? I checked earnings per share and all the other metrics that was on the website. Am I fucked? I feel like I fucked up, but hey-ho shit happens I suppose. If one of them increase ten-times over, it should cancel out everything else getting fucked... I think.
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>> No. 6923 Anonymous
25th April 2017
Tuesday 9:45 pm
6923 spacer
>>6921
I created my own portfolio. It is full of volatile stocks that I believe will get me over 300% return in a year or so. I looked around most of the ETFs around the world and there was nothing that could obviously achieve >300% return. Maybe they aren't risky enough, or maybe most investors aren't as stupid as me.

So I settle for IG because they were the cheapest when you compare the per deal rates, Admin fees, penalties for inactivity, the type of ISA, the rates for buying foreign instruments, etc. They came out the cheapest... unless I missed a better broker.

>>6920
Yes, but that is tiny compared to how much Imagination depended on Apple. Over half of their revenue came from sales and licenses to Apple.
>> No. 6925 Anonymous
25th April 2017
Tuesday 9:50 pm
6925 spacer
>>6923 Yeah, but their price has already taken the battering from being dropped by Apple. If they don't die on their arse from lack of funds (horribly possible, they let go a lot of their senior guys), they _might_ recover in an interesting way. At least they're not chasing the woeful DAB stuff any more.
>> No. 6926 Anonymous
25th April 2017
Tuesday 10:07 pm
6926 spacer
>>6923

Did you look at X-O? They were the cheapest when I opened a dealing account. X-O, as in, execution only. I never actually invested anything because I wasn't 100% comfortable sinking my money into a sketchy e-company, and anything that doesn't appear sketchy (eg. Hargreaves Lansdown) charge a premium for management. How much did you (heheh) "invest"?
>> No. 6927 Anonymous
25th April 2017
Tuesday 10:12 pm
6927 spacer
>>6913
.>stick all your savings on Lucky Lad in the 3:15 at Kempton.

YOU COULD BUY THAT HORSE OF YOURS LET ALONE BACK IT
>> No. 6928 Anonymous
25th April 2017
Tuesday 10:15 pm
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>>6926
I never heard of XO. IG isn't sketchy. They are also listed on the exchange.

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>> No. 6895 Anonymous
30th March 2017
Thursday 9:42 pm
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I always had the notion that the grass in Britain's Anglo ex-colonies was a somewhat more lustrous shade of green, particularly for skilled tradesmen and the like, but lately I've heard the opposite; that the new world isn't a shangri-la for disgruntled British tradesmen.

A skilled tradesman who earns £30k a year in the UK would expect to earn roughly $50-60k a year doing the same job in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Even if you go back to pre-Brexit exchange rates, it seems like the guy earning $60k would be in a better position, especially if you assume that house prices would be cheaper because of more lebensraum.

Apparently some of these assumptions stand on wonky ground. I've heard that when you account for costs of living and mortgaging an average house, earning £30k outside of London will take you further than $60k a year outside of Toronto, Auckland, and Sydney. Is there any truth to that?
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>> No. 6897 Anonymous
31st March 2017
Friday 5:23 am
6897 spacer
OP,

I've paid 18 quid for a bottle of beer in Brisbane. Nothing special mind, just a beer. It is fucking dear out there, especially for electronics.

That said I live in one of the most expensive cities in the world and could get by and lead a healthy, happy life for 10k, I just use my noggin and find the cheap places to eat and drink.
>> No. 6898 Anonymous
31st March 2017
Friday 9:45 am
6898 spacer
>>6896
> Also, personally if I was even thinking of Canada it would definitely be Vancouver.

Not without learning Cantonese first m80. It's basically pre-Handover HK without the slums now.
>> No. 6899 Anonymous
31st March 2017
Friday 6:12 pm
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>>6898
>without the slums now.
That will change soon - only this time, the slums will be full of white Canadians.
>> No. 6900 Anonymous
1st April 2017
Saturday 12:33 am
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>>6899

Is that you, Chinese Ministry of Propaganda lad?
>> No. 6901 Anonymous
1st April 2017
Saturday 8:38 pm
6901 spacer
>>6898
Doesn't matter lad - the Canadians have a fuckton of very beautiful country and they are good at managing it. Would live in Vancouver tomorrow.

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>> No. 6889 Anonymous
12th March 2017
Sunday 10:29 pm
6889 spacer
Is it true the Co-op bank is falling to pieces?

I ask because I'm looking for a decent ethical place to start a savings account (online saver or something similar).
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>> No. 6890 Anonymous
12th March 2017
Sunday 10:35 pm
6890 spacer
What's wrong with Nationwide? They're the best you're going to get that has branches all over the country.
>> No. 6891 Anonymous
12th March 2017
Sunday 10:35 pm
6891 spacer
Anyway you can use Move Your Money to rank banks by ethics.

http://moveyourmoney.org.uk/
>> No. 6892 Anonymous
13th March 2017
Monday 4:02 pm
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I know one off their senior finance guys. He was involved in pushing the lack of ethical investing for better returns shit. What could possibly go wrong.

The cunt.
>> No. 6893 Anonymous
13th March 2017
Monday 4:07 pm
6893 spacer
>>6892
>What could possibly go wrong.
Bugger all to be honest.
>> No. 6894 Anonymous
13th March 2017
Monday 4:57 pm
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Co-op went to shit the moment they bought Britannia Building Society. Just stick with Nationwide.

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