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#21
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In message , at 12:36:17 on
Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: I'm assuming Well, there you go. Well, it's a pretty safe assumption, and you don't have any facts, either. Come back when you have some. -- Roland Perry |
#22
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#23
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#24
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In message , at 12:38:11 on
Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: This is a form of off-balance sheet government borrowing. I am long past the need to know but thought that accounting standards had now stopped such sale and leaseback deals escaping the balance sheet. I can't see TfL arguing successfully it's an operating lease. And I think IFRS16 removes even that distinction from next year for plant and machinery so TfL would have to show a “right to use the stock” asset and a "lease" liability on their balance sheet. It would be much cheaper if the Treasury borrowed the money directly. Cheaper for TfL, yes. Whether it's cheaper for the country depends on what the bond markets decide about UK national debt. And people outside London paying increased fares year by year might ask why Londoners who don't should be bailed out. Yes, that does the raise the question of why TfL is still freezing Tube fares when it doesn't have enough budget to renew life-expired fleets. Because the Mayor made it an election commitment. If he goes back on that, he may well not get re-elected, which party politics aside, will very likely cause turbulence costing more than this one-off deal's low interest rates on money to prop up day to day operations; which they can't raise as a free-standing loan because that's not how public financing works. -- Roland Perry |
#25
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On Mon, 8 Jan 2018 13:31:36 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 12:37:01 on Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: On Mon, 8 Jan 2018 12:09:56 +0000, Roland Perry wrote: In message -septe mber.org, at 11:17:32 on Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: How do you know what the cost of political upheaval after raising taxes is likely to be? But they wouldn't raise taxes. They'd just borrow the money more cheaply, thus ultimately reducing future taxes. What makes you think they have the power to borrow the money required? Are you joking? Of course the Treasury can borrow more. It does so all the time. But can it borrow money to prop up TfL's current account? Remember - the funds raised by the sale/leaseback are being used keep TfL going on a day to day basis. No, as stated in Paul's tweet that started this thread, they're to help fund the new Piccadilly line fleet. |
#26
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#27
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On Mon, 8 Jan 2018 13:32:44 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 12:36:17 on Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: I'm assuming Well, there you go. Well, it's a pretty safe assumption, and you don't have any facts, either. Come back when you have some. And vice versa. Not having facts or the latest publicly available information certainly doesn't stop you commenting on everything. Indeed, why did you even join this thread, as you have zero facts related to it? |
#28
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On Mon, 8 Jan 2018 13:37:12 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 12:38:11 on Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: This is a form of off-balance sheet government borrowing. I am long past the need to know but thought that accounting standards had now stopped such sale and leaseback deals escaping the balance sheet. I can't see TfL arguing successfully it's an operating lease. And I think IFRS16 removes even that distinction from next year for plant and machinery so TfL would have to show a right to use the stock asset and a "lease" liability on their balance sheet. It would be much cheaper if the Treasury borrowed the money directly. Cheaper for TfL, yes. Whether it's cheaper for the country depends on what the bond markets decide about UK national debt. And people outside London paying increased fares year by year might ask why Londoners who don't should be bailed out. Yes, that does the raise the question of why TfL is still freezing Tube fares when it doesn't have enough budget to renew life-expired fleets. Because the Mayor made it an election commitment. If he goes back on that, he may well not get re-elected, which party politics aside, will very likely cause turbulence costing more than this one-off deal's low interest rates on money to prop up day to day operations; which they can't raise as a free-standing loan because that's not how public financing works. Again, get your facts straight: this is not to prop up day-to-day operation. I know you love speculating without facts, while pretending to know what you're talking about, but you could have at least read the tweet that started this thread. |
#29
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#30
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On Mon, 08 Jan 2018 13:50:15 +0000
Recliner wrote: On Mon, 8 Jan 2018 13:37:12 +0000, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 12:38:11 on Mon, 8 Jan 2018, Recliner remarked: This is a form of off-balance sheet government borrowing. I am long past the need to know but thought that accounting standards had now stopped such sale and leaseback deals escaping the balance sheet. I can't see TfL arguing successfully it's an operating lease. And I think IFRS16 removes even that distinction from next year for plant and machinery so TfL would have to show a right to use the stock asset and a "lease" liability on their balance sheet. It would be much cheaper if the Treasury borrowed the money directly. Cheaper for TfL, yes. Whether it's cheaper for the country depends on what the bond markets decide about UK national debt. And people outside London paying increased fares year by year might ask why Londoners who don't should be bailed out. Yes, that does the raise the question of why TfL is still freezing Tube fares when it doesn't have enough budget to renew life-expired fleets. Because the Mayor made it an election commitment. If he goes back on that, he may well not get re-elected, which party politics aside, will very likely cause turbulence costing more than this one-off deal's low interest rates on money to prop up day to day operations; which they can't raise as a free-standing loan because that's not how public financing works. Again, get your facts straight: this is not to prop up day-to-day operation. I know you love speculating without facts, while pretending to know what you're talking about, but you could have at least read the tweet that started this thread. Whatever the reason, if it this has been devised by Boris or some other Tory mayor you can gaurantee corbyn, abbot and the other usual suspects would be making hay in parliament and on TV about it. You'd be able to hear the squeals of righteous indignation from across the channel. But because its little khan golden boy there hasn't been a squeak from any of them. |
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