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Shaw Capital Management: 2012 Warning: Eurozone Economic Downturn - 0 views

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    The eurozone is anticipated to go back to downturn in 2012 according to a report from Shaw Capital Management by audit firm Ernst & Young. The company said it anticipates the economies of the 17 member countries to shrink in the first two quarters of 2012. The report forecasts expansion of just 0.1% for the whole of the year and warns unemployment in the eurozone is unlikely to fall below 10% before 2015.The notification was backed by economic data from Markit suggesting output continued to deal across the 17-nation bloc over the past month. Although the headline Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) figure rose slightly to 47.9 but remained below 50 which indicates growth. On the Shaw Capital Management it was noted that the survey compiler alleged the slight improvement was down to strength in France and Germany, with peripheral eurozone economies still struggling. Last week, 26 of the 27 members of the EU backed new monetary principles to maintain budgets in line, with only the UK refraining. But, according to Sky News, just days later, fractures have begun to emerge as drafting of the pact begins, with some countries already airing concerns. Many also fear the pact will still not be enough to prevent more countries from needing a bailout like Ireland and Greece. According to the Shaw Capital Management, the euro dropped to an 11-month low on the back of the concerns on Wednesday, dropping below $1.30 (84p) for the first time since January. Furthermore, the governor of France's central bank has launched a substantial assault on credit ratings agencies, calling them "incomprehensible and irrational" as Paris braces for a potential reduce or eliminate of the country's triple A status. The Head of the Bank of France-Christian Nover said- aFrench reduce or eliminate would not be justified - adding that the agencies should begin by downgrading the triple A rating of Britain, which "has greater loss, more debt, higher inflation, less growth than us and where cr
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Shaw Capital Management Factoring and Financings - Google+ - 0 views

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    GOVERNMENT shelling out reductions will contribute to a 22% begin repossessions next year, a grim review warned yesterday. The Council of Mortgage Lenders said 45,000 families may lose their homes in 2012, up from 37,000 this year. While, that would still be fewer than the 47,900 forced to hand back the keys in 2009, it is part of a broader malaise intimidating the housing market.Based from the Shaw Capital Management, The CML says that it should also expect ­mortgage lending to contract and the amount of home buyers slipping behind with loan repayments to go up. There are around 166,000 people as its approximations with delinquencies of more than 2.5% today, down from 196,000 in 2009.But it should expect this total to go up again to 180,000 next year as Government reductions lead to rising unemployment and wage goes up again fail to keep rate with living costs. Bob Pannell, CML chief economist, said: "With higher ­unemployment and the likelihood of real incomes controlling at best over the course of the year, we should expect to see greater financial stress."The CML predicts net lending, the total of new lending after repayments, will plunge to £5billion next year from £9billion this year and £41bn in 2008.According to the Shaw Capital Management,The amount of properties altering hands will also slide to 825,000 from 852,000 expected this year and 901,000 in 2008 as the credit crunch started. Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyor, warned the eurozone crisis would make it more robust for banks to boost funds for lending. With buyer assurance low and credit conditions "congealing", he said mortgage rates would rise while lending to people with small deposits falls."The recent international economic uncertainty has dented the mortgage market with gives off that will leave it still groggy in the New Year," he said. Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: "We have been warning that increasing numbers of homeowners are straini
Shawcap Factoring

ShawCMFactoring - Friendfeed - 0 views

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    GOVERNMENT shelling out reductions will contribute to a 22% begin repossessions next year, a grim review warned yesterday. The Council of Mortgage Lenders said 45,000 families may lose their homes in 2012, up from 37,000 this year. While, that would still be fewer than the 47,900 forced to hand back the keys in 2009, it is part of a broader malaise intimidating the housing market.Based from the Shaw Capital Management, The CML says that it should also expect ­mortgage lending to contract and the amount of home buyers slipping behind with loan repayments to go up. There are around 166,000 people as its approximations with delinquencies of more than 2.5% today, down from 196,000 in 2009.But it should expect this total to go up again to 180,000 next year as Government reductions lead to rising unemployment and wage goes up again fail to keep rate with living costs. Bob Pannell, CML chief economist, said: "With higher ­unemployment and the likelihood of real incomes controlling at best over the course of the year, we should expect to see greater financial stress."The CML predicts net lending, the total of new lending after repayments, will plunge to £5billion next year from £9billion this year and £41bn in 2008.According to the Shaw Capital Management,The amount of properties altering hands will also slide to 825,000 from 852,000 expected this year and 901,000 in 2008 as the credit crunch started. Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyor, warned the eurozone crisis would make it more robust for banks to boost funds for lending. With buyer assurance low and credit conditions "congealing", he said mortgage rates would rise while lending to people with small deposits falls."The recent international economic uncertainty has dented the mortgage market with gives off that will leave it still groggy in the New Year," he said. Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: "We have been warning that increasing numbers of homeowners are strai
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    GOVERNMENT shelling out reductions will contribute to a 22% begin repossessions next year, a grim review warned yesterday. The Council of Mortgage Lenders said 45,000 families may lose their homes in 2012, up from 37,000 this year. While, that would still be fewer than the 47,900 forced to hand back the keys in 2009, it is part of a broader malaise intimidating the housing market.Based from the Shaw Capital Management, The CML says that it should also expect ­mortgage lending to contract and the amount of home buyers slipping behind with loan repayments to go up. There are around 166,000 people as its approximations with delinquencies of more than 2.5% today, down from 196,000 in 2009.But it should expect this total to go up again to 180,000 next year as Government reductions lead to rising unemployment and wage goes up again fail to keep rate with living costs. Bob Pannell, CML chief economist, said: "With higher ­unemployment and the likelihood of real incomes controlling at best over the course of the year, we should expect to see greater financial stress."The CML predicts net lending, the total of new lending after repayments, will plunge to £5billion next year from £9billion this year and £41bn in 2008.According to the Shaw Capital Management,The amount of properties altering hands will also slide to 825,000 from 852,000 expected this year and 901,000 in 2008 as the credit crunch started. Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyor, warned the eurozone crisis would make it more robust for banks to boost funds for lending. With buyer assurance low and credit conditions "congealing", he said mortgage rates would rise while lending to people with small deposits falls."The recent international economic uncertainty has dented the mortgage market with gives off that will leave it still groggy in the New Year," he said. Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: "We have been warning that increasing numbers of homeowners are straini
Shawcap Factoring

