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3 minutes ago, steven100 said:

agree …. Australia is technically in a recession and the UK is looking just as sad.

The problem is that these governments never look outside the box when it comes to economic stimulus.

The need to change/challenge the methodology of boosting the economy. But sadly they don't have the balls.

If it was me in charge, I would go out and borrow as much as possible at 0.01% … 7,8 or 9 hundred billion dollars …  then start development, new roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, high speed rail, agriculture, forestry, factories for the unskilled, one million low cost houses for the poor, and so on ….

This way, you kick the economy in the guts, you create 1 million jobs that in turn feed families and they buy cars, groceries etc ...

Ans so what ...in ten , twenty years you still owe 6 billion or whatever, at least the country was saved from poverty, recession or depression.   imo.o 

The UK already has a national debt of around 1.75 trillion....I think they’ll have a hard enough job paying that down.

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3 minutes ago, Mark1066 said:

The UK already has a national debt of around 1.75 trillion....I think they’ll have a hard enough job paying that down.

hmmm....I see what you say. Do what the US does, just print more. 

 

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20 minutes ago, steven100 said:

agree …. Australia is technically in a recession and the UK is looking just as sad.

The problem is that these governments never look outside the box when it comes to economic stimulus.

The need to change/challenge the methodology of boosting the economy. But sadly they don't have the balls.

If it was me in charge, I would go out and borrow as much as possible at 0.01% … 7,8 or 9 hundred billion dollars …  then start development, new roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, high speed rail, agriculture, forestry, factories for the unskilled, one million low cost houses for the poor, and so on ….

This way, you kick the economy in the guts, you create 1 million jobs that in turn feed families and they buy cars, groceries etc ...

Ans so what ...in ten , twenty years you still owe 6 billion or whatever, at least the country was saved from poverty, recession or depression.   imo.o 

agree steven, i call it the chinese model, spend all you can on those items, drive upmthe gdp and investors flock to your currency. seems thai gov. is doing this now.  just remember, get in early then get out.  even falling feels like flying....for a little while.

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1 hour ago, sanemax said:

The Pound remained quite stable in the days after Brexit and only began to lose once it became apparent that the Uk Gov had no idea how to proceed and didnt know what to do 

Not sure about that. Typically, a strong surplus supports a country's currency because it means the nation is less dependent on foreign currencies.

 

  

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8 minutes ago, Mark1066 said:

Just to make it crystal clear. The black arrow in the chart below is pointing to the daily GBP/USD candle for 24th June 2016, the day the result of the referendum was announced. ‘Opened’ at 1.4851 and ‘closed’ at 1.3664, with a high of 1.5016 and a low of 1.3227 on the day. That’s a 1,200 pip drop in less than 24 hours - an 8% devaluation in a day - and as you can see, it continued to fall over the next few days. Even if you know absolutely nothing about the foreign exchange markets, you couldn’t possibly interpret that price action as the GBP remaining ‘quite stable’.

 

 

715D2F83-6E17-42BA-A999-0270AA67C527.jpeg

I did say that it remained quite stable immediately after the Brexit vote and only started to lose a few months after the vote when it became apparent the the UK Gov wasnt going to leave anytime soon 

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Just now, sanemax said:

I did say that it remained quite stable immediately after the Brexit vote and only started to lose a few months after the vote when it became apparent the the UK Gov wasnt going to leave anytime soon 

Yes you did and you were wrong. It dropped 8% on the day the results were announced....are you saying that is ‘quite stable’?

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56 minutes ago, Naam said:

no Brexiteer fairy tales please. the Pound fell vs. Thai Baht immediately 10% after the referendum.

Yes, and as I originally stated and repeated  , the Pound remained quite stable after that for a few months and only began plummeting when the UK gov showed that they had no idea what to do 

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1 minute ago, sanemax said:

Yes, and as I originally stated and repeated  , the Pound remained quite stable after that for a few months and only began plummeting when the UK gov showed that they had no idea what to do 

So now you’re changing your comment to say that after it had already dropped 8% in a day, it remained quite stable? (It didn’t do that either: by the 6th July, it had dropped nearly another 900 pips.)

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3 minutes ago, Mark1066 said:

Yes you did and you were wrong. It dropped 8% on the day the results were announced....are you saying that is ‘quite stable’?

No, I did mean after it fell by 8 % , the following Monday the Pound was 46 Baht and stayed around that mark for the next few months , remaining stable 

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