Probably wont impress the doom mongers buy hey ho

Whilst no-one knows what the future holds, surely it's possible to make an educated guess about what might be to come, based on what's already happened.Euler wrote:That's where people go wrong though Jeff, people look in the rear view mirror too often.
Granted, but as the current situation with the Premium Charge shows, there are limits to what the free market can achieve...Euler wrote:Capitalism is all about overcoming issues, not worrying about them.
Nice link!Euler wrote:http://www.dryassociates.com/images/maxims.pdf
People worry too much about what could go wrong without thinking about what could go right. That was the same mistake I made when I was young, seeing the problems rather than opportunites. Opportunties and issues are created in equal proportion, never forget that.Ferru123 wrote:Whilst no-one knows what the future holds, surely it's possible to make an educated guess about what might be to come, based on what's already happened.
True - and at the other end of the scale, humans are also good at creating bubbles by jumping onto bandwagons!Euler wrote: People worry too much about what could go wrong without thinking about what could go right.
True.Euler wrote:The Internet wasn't on any analyst report I read twenty years ago
BBC wrote:Billionaire Warren Buffett's investment firm Berkshire Hathaway has reported a sharp rise in profits thanks in part to strong returns on derivative contracts.
Net profits for the second quarter were $3.4bn (£2.1bn), a rise of 74% on the $2bn the company made a year earlier. Revenue grew to $38.3bn.
The profits on derivatives helped offset insurance losses.
Mr Buffett is the world's third richest man, with an estimated fortune of about $50bn, according to Forbes.
Berkshire Hathaway has sustained losses at its insurance businesses this year owing to the natural disasters in Japan and New Zealand.