Shaw Capital Management Factoring and Financings - 0 views

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    Shaw Capital Management Factoring and Financings 1 review Category: Investing P.O. Box 17078 Baltimore, MD 21297Baltimore, MD 21297(410) 684-2728 One review for Shaw Capital Management Factoring and Financings 1 review in English Review from Sean G. 0friends 1review Sean G. Baltimore, MD 2/27/2012 First to Review Shaw Capital Management and Financing provides export trade financing to clients in every major world market and can convert accounts receivable finance transactions in 17 currencies. We have no minimum or maximum monthly volume requirements. Other factoring companies require a financial commitment for the amount of freight bills you factor each month. Our highly skilled team provides full administrative support - including credit management, invoicing, collections, account reporting, expense reporting, fuel card management and much more! With Shaw Capital Management and Financing, you get paid in full minus our fee the day we receive your freight bills. Other factoring companies holdback 10 to 15 percent of your money or more for each invoice in a reserve account. That reserve amount is not immediately provided to your company. In the end, you receive part of that percentage back, depending on how long it takes the factoring company to receive payment on the invoice.
Shawcap Factoring

Shaw Capital Management News: Top Tips in Selling your Old Mobile Phone - 0 views

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    Countless of outdated mobile phones languish in cupboards and drawers across the UK, and there are dozens of websites that will offer you cash for old handsets - but are you getting a good deal, watch out for scams online. Good thing we have Shaw Capital Management here to keep you updated. In offering money for a used, frequently useless phone, mobile phone 'recycling' companies usually sell of those handset devices rather than recycling it in order for them to provide a unique perfect service. The process goes like this; Customers will enter to- the make and model of their phone, its condition, and some personal details into a website. A quote appears and the company sends out a freepost envelope. Pop the phone in the envelope, then the Customers will send it back to the company and within a few days the money will arrive via cheque or in your bank account. At least, that is how it is supposed to work. But if customers are not careful they can end up with a bad deal - or nothing at all. To test the market, one of the customers searched online and found what appeared to be a good offer: £65 for his old phone - a handset he had bought three years ago. He posted it and waited for the bank transfer. But after Cash4Phones examined his used phone, He got an email informing that "excessive wear and tear" meant the company could only give him £39.33.He had five days to accept. After He complained - the phone is virtually free of scratches and the screen is intact - the company upped its offer to the original price. On one popular phone recycling forum, we found close to a hundred similar complaints about Cash4Phones offering less than its original quote because of "wear and tear" - far more than nearly any other company. Most of the complaints appeared to be resolved on the forum after Cash4Phones increased its offer, and the company says online forums are skewed towards people who are dissatisfied. It says it has many more customers who
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Shaw Capital Management Factoring News: Orange County Men Face Charges for Alleged Home... - 0 views

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    Five men are scheduled to be arraigned Monday on charges that they tricked hundreds of people into paying thousands of dollars in up-front fees for home loan modifications they never intended to perform. Jacob John Cunningham, 24, Dominic Adam Nolan, 30, John D. Silva, 27, all of Irvine, Justin Dennis Koelle, 23, of Costa Mesa and Andrew Michael Phalen, 25, of Mission Viejo face multiple felony charges related to the alleged three-year scam. Authorities claim they created fake home loan modification companies and sent out mailers soliciting fees to adjust customers' mortgages. The ads said they were 100% successful and would return the initial fee if the company did not complete the loan modification, according to prosecutors. It's illegal to collect fees ahead of performing home loan modifications in California. As the men collected from their victims, prosecutors said they would change their company's name, phone number and addresses. The plot developed in 2011, with the men allegedly representing themselves as CitiFinancial and CitiMortgage and offering home refinancing. Customers were asked to deposit money into the group's account at a low interest rate. The total loss is estimated at more than $65,000 nationwide. The men face sentences ranging from seven years and eight months to 21 years and eight months in prison. - Joseph Serna
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