Gaz (FMwkdsoul)
Well-Known Member
19 voted in fav, see who the outlier was and if they kick off.That assumes everyone impacted by the inclusion of Shareholder loans is happy to include them
19 voted in fav, see who the outlier was and if they kick off.That assumes everyone impacted by the inclusion of Shareholder loans is happy to include them
You are Rob Harris and I claim my £115.
You've lost me. 19 voted in favour of what?19 voted in fav, see who the outlier was and if they kick off.
leaving out shareholder loans from the initial APT rules.You've lost me. 19 voted in favour of what?
I recall an article in the NYT which claimed the "object" description above implied it was knowingly included as unlawful, do you agree with that interpretation?The judgment seems pretty clear to me that if tested PSR is also unlawful per the shareholder loan point - so separate but deeply connected. But I think it will be fixed.
As it happens I think there is an error in para 258 on this point. It says the Tribunal have been asked whether the exclusion of shareholder loans from the PSR distorts competition. But then go on to answer for APT Rules. City submitted that the exclusion of shareholder loans from the APT Rules was an object restriction. And the Tribunal agreed but it did not conclude on PSR as far as I can see unless anyone can spot it.
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Newcastle - somewhat unsurprisingly - our voting in favour was a surprise tho'.19 voted in fav, see who the outlier was and if they kick off.
Right, sorry - that was kinda my original point. They're now looking to get those 19 to vote the other way. I'm not sure enough of them willleaving out shareholder loans from the initial APT rules.
Don't understand the question. If you mean does a finding of object restriction equate to a finding that its inclusion was by design, yes I think it does.I recall an article in the NYT which claimed the "object" description above implied it was knowingly included as unlawful, do you agree with that interpretation?
Do you think shareholders loans for APT and shareholders loans for FFP/PSR are separate issues?
Simplistically, you would think if the treatment of shareholder loans makes the APT rules unlawful, then it makes the PSR rules unlawful too, if challenged. And if the rules have been applied unlawfully since inception, that is a big problem.
But, I suppose, there may be different arguments for the current PSR position compared to the current APT position.