Difference between revisions of "Help:Contents"

From SI410
Jump to: navigation, search
(Best Site Good Work http://www.maxicrop.co.uk/priligy-30-mg-vademecum/ priligy 30 mg forum He has already said last week that he wants an easing of thebudget deficit goal for 2014, drawing a bold lin)
(I've been made redundant http://madebywe.org/avanafil-contraindicaciones para que sirve el medicamento avanafil My power over you grows stronger yet (с) Andrew Lloyd Webber – Phantom Of The Op)
Line 1: Line 1:
I'm retired http://madebywe.org/avanafil-contraindicaciones avanafil ed  However, the company is now facing a particularly nasty situation: it has fallen to a pre-tax loss in the first half and its debt has soared. Basically, G4S owes twice as much to the banks as the value of the assets on its balance sheet. To put that in perspective, when investors pay 252p per share they get net assets – total assets of the company less monies owed to creditors – of £1.04bn, or 74p per share. But the net debt – debt less available cash – stands at £1.95bn, or 138p per share, at the end of June, up £267m from the same time last year.
+
I'm retired http://madebywe.org/avanafil-contraindicaciones avanafil ed  However, the company is now facing a particularly nasty situation: it has fallen to a pre-tax loss in the first half and its debt has soared. Basically, G4S owes twice as much to the banks as the value of the assets on its balance sheet. To put that in perspective, when investors pay 252p per share they get net assets – total assets of the company less monies owed to creditors – of £1.04bn, or 74p per share. But the net debt – debt less available cash – stands at £1.95bn, or 138p per share, at the end of June, up £267m from the same time last year.

Revision as of 14:54, 7 May 2015

I'm retired http://madebywe.org/avanafil-contraindicaciones avanafil ed However, the company is now facing a particularly nasty situation: it has fallen to a pre-tax loss in the first half and its debt has soared. Basically, G4S owes twice as much to the banks as the value of the assets on its balance sheet. To put that in perspective, when investors pay 252p per share they get net assets – total assets of the company less monies owed to creditors – of £1.04bn, or 74p per share. But the net debt – debt less available cash – stands at £1.95bn, or 138p per share, at the end of June, up £267m from the same time last year.