Octavos 9/16 de Enero: Recreativo – Villarreal Sevilla – Barcelona Betis – Valencia At. Madrid – Valladolid Getafe – Levante Mallorca – Real Madrid Zaragoza – Rácing Athletic – Español Cuartos 23/30 de Enero: Ganador Recreativo – Villarreal vs Sevilla – Barcelona Ganador Betis – Valencia vs At. Madrid – Valladolid Ganador Getafe – Levante vs Mallorca – Real Madrid Ganador Zaragoza – Rácing vs Athletic – Español Mis
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¿Cómo valoras los enfrentamientos en los octavos y cuartos de Copa del Rey?
Buenas noches… Hoy he flipado en colores….ya es el no va más…. Vale que no es un medio informativo que me guste mucho ( demasiada política en las cadenas) pero hoy, en un especial ésta noche en TV con cámara oculta se han reflejado una por una las monstruosidades que se cometen en dicha comunidad ( y
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¿ Por qué NO se les PERMITE a los niños en el COLEGIO hablar el CASTELLANO.en el PAIS VASCO?
The Spanish property market is in too much of a mess for a real BMV market to exist, according to agents specialising in distressed property in the country. Struggling developers, desperate homeowners and banks stocked with repossessions are all setting their prices according to how badly they want to sell, meaning a benchmark price is virtually impossible in many of the tourist hotspots. And without a standard to measure against, agents are left to secure whatever price they can for each situation. “Something is worth what someone else is prepared to pay for it and that’s that,” says Inez Rix, owner of Direct Auctions. “You have an open market price (not value), a bank valuation (upon which they base their lending), the offer price and the declared price at notary! No wonder there is no benchmarking for Spanish property .” The problem is so severe that one unit might be on sale for 50% less than the identical unit next door, says Darren Carter, owner of distressed agent Goldberg & Partners. “It all depends on the seller, the buyer and even the weather or what week it is as to what price will be agreed. A developer or bank might have sold three units at one price last week and not want to sell at the same price this week.” The ability to sell at a below market value is also hampered by the banks’ mortgage regulations. In Portugal, developers are offering units with 100% LTV mortgages by fixing prices at 80% of the lending bank’s valuation, effectively removing the need for a deposit. “In Spain this isn’t legal as the Bank of Spain ensures their normal lending criteria is adhered to,” says Rix. “In order to achieve a percentage of borrowing against the higher bank valuation, one now has to obtain a doctored purchase contract.” Carter says there are now better finance deals for buying bank product in Spain, “even 90 or 100% LTV on the price of the property but not including closing costs”, but the mortgage market has become too dynamic. “It feels like banks will offer one LTV one week and a different one next week once they’ve got their quota for the month.” Story from OPP (subscription)
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The Myth of BMV Spanish Property
Yo creo que quedarán Guadalajara 3, charales jar8s 1 Pongo al Guadalajara primero porque siempre es local, juegue en donde juegue.Las mejores ofertas de vuelos a Guadalajara las encontrarás en l3b.es
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10 puntos ¿Cuanto quedará el Guadalajara-Veracruz?
King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia officially opened the new Terminal 3 at Malaga Airport on Monday 15th March. The new terminal doubles the capacity of the airport from being able to handle 4,500 passengers to 9,000 passengers per hour. The new terminal has 180 check-in desks, 48 boarding gates, 11,000 m2 of shops, 3,700 parking spaces, and is capable of handling 14,000 suitcases per hour.The opening took place in the presence of 500 local and national dignitaries, including the President of the Junta de Andalucia , Juan Antonio Griñan. The first flight to use the new facilities left Malaga at 06.50 on Tuesday morning, bound for Barcelona . Unfortunately, most visitors from the UK won´t get to use the new terminal, as most of the low-cost carriers will continue to operate from Terminal 2. Related Posts The Ideal House in Spain… Malaga Cruises Booming Travelling by Train in Spain
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King of Spain Opens New Terminal at Malaga Airport
In a bumper news week, there’s good and bad news for Spain. Let’s get the bad news out of the way first - and end on a high. Remember my soapbox rant last week about how public sector striking will only add to Spain’s woes? Well, the public won, and the government caved in over pension reforms . This is particularly bad news for Spain - who already have precious-few financial tools left to deal with their twin problems of mounting debt and growing unemployment. I have no doubt that whatever they next suggest as a solution will be opposed - and most likely defeated. Unsurprisingly, buying into Spanish government debt via bonds is now seen as a risky business . Advising investors, a Merrill Lynch spokesman said: It’s going to take a very long time - half a generation - for Spain to fix the structural issues they have. Rather than a spectacular short-term event, a more likely outcome is a death-by-a-thousand-cuts-type scenario. My prediction is that Mr Zapatero’s aversion to taking on the unions will cost him at election time. The incoming government will make drastic changes - and suffer temporary unpopularity by doing so - and Spain will eventually enjoy a more sustainable foundation for financial growth. Until then, it’s “death-by-a-thousand-cuts” for Mr Zapatero and the nation he’s supposed to be leading. And now for the good news - and there is a fair bit of it. Last week I boldly proclaimed that we had already passed the bottom of the Spanish property market . It seems that I’m not the only one who thinks so. In Spanish Property Recovery Begins , Mark Stucklin adds some data to that assertion but warns that the recovery is not happening uniformly throughout Spain, nor across all types of property. Mark’s summary is backed up by the latest TINSA house valuation trend too. No-one is predicting a spectacular U-turn in the fortunes of Spanish property - and you wouldn’t believe them if they did. Even so, any kind of a recovery is welcome news right now. There are also hints that Spain’s building societies are playing their part in the fragile recovery. An update on lending in Spain provides the cheery news that: Spanish Banks are slowly relaxing their lending criteria with one or two offering more attractive deals and higher LTV’s. And finally, in the fairly unlikely event that you’re a higher rate tax payer and employed by a Spanish company, you can now benefit from the same tax breaks as David Beckham. Martin Dell, Kyero.com
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Spanish Property: And Now for the Good News
Está bloqueada para un operador inglés. Se ha llevado a varias tiendas de Fuengirola y Marbella y la remiten siempre a la misma empresa de Málaga, la cual no puede, o no se quiere comprometer, a liberarla.Si buscas el mejor precio de vacaciones en Marbella, búscalo en l3b.es
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Como liberar una BLACKBERRY 6020?
