P
paulie
Guest
The subject of tonights SMTM. Extremely topical given Miachael martin's announcement yesterday. From the RTE website: (try reading it with Eddie's Cork accent )
Mary and Stephen live in rural Wexford. Their two grown up sons have now left home. Stephen is hard working, frugal and quiet living while Mary, 53, drives a Mercedes and enjoys spending money on clothes, on shoes, on her appearance and on a healthy social life.
Together they run a cigarette vending machine business, which they have built up over the last 20 years. The business was always planned as the couple's pension and they hoped that Stephen could retire this year at the age of 62. However, the imminent smoking ban in bars and restaurants has put a very big hole in their retirement plans. A business once worth around €250,000 is now possibly worthless.
Apart from the business Mary and Stephen have very significant and spiralling debts but luckily they also have assets. Their situation now means that they will have to realise these assets so that they can maintain their lifestyle into retirement. But extricating maximum value from their assets proves a huge challenge, not least because of the banking arrangements the couple have entered into. Mary and Stephen provide a salient lesson on how not to deal with banks!
In short both their business and personal finances are in a complicated mess and they need Eddie's help to sort it out. Can they dig themselves out of a bad deal so that they can retire comfortably? And does Mary really need to take a part time job so that she can maintain her spending regime into the future?
Mary and Stephen live in rural Wexford. Their two grown up sons have now left home. Stephen is hard working, frugal and quiet living while Mary, 53, drives a Mercedes and enjoys spending money on clothes, on shoes, on her appearance and on a healthy social life.
Together they run a cigarette vending machine business, which they have built up over the last 20 years. The business was always planned as the couple's pension and they hoped that Stephen could retire this year at the age of 62. However, the imminent smoking ban in bars and restaurants has put a very big hole in their retirement plans. A business once worth around €250,000 is now possibly worthless.
Apart from the business Mary and Stephen have very significant and spiralling debts but luckily they also have assets. Their situation now means that they will have to realise these assets so that they can maintain their lifestyle into retirement. But extricating maximum value from their assets proves a huge challenge, not least because of the banking arrangements the couple have entered into. Mary and Stephen provide a salient lesson on how not to deal with banks!
In short both their business and personal finances are in a complicated mess and they need Eddie's help to sort it out. Can they dig themselves out of a bad deal so that they can retire comfortably? And does Mary really need to take a part time job so that she can maintain her spending regime into the future?