Originally posted by GB9
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Food prices plummet
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It's difficult to avoid making this personal when you're essentially spamming the forum. When you're not posting antisemitic content, you're creating fifty threads on Brexit and posting about the woes of Brexit in all your responses, regardless of topic. It's very tedious.Originally posted by diseasex View PostI'm tired of answering about myself all the time. Talk about topics I post or don't talk to me.Comment
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I never posted antisemitic content, thats why my ban was lifted. Now go awayOriginally posted by jamesbrown View PostIt's difficult to avoid making this personal when you're essentially spamming the forum. When you're not posting antisemitic content, you're creating fifty threads on Brexit and posting about the woes of Brexit in all your responses, regardless of topic. It's very tedious.Comment
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1.72 was a temporary top but was 2 years ago, not one. And we need to remember events like US rate rises, which albeit small will impact on currency valuations.Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostOne of you is overstating it slightly and one understating it, but it doesn't really matter that much
Cable always overshoots; 1.72 was a very temporary top and 1.2 would be a very temporary bottom (IMO). I reckon the stable Cable, so to speak, is around 1.5 without Brexit and 1.3 with Brexit, so around 15%. However, the trade-weighted index is more important in many ways and this index has declined much less (although still at a multi-year low).Comment
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I'd expect dovish minutes from the Fed later, and that was pre-Brexit. There won't be rate rises for a long time now (IMO), even with a bounce back in jobs on Friday. They've revealed an increasingly outward looking mandate in recent months (during and post the Feb crash) w/r to financial stability, despite the US being a relatively self-contained (consumer-driven) economy. For the latter reason, there is a chance of what you suggest; if (for example) Trump wins and decides to replace Yellen with a more hawkish Republican (highly unlikely, and such a move would be unprecedented), but it seems more likely that rates won't rise for a considerable period, probably beyond the next recession.Originally posted by GB9 View Post1.72 was a temporary top but was 2 years ago, not one. And we need to remember events like US rate rises, which albeit small will impact on currency valuations.Comment
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nope you talk with sense, sometimes.Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostCan I be added please?
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