Blackberry and Apple
What ever happened to the Blackberry? I have a friend, a banker who runs the IT team, and who still has one in daily use. Swears by it. Mind you, he has a vintage Jaguar also in daily use, which says something about him. Launched in 1999, it…
Pier into the Future
Piers, it seems, are making something of a comeback with today’s younger generation enjoying them as much as we did as children. As a child I was occasionally taken to Blackpool. If it was summer then it was buckets and spades, donkey rides and ice cream, whilst in the winter it was the…
It's Official. Beer is good for you.
Guinness is Good for You, was the advertising slogan made famous by the firm from the 1920’s until it was banned in the 1960’s, no longer considered a healthy option. Guinness also claimed to Give You Strength, and according to The Royal College of Physicians Museum, Guinness wrote to…
From Obscurity to Premier Cru
Wine drinking was a habit only for the elite in Britain, but an everyday necessity for our French and European cousins.
In the sixties, cheap, semi-sweet drinks such as ‘Babycham’ and ‘Cherry B’ took over from sherry and eventually Portuguese ‘Mateus Rose’. So exotic was this wine considered that…
Crystal Ball
In this blog:
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns
Consider two investments side by side, one with a return of 4% and one with 8% - which one is the more profitable?
High or low relative to what?
What the data says.
Norwegian Odyssey
The Beatles song Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) was about an extramarital affair that John Lennon was involved in. In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, he said:
"I was trying to write about an affair without letting my wife know I was having one…
Going cheap
In this blog:
Investment trusts have two problems for IFAs
The data behind an income portfolio
Inflation – a key differentiator made transparent with data.
Stormy... but no, not Stormy Daniels, and not Stormzy
In this blog:
The storm elements in western France
The storm elements in the investment atmosphere
Data driven research.
Return to Base
Eighteen months ago, I posted a piece called The Great De-Cluttering Dilemma, as we moved out of our house following an underfloor leak. This week we are moving back in to the house, complete with all our goods and chattels…
In God we trust (here's why)
Some guarantees cost more than others – is your money at risk? In this blog:
What’s in a rate?
Understanding preference shares
"When I am an old woman I shall wear purple”
As a company we are probably unique in having a section in our website that outlines for you how to write and give a eulogy. In this blog:
“With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.”
“A billion here, a billion there …”
What the man said
Here’s some good news (not in the headlines or Today on R4). And if someone runs $27bn, we’d like to hear what they think. In this blog:
A key part of inflation has gone negative
Here comes the bill
‘The weirdest time in 40 years’
The Big Screen
My dad’s first job was as a projectionist at The Picture House Cinema in the market town of Beverly in East Yorkshire. There was no TV at the time and so news and entertainment were to be found there and he saw it all though the tiny square window of his projection booth. Then he went off to war.
The Leg Lab
In 1992 Marc and Robert spun out a company from the MIT ‘leg lab’ that worked on developing robotics. In 2004 they demonstrated BigDog, which you’ll probably have seen. With the seed development already done at MIT it took the team twelve years to get to here – I don’t who was funding this, who the backers were/are, and surely in robotics there can be no certainty.
Annuities - value or scam?
Interest rates are up, gilt yields are up, and the Sunday Times is covered in adverts and editorials talking about annuities; we look at the numbers, not the commentaries. In this blog:
t’s all in the maths
“Colin” the Client’s Story
Anyone for... Pickleball?
Once upon a time and by a fortuitous chain of events, I was very lucky to have a 1-2-1 tennis lesson with Rod Laver at Wimbledon. He was such a gent he even said I could tell my kids I won. More recently I’ve tried out tennis’ rival sport, Pickleball - billed as “a game for all ages”. And then there’s the other rival Padel.
'Allo 'Allo... Classic sitcoms caused Brexit!
In the 1970’s there were 132 listed British sitcoms. From the 1980’s to the 2010’s it increased from 143 to 172 sitcoms. But this decade so far there have only been 54. An academic writing in a new book is claiming that some of those sitcoms make sense of the political attitudes that prompted Brexit…
How many of these have you done, or would like to do?
In this blog:
Don’t retire until you want to
The sweet spot in retirement
A big list of things to do over the next 12 months while you’re in the sweet spot.