Welcome to my Residual Income Site

You are not far away from the most important decision you will ever make!

Please read this entire page carefully do not miss any of it.

My name is Colin Warburton, and I work full time from home in the UK.

What I want to share with you will help you decide what the best way is to make a Residual Income in the UK.

The information below will give you a strong overview of how I believe the mistakes I, and possibly yourself, have made, can be avoided.

I am lucky in that I work full-time from my home. I have no boss to report to, and I have the freedom to use my time in any way I like. But you can obtain a residual income even if you aren't in the same position.

Do you believe in the following statement by Zig Ziglar: "You can have anything in the world you want if you'll just help enough other people get what they want."

Unfortunately, if you are looking to make a residual income, most of what we are taught does not do that.

Bearing in mind that over 95% of people in MLM will fail, is that the way you should be proceeding if you want to make a residual income? No matter what people tell you, it just isn't that easy.

There is another way to Achieve your Residual Income and it doesn't have to involve the internet. What you need is something that has been done before and based on a solid business.

And you need to be guided by people that are doing well, not someone who started 2 days before you! (sound familiar?)

You need proper training ... by people who are good... you should never be left guessing what to do next.

If you are really serious about being in that top 5% that actually make a good residual income then fill in the form below for more information. Or if you don't want to give your information yet, go here. (you will need sound)

Good Luck


Colin
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Colin Warburton


A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty. We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give. --Winston Churchill


Friday 8 April 2011

UK Business Energy Prices Drop:

Energy Prices Drop Despite The Cold Weather


Despite going through one of the coldest winters in history, UK energy prices dropped. Strong gas supply from Norway, imported LNG and the restart of a nuclear reactor helped bring household and business energy prices down.


Normally when temperatures drop gas prices go up. This winter temperatures are several degrees below seasonal average which should have rocketed gas prices. Energy prices are highly influenced by gas prices, so every time gas prices go up energy prices soon follow.


“Everything has traded lower on gas,” said an energy broker.


Back in December we reported that UK Business Gas Prices Drop despite Forecasted Cold Spell, at the time a strong supply from Norway and Netherlands plus strong imports of LNG forced gas traders to lower their prices.


The same is happening again. National Grid data showed Norwegian gas via Langeled was flowing 69 mcm/day, while the Interconnector was adding 12mcm/day and Britain’s LNG terminals were supply around 90 mcm.


Gas prices for Wednesday dropped 60p for spot contracts compared to late December and were traded at 57.80 pence per therm. Gas for February and March was down 2 pence and was traded at 57.80 and 57.50, respectively.


In the power market energy prices followed and British baseload power prices for delivery on Wednesday was 49.85 pounds per megawatt-hour (MWh) and 55 pounds per MWh in peak, down GBP1.65 per MWh.


On the N2EX wholesale power exchange, the day-ahead power auction cleared GBP3.51 lower than the previous day at GBP48.65/MWh.


But gas wasn’t the only reason energy prices dropped. The restart of Oldbury 2 220 MW nuclear reactor and its reintegration to the grid also played an important role in plunging UK energy prices.


There are also energy brokers that believe floods in Australia might influence UK gas and energy prices if coal supply is interrupted. UK coal surplus is high which means it won’t affect prices just yet.


Further more, weekend base was heard at GBP48/MWh, down GBP3 from the previous weekend, and week 2 base was offered at GBP50.75/MWh.


View the original article here


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