Discussion:
withdraw your money from RBScot and NatWest- fast!
(too old to reply)
John Nagelson
2008-09-30 09:47:06 UTC
Permalink
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.

RBS Group is in serious trouble and may not see out the week.

The 'Big Four' UK high street banks are Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, and
RBS. The RBS Group includes both the Royal Bank of Scotland and
NatWest.

RBS is standing out as the banking group whose share price is getting
pummelled most. This is bound to be the bank that all the bears go
after.

It's ripe for total collapse.

Don't trust the government to guarantee your bank deposits.
You can follow the prices here:

http://uk.betastreaming.finance.yahoo.com/q/cp?s=%5EFTSE&c=1

Latest prices:

Barclays, down 2%
Lloyds, down 3%
HSBC, 0%
Royal Bank of Scotland, down 20%

This pattern has been typical over the past week.
Don't wait to come home from work and hear on the TV news that the
Royal Bank of Scotland Group has gone bust, or that you'll have to
wait a year or so before the kindly government gives you
"compensation" for the first £35000 of your money.

Get down your branch and get your money out now.

If you don't do this, then bookmark the above webpage and watch
the share price fall and fall, and eventually you'll come to a
conclusion.

Never mind all the politicians and experts saying 'don't cause a run
on the banks'. Remember Northern Rock. Remember all the pension rip-
offs. Remember what granddad used to say about the Great Crash of
1929.

How long will you wait? Soon there may be queues from RBS branches for
a mile down the high street. Get there quick if you want to have a
chance of actually being served!

Look after *yourself* and your family. Don't expect the government to
look after you.

John
Jim
2008-09-30 10:02:37 UTC
Permalink
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
This is a message for ***@eclipse.net.uk
Cerumen
2008-09-30 10:08:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jim
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
I wonder what anybody can hope to gain from such a posting as the original
one?
--
Chris,
Braccae illae virides cum subucula rosea et tunica Caledonia-quam elenganter
concinnatur!
Jim
2008-09-30 11:28:06 UTC
Permalink
In article <***@mid.individual.net>, ***@gmail.com
says...
Post by Cerumen
Post by Jim
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
I wonder what anybody can hope to gain from such a posting as the original
one?
Indeed. They obviously don't value their internet access.
james
2008-10-02 06:11:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jim
says...
Post by Cerumen
Post by Jim
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
I wonder what anybody can hope to gain from such a posting as the original
one?
Indeed. They obviously don't value their internet access.
Why should you think that? There was no abuse of the Usenet or even
abuse of the World Wide Web via the Google's groups.
--
James Follett. Novelist
Jeff Gaines
2008-09-30 11:51:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Cerumen
Post by Jim
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
I wonder what anybody can hope to gain from such a posting as the original
one?
Perhaps they're speculating on share prices and want to see some downward
movement?
--
Jeff Gaines Damerham Hampshire UK
Indecision is the key to flexibility
ian field
2008-10-03 14:40:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jeff Gaines
Post by Cerumen
Post by Jim
In article <67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
I wonder what anybody can hope to gain from such a posting as the original
one?
Perhaps they're speculating on share prices and want to see some downward
movement?
Nah - just a disgruntled customer who got charged for an unauthorised
overdraft.

Clive Sinclair
2008-09-30 12:18:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.
RBS Group is in serious trouble and may not see out the week.
The 'Big Four' UK high street banks are Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, and
RBS. The RBS Group includes both the Royal Bank of Scotland and
NatWest.
RBS is standing out as the banking group whose share price is getting
pummelled most. This is bound to be the bank that all the bears go
after.
It's ripe for total collapse.
Don't trust the government to guarantee your bank deposits.
http://uk.betastreaming.finance.yahoo.com/q/cp?s=%5EFTSE&c=1
Barclays, down 2%
Lloyds, down 3%
HSBC, 0%
Royal Bank of Scotland, down 20%
This pattern has been typical over the past week.
Don't wait to come home from work and hear on the TV news that the
Royal Bank of Scotland Group has gone bust, or that you'll have to
wait a year or so before the kindly government gives you
"compensation" for the first £35000 of your money.
Get down your branch and get your money out now.
If you don't do this, then bookmark the above webpage and watch
the share price fall and fall, and eventually you'll come to a
conclusion.
Never mind all the politicians and experts saying 'don't cause a run
on the banks'. Remember Northern Rock. Remember all the pension rip-
offs. Remember what granddad used to say about the Great Crash of
1929.
How long will you wait? Soon there may be queues from RBS branches for
a mile down the high street. Get there quick if you want to have a
chance of actually being served!
Look after *yourself* and your family. Don't expect the government to
look after you.
John
Probably some fat cat stockbroker trying to make a little extra, as he
knows his job will be going down the pan - and so it should!
--
Clive

We don't die, we just stop paying taxes.
james
2008-10-02 06:19:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Clive Sinclair
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest
Probably some fat cat stockbroker trying to make a little extra, as he
knows his job will be going down the pan - and so it should!
Many stockbrokers do a valuable job. Mine advised me to sell my Bradford
and Bingley PIBS last January. I was extremely reluctant to do so
because they were yielding 8 per cent ticket. That a building society
might default on PIBS interest was unthinkable at the time but I gave in
to his pressure. PIBS are unsecured.

