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Thailand's surging baht shatters expat dreams of easy retirement


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5 hours ago, MadMuhammad said:

Can anyone give me a link to a currency chart GBP to THB that goes back further than the Asian Financial Crisis when the value of the pound blew out against the Thai Baht? 

Just curious as to what it was tracking at historically 

Not clear from the graph as it's so compressed, but this is from January 1st 1980 to date.

 

https://fxtop.com/en/historical-exchange-rates.php?A=1&C1=GBP&C2=THB&TR=1&DD1=01&MM1=01&YYYY1=1980&B=1&P=&I=1&DD2=03&MM2=10&YYYY2=2019&btnOK=Go!

 

 

$$$$BOX5a.jpg

Edited by robsamui
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5 hours ago, LazySlipper said:

Really? The THB is strong and hurting expats lifestyle?

 

Let me get my reading glasses... must have missed something.

I think its the other way round . A weak Pound not a strong Baht, same as the Euro, Aus Dollar. Thailand doesn't want a strong Baht but thats its value against other currencies . Thailand is in a good position with its Foreign currence account although business isn't to good  but as long as the foreign reserve account is good there is no problems as all foreign debts are covered.

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Look at the chart from 2004 till now. I arrived before that.

 

       Average   Min       Max

2019 39.843576 36.912582 42.135820 191
2018 43.143031 41.106658 44.788483 255
2017 43.687648 42.662436 45.038995 255
2016 47.811798 42.561910 53.389785 257
2015 52.412438 47.508283 56.314708 256
2014 53.510748 51.073109 55.590778 255
2013 48.097056 43.649422 54.280763 255
2012 49.246528 47.676398 50.391250 256
2011 48.884682 46.616201 50.033731 257
2010 48.960109 46.195049 53.764811 258
2009 53.698016 47.591350 57.831041 256
2008 61.012502 50.295627 67.294325 256
2007 64.633642 59.579150 70.624953 255
2006 69.821829 66.410146 72.380464 255
2005 73.214701 70.363214 75.813507 257
2004 73.698138 69.926319 76.498465 259
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good and bad times = money wise Thailand.

Yet no complaints just another mind set needed.

be it that study, insurance and rentals are the most effected in increase by exchange rates.

that's life everywhere in the world i guess

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26 minutes ago, robsamui said:

Not clear from the graph as it's so compressed, but this is from January 1st 1980 to date.

 

https://fxtop.com/en/historical-exchange-rates.php?A=1&C1=GBP&C2=THB&TR=1&DD1=01&MM1=01&YYYY1=1980&B=1&P=&I=1&DD2=03&MM2=10&YYYY2=2019&btnOK=Go!

 

 

$$$$BOX5a.jpg

I’ve got a clearer one here. 

 

As posted above, at a quick glance excluding the obvious skewed AFC, of which will never happen again in our lifetime, I rate the GBP to THB @ a fair value of 45:1. Not that much far off what it is now. 

 

Again, I’m not an economist nor do I have any real chart experience. 

62CF87D0-1EFD-432D-B8A1-EFD2E08951B6.jpeg

Edited by MadMuhammad
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6 hours ago, Dmaxdan said:

In fairness, from the point of view of British expats, the strong baht is only the tip of the iceberg. Brexit and our idiotic government are the main villains with regards to current exchange rates.

Took the words right out of my head.

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6 hours ago, LazySlipper said:

Really? The THB is strong and hurting expats lifestyle?

 

Let me get my reading glasses... must have missed something.

what is so difficult for you to understand?

the statement is true

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Just now, moe666 said:

If you planned your retirement thinking it would be 70 to the lb forever then you made a drastic mistake. Most of the brits I know get a pension around 1500 to 2000lb a month not much really

your figures are absolute rubbish, not accurate at all

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17 minutes ago, HHTel said:

Although I'm still 'afloat', I certainly didn't plan to live on half of what I was getting when I arrived.  The pound was getting 73 for a while and now it's half that coupled with rising prices.

 

For those (myself included) that bought a house then and if planning to leave should make a massive profit on the sale.  My house cost around 7 mill to build which was a little under 100,000 pounds.  If I get 10 mill for it now that converts to around 270,000 quid!

Of course that only works if you're planning to leave the country.

But your not planning to leave so your investment is ok, better in the building then in the bank.

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5 hours ago, RichardColeman said:

Sounds like another fool not planning his life properly with no escape route.

Well one thing is sure. And that is that you can not trust a goverment.

Dispite all your planning we see around the world many running into problems with the pensions they. have.

 

There are countries that even half the pension when you live in countries like Thailand because they say all is cheaper.

 

In the mean time even in thailand all prices did go up rapidly and today for many things thailand are having an eqaul costs or are even more expensive.

 

You see many companies move out in the past 5 yeard and what comes back are older people who have a pension. The bath is getting stronger makes then the exchanged income becomes lower and many drop a lot. When have no extra source of income you run into problems dispite the fact that you have been here a long time and have been integrates into the local village or area. Makes all the you can not comply to the (new) rules set by the goverment back home and the thai goverment

 

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would be great to be a well-off retiree, look at me sitting back pocking sh---t I am doing the hard yard not because of my plans but because as the baht rises my pension does not being am Aussie with a very weak pension it does not take much to upset the balance I am glad the manager of the Thailand central bank has started the slowing down process how ever small it is

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2 hours ago, Scot123 said:

There ares so many nasty twisted people on this site. If they are themselves really expats then their self hate is amazing. I first set foot in Thailand in 2002 and fell in love. Was here in 2006 and witnessed first hand the changes in attitude to farang and nearly all my friends left Thailand. Moved here again in 2010 then new coup again the change in attitude towards expats. You must be in self deniel not to see or have felt it or in many cases blinded by the commitment you have and terrified of failure. We as a family decided to pull the plug on Thailand October 2018 left in March 2019. Not because we had to financially but because of the changes in immigration and the overwhelming not knowing what was coming. 6 police vehicles turning up at one's house in the morning full of police will do that to you. The 800k or 400k in the bank yep that was a doozy, then the gift of 400k or 200k to the banks please don't make me laugh. The compulsory insurance is just around the corner (that one scared me). I started comparing costs and was shocked at how expensive Thailand had become for us and our way of life compared to UK. We are all glad to be home children, wife and me. I do miss the weather, I do miss my friends. Oh and we left our house which I was just about to build my dream extension on..... Countries should not be run by soldiers from an ex soldier. 

You have your delusions we have ours ????

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1 hour ago, Lacessit said:

It's only tough for those living close to the edge.

I just wonder why the Thai government can't bring itself to say to retirees - live here for three years with a clean slate, and we will scrap extensions, 90 day reports and TM30's. Transgress, we will kick you out. I could live with that.

 

Extensions, 90s and TM30 don't cost very much though. However it would be a great step.

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17 minutes ago, nickmondo said:

rubbish

Brexit has nothing to do with the strength of the baht.

Aus, USA, EU, they all doing same as Brexit?

 

But i has. Investors who want to invest in the UK are waiting to see what the situation will be. Boris will sort it out. I'm a leaver I can't say I've benitited

 

21 minutes ago, PEE TEE said:

I'm sure even with the strong THB  and the weak GBP is still cheaper that living back in the UK . I recon after around another 3 years the GBP will go up again ( i hope ) 

Thank to Boris. 

Edited by Percy P
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