Investors should avoid Spain’s bonds as the euro region’s highest levels of joblessness stifle the country’s ability to cut its budget deficit, according to Invesco Ltd. and Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Lynch unit. Spanish debt isn’t yielding enough to compensate investors for buying the bonds of a country with the euro region’s third- largest budget deficit, according to Axel Blase, a fund manager in Frankfurt at Invesco. Investors receive a 69 basis-point yield premium for holding Spanish 10-year bonds rather than German bunds, compared with 313 basis points for Greek debt. “It’s not a time to increase exposure to Spain,” said Blase, who helps oversee the company’s $423 billion in assets. “The country is in rather serious difficulties and the risk premium on Spanish bonds isn’t that attractive.” Concern that Europe’s most recession-battered nations aren’t doing enough to contain their deficits sent Greek bond yields to the highest in more than a decade, and helped push the euro 4.6 percent lower against the dollar this year. While attention focused initially on Greece, Spain may take years to recover from the recession, according to Johan Jooste, a strategist at Merrill Lynch Wealth Management in London. “It’s going to take a very long time — half a generation — for them to fix the structural issues they have,” Jooste said. “Rather than a spectacular short-term blow up, a more likely outcome is a death-by-a-thousand-cuts-type scenario.” The country’s economy, which is more than four times the size of Greece, has been contracting since the second quarter of 2008. The deficit reached 11.4 percent last year, almost four times the EU’s 3 percent limit, compared with 12.7 percent for Greece. Optimistic Forecast Standard & Poor’s said Feb. 26 the Spanish government’s growth forecasts may be too optimistic, predicting average gross domestic product expansion of 0.6 percent through 2013, compared with the 1.5 percent upon which lawmakers are basing budget measures. The public debt burden will rise above 80 percent of GDP by 2012, compared with 40 percent in 2008, S&P said. While Invesco and Merrill Lynch are shunning Spanish debt, Greece is enticing DWS Investment GmbH. Germany’s biggest mutual fund manager said it’s buying Greek bonds as the highest yields in the euro area and the prospect of support from European partners trump concern the country will struggle to reduce spending. Too Tempting “Although we still think challenges ahead for Greece are significant, the values offered by current spreads are too tempting,” Johannes Mueller, a portfolio manager at the company in Frankfurt, said last week. Greece’s 10-year yield reached 7.16 percent on Jan. 28. The yield on 10-year Spanish bonds climbed to a seven-month high of 4.2 percent the same day. Spain’s 10-year bond yield rose 3 basis points to 3.87 percent as of 4:37 p.m. in London today. It will climb to 4.61 percent by mid-2011, according to the median of three analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Spain offered investors a 12 basis-point yield premium over existing debt in a 5 billion-euro ($6.8 billion) sale of new 15- year bonds on Feb. 17. Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s government plans to sell a net 76.8 billion euros of debt this year. The country, which was responsible for more than half of all new jobs in the euro region in the five years through 2006, posted a budget surplus between 2005 and 2007. Deep-Rooted “Spain came into this crisis with actually very, very good debt-to-GDP statistics,” said Jamie Stuttard, head of European and U.K. fixed income at Schroders Plc in London. “Nevertheless Spain has deep-rooted economic problems.” The unemployment rate is the highest in the euro area at 18.8 percent, and the country accounted for more than half the region’s 4.3 million job losses over the last two years, according to data from the European Union’s statistics office. The pace of decline in Spanish tax revenues is a “concern,” Fitch Ratings analysts Paul Rawkins and Chris Pryce said in a presentation in London two days ago. “Labour market inflexibilities could prolong economic adjustment,” they said. Spanish bonds have returned 1.5 percent this year, compared with 2.2 percent for German debt and a loss of 0.8 percent for Greek securities, according to Bloomberg/EFFAS indexes. Story from Business Week
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Investors Urged to Avoid Spanish Bonds
En siete meses España habrá desmantelado su arsenal de bombas de racimo. Así lo anunció la ministra de Defensa Carmen Chacón que ayer visitó las instalaciones de Fabricaciones Extremeñas (Faex) en El Gordo (Cáceres), la empresa encargada de destruir … España se deshace de sus 5.500 bombas de racimo La Vanguardia España, sin bombas de racimo en
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¿ Qué os parece esta medida realizada por Zapatero?
vivimos en gerona, españa mi marido sabe que la vendo no me gustan las motos y no salimos en ella. 2000€Para encontrar el mejor precio en hoteles en Gerona, visita l3b.es
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¿vendo moto de mi marido una yamaha fazer 600 en 2000€?