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Bank of Thailand explains sudden appreciation of Baht


Jonathan Fairfield

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52 minutes ago, chowny77 said:

I am just waiting for the baht to explode as too many people are already in debt and the housing building boom is out of control. Possibly a re-occurrence of 1997. No way the banks can talk their way out of obviously making the baht strong with no financial backing.

Maybe right but timing it is very difficult

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36 minutes ago, Maverell said:

It certainly looks that way, its the same of course with the THB/GBP rate. Perhaps some one who knows about these things can enlighten us?

 

I don't claim to understand these things, but it does make sense. Bills come due at the end of the month/beginning of the following month. Thus, there is a demand for Baht. Individuals and businesses are forced to sell foreign currency in order to obtain Baht to meet their liabilities. Since a disproportianate amount of Baht is needed at the end of the month vs. any other time for salaries, one would expect due to supply and demand for the Baht to rise in value during this period. It should similarly drop during the middle of the month when demand for Baht is at its lowest.

 

Sadly, I never see the "dropping" part. Once the Baht has risen, it seems to stay stuck. And that goes back to my previous rant about how hard it is for anyone to send foreign currency out of the country. The "once a Baht, always a Baht" policy of the BoT seems to be working as intended.

 

Edited by Monomial
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2 hours ago, marko kok prong said:

He think us falang are all butterballs

All Thais think us falangs are butterballs.

 

But then all Thais think Thais are smartypants too so how much faith can you really have in what they think?

 

If 'thinking' is the right word.

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1 hour ago, ramrod711 said:

Let's create a completely fictional scenario, there is a rogue unelected government. Leaders of said fictional government fear that they may end up persona non grata just like leaders of past nonfictional governments. It may be in the interests of such a government to have a very strong baht so that they could buy foreign currency at a reduced rate. All theoretical conjecture of course and no factual information to back it up.

Unelected government like the government that is in power now?

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2 hours ago, Maverell said:

It certainly looks that way, its the same of course with the THB/GBP rate. Perhaps some one who knows about these things can enlighten us?

It also seems to dip every Friday which of course stays until the following Monday.

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1 hour ago, Chivas said:

Wrong every nationality is getting fried as the benchmark Dollar/Baht ratio effects absolutely everyone exchanging money

No, not at all. Every nationality that works in Thailand, earns a salary in Thai baht, and regularly wires some amount of their salary out of Thailand, is actually benefiting from this. And this is not a small group -- undoubtedly much larger than the number of moaning penniless pensioners that post on ThaiVisa.com

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3 hours ago, zydeco said:

29.75 now. Happy New Year! Donald is getting the cheap dollar he wanted. And Americans in Thailand are getting fried.

29.75 is not low enough.

 

Donald Trump wants it lower than 29 to break the record which is the lowest in the past 10 years.

 

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