proteus wrote: ↑24 May 2020, 19:29
shotzski wrote: ↑24 May 2020, 12:16
proteus wrote: ↑24 May 2020, 09:46
I wonder how were they able to sign Ricciardo if they are completely out of cash? Noone with sane mind would sign a double digit million driver if you dont have the money.
To me it looks like more as an opportunity to get some free cash compensation, since loss of sales has happened, but since the lockdown is slowly being lifted, cars will start to roll out of the factories soon.
Mclaren cars are a well seeked commodity and a well established brand, so i dont see a problem with regaining momentum. Maybe some cuts will be needed though.
Maybe they have already projected a significant rebound in sales/cash flow come 2021, which by then Daniel's contract would start?
The biggest problems of european and american banks is that they are loaning money which they dont have, the biggest problem of companies on the other side is predicting sales and growth which didnt happen jet. Thats why chinese are owning half of the world economy. They can have 10 years of crisis and they will get trough it, while we get it for few months and half of the companies are in the brink of collapse.
That is pretty much the definition of a prediction, forseeing something that hasn't happened yet. That's why they use the prefix of "pre" in the word. You can't predict something that's already happened. That's called history. I think what you mean is "over ambitous predictions". I'm not sure you're right on that count as Companies have to meet their predictions/forcasts. The stock tends to go up if thier forcasts are high, then down down when they fail to meet those forcasts. When failing to meet its forcasts, becomes a reoccuring theme, markets stop beleive thier forcasts and they nolonger get the stock bounce.
With regards to the banks, you can blame the banks but the problem isn't the banks. It is the people that live in those countries that allow the goverments to regulate the banks in that way. I think canada's bank regs were already strick and they got stricter in 2015 "In simple terms, banks must hold enough high-quality, liquid assets to fund 100 per cent of their cash outflows for 30 days". There is also a global minimum standard set out by the "Basel Committee", that your governemnet should be making sure your banks are meeting.
I'm WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY off topic.