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The Law
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May 18 2005, 08:59 PM
because in some cases the rate given to people is 19.9% .

in this case how can other retailers advertise Televisions at £40 then have £300 tv's in stock.
some of you people need to get a life

Welcome to the forum No.1!

Your lack of understanding the simplest of concepts is impressive :unsure:

A shop advertising cheap goods must have a certain number in stock to make such a claim. However, the ASA accept that stocks are limited, and that at a certain point the goods will run out whilst the advert still circulates. An example of cases where action has been taken is Richer Sounds (who have been going rather downhill of late in a rather spooky parallel to YCC way) who was regularly advertising 25 pound DVD players (back then a rarity) but having about 100 units to go round (Nationally!).

However, with an APR, this is not a special offer or finite supply item, so in order to claim that this is the most regularly offered APR, they must be able to substantiate it against their average customer base and the rates offered on average. I feel they would find this stat tricky to prove.... :angry:

p.s Got a life thanks!
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