Troll? You obviously don't know "come here" from "sic 'em".
* I recon your query was sincere, though thoroughly uninformed.
* I recon your query was sincere, though thoroughly uninformed.
okTroll? You obviously don't know "come here" from "sic 'em".
* I recon your query was sincere, though thoroughly uninformed.
No country has ever depreciated their currency with the result being economic success. Look at the record of South American countries with their successive devaluations.It'd help our exports? Plain and simple, we have all these products made in China, a weak dollar would bring some manufacturing home. Ofcourse it's never that simple right?
The Eur/Usd went up a lot in the past few months. I'm not familiar with EU politics, but didn't they print a ton of money too for Covid? Or we just printed that much more?
No country has ever depreciated their currency with the result being economic success. Look at the record of South American countries with their successive devaluations.
It'd help our exports? Plain and simple, we have all these products made in China, a weak dollar would bring some manufacturing home. Ofcourse it's never that simple right?
The Eur/Usd went up a lot in the past few months. I'm not familiar with EU politics, but didn't they print a ton of money too for Covid? Or we just printed that much more?
Right, not that simple. A significant contributor however is the very easy, current, money policy of the Powell led fed. This has pushed already low interest rates to rock bottom levels, and in turn has been followed by, among other things, a devalued dollar and price inflation, including upward pressure on equity prices. Small inflationary effects on the equities market may be amplified by human emotion, resulting in a market that prefers to be irrational.It'd help our exports? Plain and simple, we have all these products made in China, a weak dollar would bring some manufacturing home. Ofcourse it's never that simple right?
Yes, not that simple. The Eur/Usd went up a lot in the past few months. I'm not familiar with EU politics, but didn't they print a ton of money too for Covid? Or we just printed that much more?
That would be of course a negative wholesale rate, the rate banks pay for the money they lend. The retail rate,i.e., what you would pay to borrow, will of course remain small but positive.For starters, you can search for European protests this weekend. Mind you, politically around the globe, Wuhan virus has been weaponized. Feet on the ground have very different news accounts with supporting vids and pics. London, Berlin, and Belarus.
But that's only a recent wrinkle. Who of sound mind would pay to achieve a negative interest rate?
Yes the virus has been politically weaponized such as referring to it by the name of the city it was first discovered in, unlike how all the medical and scientific communities around the world refer to.... Mind you, politically around the globe, Wuhan virus has been weaponized...