NB: I don't know if B&B have defaulted on PIBS. Does any one know?
--
James Follett. Novelist
Charles Ellson
2008-10-02 16:22:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by james
Post by Clive Sinclair
Post by John Nagelson
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest
Probably some fat cat stockbroker trying to make a little extra, as he
knows his job will be going down the pan - and so it should!
Many stockbrokers do a valuable job. Mine advised me to sell my Bradford
and Bingley PIBS last January. I was extremely reluctant to do so
because they were yielding 8 per cent ticket. That a building society
might default on PIBS interest was unthinkable at the time but I gave in
to his pressure. PIBS are unsecured.
NB: I don't know if B&B have defaulted on PIBS. Does any one know?
http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/pibs is showing them trading at 85p. I'm
not sure if you can "default" on a PIBS as such but just leave the
holders with something that no-one wants to buy.
Brian Gaff
2008-09-30 18:58:47 UTC
Permalink
Oh you are the jolly one. Don't you think that if this occurs its more
likely to go down?

Interestingly, on another tack, Lloyds TSB is in the middle of a huge
revamp of its branches. Even my one horse town branch has been revamped
internally, and this makes twice in two years.

Brian
--
Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email.
graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them
Email: ***@blueyonder.co.uk
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________


"John Nagelson" <***@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message news:67ab984c-f097-44e8-8360-***@d1g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
This is a message for account holders with the Royal Bank of Scotland
or NatWest, or for people whose family members may have accounts
there.

RBS Group is in serious trouble and may not see out the week.

The 'Big Four' UK high street banks are Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, and
RBS. The RBS Group includes both the Royal Bank of Scotland and
NatWest.

RBS is standing out as the banking group whose share price is getting
pummelled most. This is bound to be the bank that all the bears go
after.

It's ripe for total collapse.

Don't trust the government to guarantee your bank deposits.
You can follow the prices here:

http://uk.betastreaming.finance.yahoo.com/q/cp?s=%5EFTSE&c=1

Latest prices:

Barclays, down 2%
Lloyds, down 3%
HSBC, 0%
Royal Bank of Scotland, down 20%

This pattern has been typical over the past week.
Don't wait to come home from work and hear on the TV news that the
Royal Bank of Scotland Group has gone bust, or that you'll have to
wait a year or so before the kindly government gives you
"compensation" for the first £35000 of your money.

Get down your branch and get your money out now.

If you don't do this, then bookmark the above webpage and watch
the share price fall and fall, and eventually you'll come to a
conclusion.

Never mind all the politicians and experts saying 'don't cause a run
on the banks'. Remember Northern Rock. Remember all the pension rip-
offs. Remember what granddad used to say about the Great Crash of
1929.

How long will you wait? Soon there may be queues from RBS branches for
a mile down the high street. Get there quick if you want to have a
chance of actually being served!

Look after *yourself* and your family. Don't expect the government to
look after you.

John
Pete C
2008-09-30 19:43:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Brian Gaff
Oh you are the jolly one. Don't you think that if this occurs its
more likely to go down?
Interestingly, on another tack, Lloyds TSB is in the middle of a huge
revamp of its branches. Even my one horse town branch has been
revamped internally, and this makes twice in two years.
Brian
Mm, all done on credit no doubt ;)
--
Pete C
London UK
Harold
2008-09-30 19:52:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Brian Gaff
Oh you are the jolly one. Don't you think that if this occurs its more
likely to go down?
Interestingly, on another tack, Lloyds TSB is in the middle of a huge
revamp of its branches. Even my one horse town branch has been revamped
internally, and this makes twice in two years.
No doubt a one _black_ horse town....
--
Harold
Brian Gaff
2008-10-03 07:49:37 UTC
Permalink
I believe they had to dye the horse in the advert black as well.

I think I'll start selling mattresses for money storage purposes.

Brian
--
Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email.
graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them
Email: ***@blueyonder.co.uk
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Post by Harold
Post by Brian Gaff
Oh you are the jolly one. Don't you think that if this occurs its more
likely to go down?
Interestingly, on another tack, Lloyds TSB is in the middle of a huge
revamp of its branches. Even my one horse town branch has been revamped
internally, and this makes twice in two years.
No doubt a one _black_ horse town....
--
Harold
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