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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by MarkG
(Post 4760824)
If they cut rates, the US dollar is toast. They can't raise without crashing the economy and they can't cut without crashing the economy. And with Chinese costs and wages increasing, they can't hold without increasing inflation.
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by cneldred
(Post 4760913)
Some of the comments with the rate hike from BOE were hinting at cuts later in the year.
I'll be surprised if the BoE can cut rates before 2010; I think we're about to see a sustained period of stagflation again as China starts exporting inflation to the West rather than deflation. |
Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by cneldred
(Post 4760919)
Agreed the US is in a world of doo doo.
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by MarkG
(Post 4760942)
Not with inflation currently at the highest level in a decade: and that's just the fudged inflation numbers, not real inflation.
I'll be surprised if the BoE can cut rates before 2010; I think we're about to see a sustained period of stagflation again as China starts exporting inflation to the West rather than deflation. The comment i was referring to was 'CPI likely to slow to around 2% during the course of 2007' doo doo, the family friendly version yes. |
Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by cneldred
(Post 4761062)
The comment i was referring to was 'CPI likely to slow to around 2% during the course of 2007'
The only way CPI will drop to 2% is if Gordon Brown fiddles the figures even worse than he already has, and then the disparity between CPI and RPI will only get more and more blatant. The last time RPI was this high, interest rates were over 10%, but that was back when we had a government that actually tried to keep inflation under control. |
Re: Exchange rate
So if the US are in the sh1t, how will this reflect on the Canadian economy or wont it?
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by Danny B
(Post 4761095)
So if the US are in the sh1t, how will this reflect on the Canadian economy or wont it?
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by MarkG
(Post 4761116)
The parts that rely on America will be in the crap too, but I'm not sure about the parts that rely on China (e.g. oil and other resources). China will be hit by a US recession, but I'm not sure if it will be hit hard enough to create a global recession.
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by steve666
(Post 4761130)
Does anyone agree that Canadian oil is the only buffer Canada has to stop the US problems cascading through their economy?
Obviously, as I said, Chinese and American problems are connected, but some economists seem to believe that China won't be hit hard by a US recession while some believe China will be hit even worse than America; so it's hard to tell. |
Re: Exchange rate
European Central Bank just signaled to the market they will raise rates next month, this was expected. Euro should remain strong and may add a little strength to GBP£.
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Re: Exchange rate
Hmmm... Is it me or has the exchange rate got worse by quite a lot in the last two hours or so?
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Re: Exchange rate
Ouch. Yes, I guess that people are selling off pounds now they know the interest rate rise is only 0.25%.
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by cneldred
(Post 4761225)
European Central Bank just signaled to the market they will raise rates next month, this was expected. Euro should remain strong and may add a little strength to GBP£.
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by Andthen
(Post 4761266)
Hmmm... Is it me or has the exchange rate got worse by quite a lot in the last two hours or so?
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Re: Exchange rate
Originally Posted by MarkG
(Post 4761296)
Ouch. Yes, I guess that people are selling off pounds now they know the interest rate rise is only 0.25%.
I'm getting the hang of this:) |
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