Bobc
Well-Known Member
Now in liquidation I hear. What a shame.
So it would seem 100 jobs at stake as bank refuses yacht builder £3m coronavirus loan.
It rather looks like their nasty scheme to avoid their damages liability didn't work out after all.
What's going on at Discovery yachts?
So it would seem 100 jobs at stake as bank refuses yacht builder £3m coronavirus loan.
It rather looks like their nasty scheme to avoid their damages liability didn't work out after all.
What's going on at Discovery yachts?
Discovery Shipyard’s managing director John Burnie told the A&T he believed the loan decision was “unfair”. He claimed it was based on financial problems which a small, former part of the firm suffered in 2019 under different management. He stressed its immediate future was not at risk, saying: “The loan we have asked for is to help us in the long-term.
Oh so true Dom.A bit if a bugbear of mine, but the latest Bank of England/UK Government blue-light Debt Service is part of a trend which enables free-market democracies to operate on ever-thinner quantities of risk capital. This brings obvious benefits to shareholders and other asset holders, which is contributes to the wealth gaps we see today.
This debt model is ultimately not sustainable, any more than if I started to feed nitrous oxide into my old Merc. Politicians must stop getting suckered into the notion that any job-creating entrepreneur has a God-given right to accrue large returns on tiny slivers of risk capital.
There is a neat free-market solution: a new Government service which explains to investors how to operate those foldy leather thingies tucked into their back pockets!
This thinking started in the 1960's as it made sense to borrow money and make it work for you and earn profits that would then pay the interest and overtime inflation made the value of capital to be paid back reduce as prices soared. Later in the 1980's the stock exchange became more of a massive gambling den with almost no regard to potential risks of failure. It was driven by short term gains rather than long term investment. Many of these people are now running our major companies on a wing and a prayer, even more today than 6 months ago. No wonder so many companies with little capital behind them will survive this closedown.A bit if a bugbear of mine, but the latest Bank of England/UK Government blue-light Debt Service is part of a trend which enables free-market democracies to operate on ever-thinner quantities of risk capital. This brings obvious benefits to shareholders and other asset holders, which is contributes to the wealth gaps we see today.
This debt model is ultimately not sustainable, any more than if I started to feed nitrous oxide into my old Merc. Politicians must stop getting suckered into the notion that any job-creating entrepreneur has a God-given right to accrue large returns on tiny slivers of risk capital.
There is a neat free-market solution: a new Government service which explains to investors how to operate those foldy leather thingies tucked into their back pockets!
Isn't the real basic problem here more about the business not making a decent profit?A bit if a bugbear of mine, but the latest Bank of England/UK Government blue-light Debt Service is part of a trend which enables free-market democracies to operate on ever-thinner quantities of risk capital. This brings obvious benefits to shareholders and other asset holders, which in turn contributes to the wealth gaps we see today.
This debt model is ultimately not sustainable, any more than if I started to feed nitrous oxide into my old Merc. Politicians must stop getting suckered into the notion that any job-creating entrepreneur has a God-given right to accrue large returns on tiny slivers of risk capital.
There is a neat free-market solution: a new Government service which explains to investors how to operate those foldy leather thingies tucked into their back pockets!
Isn't the real basic problem here more about the business not making a decent profit?
Isn't the real basic problem here more about the business not making a decent profit?
On a more micro level their credit rating (from a supplier perspective) has apparently been in the toilet for a while. Supplier confidence was, I am told, not helped by the Discovery people they dealt with, who didn't seem to be strong in the arena of competence.Isn't the real basic problem here more about the business not making a decent profit?
Did he get anything for them?Wasn't Sean Langdon so lucky to sell his shareholding when he did? Great timing!
Did he get anything for them?
I can't find any confirmation of this.Now in liquidation I hear. What a shame.
DISCOVERY YACHTS GROUP LTD - Insolvency (free information from Companies House)I can't find any confirmation of this.