As soon as a share suffers a pre-ordained percentage fall it is sold, whatever the story Lynx is the ideal example of when such a policy would work But Safeway and S&U represent the other side of the coin. I know an investor can always sell and buy back although the cost of such exercises must be considered.I prefer a more flexible policy. After all, the no pain, no gain portfolio is for the long haul. It is not aimed at active traders although they may find it adds to their store of knowledge. My intention is to cater for investors who take a keen but relaxed interest in the stock market and are not glued to their screens, frantically following share movements.It is foolish to pretend there is a foolproof method for dealing with the unpredictability of the stock market.
Safeway and S&U, on the one hand, and Lynx, on the other, demonstrate the merits of an instinctive, more flexible approach, and a more regulated regime. I prefer the freedom to buy and sell when I think the time is right.. Train guards on South West Trains have called off their planned strikes for tomorrow, Friday, and next Tuesday. Train guards on South West Trains have called off their planned strikes for tomorrow, Friday, and next Tuesday. Members of the Rail Maritime and Transport union were due to walk out for twenty-four hours in both instances because of ongoing disputes over industrial relations. However, the union executive today accepted a new offer from the employers.The union's assistant general secretary said that they were delighted to have resolved the dispute, and denied that they simply protesting about the coloured waistcoats and badges they were supposed to wear..
The family of a man hanged and later cleared of two of the infamous 10 Rillington Place murders has launched a compensation claim for "51 years of silence and disbelief". The family of a man hanged and later cleared of two of the infamous 10 Rillington Place murders has launched a compensation claim for "51 years of silence and disbelief". Timothy Evans, 25, a Welsh van driver with an IQ of 70 who boasted that he was the son of an Italian count, was executed in 1950 for strangling his wife Beryl and his 14-month-old daughter, Geraldine, the previous year.The bodies of the mother and child were found buried in a washroom at their flat in Notting Hill, west London, shortly after Beryl had told friends that she wanted to undergo an illegal abortion.Three years after Mr Evans was hanged, John Christie, a neighbour in the house at 10 Rillington Place, confessed to strangling eight female victims including Beryl and her baby daughter. He too was executed.The confession by Christie, 40, which gripped post-war Britain with its grisly insight into the first mass murder of the era, uncovered one of the most notorious miscarriages of justice in British legal history.In the face of apparently overwhelming evidence gathered by two public inquiries that Christie had sent his neighbour to the gallows, Mr Evans received an official royal pardon in 1966 A compensation claim to the Home Office was rejected. But the award last week of £600,000 in damages to the family of Mahmood Mattan, a Somali sailor wrongly executed in 1952, has prompted Mr Evans's sister, Eleanor Ashby, 79, to try again.Mrs Ashby, of Chippenham, Wiltshire, who remembers her mother, Thomasina Probert, receiving the pardon letter, said: "The pardon offered some comfort but nobody knows how his family suffered."It has been 51 years of silence and disbelief. Every time a miscarriage of justice comes to light, we think of it I would like people to know that he really was innocent. We feel like the victims."The case has been taken up by Bernard de Maid, the Cardiff solicitor who was employed by the family of Mr Mattan to seek to overturn his conviction for slitting the throat of a South Wales pawnbroker, Lily Volpert.Despite having four alibi witnesses, the 28-year-sailor, who was described by his own defence lawyer as a "semi-civilised savage", was convicted and executed within six months of the murder.Mr De Maid believes a six-figure sum similar to that paid by the Home Office after Mattan's conviction was quashed by the Court of Appeal in 1998 could also be awarded in the case of Mr Evans. He said: "The two cases are quite similar: someone was wrongly executed and information has been found that someone else was guilty of the murder."There are issues to be resolved about whether there was any misconduct on the part of the Metropolitan Police in the Evans case.
