General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here. |
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#1 |
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#3 |
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I am not an FX speculator, but FX plays a huge role in my financial well-being and will for the foreseeable future.
What I can do is read some blogs/etc (Which I do, and would be glad if anyone would point me to more) and learn about other people's observations (because they also make up a minor component of the market, and normal people as a whole make up a potentially major component of the market). JM |
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#9 |
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On the up side every young Greek with remotely any talent will soon be in either North America or Northern Europe so I see cheap but authentic Greek restaurants in our futures. |
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#10 |
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Are you parodying your own incessant tendency to relate everything to trendy cuisine, or do you honestly think that way? Even if it's the latter, it'd probably be better for everyone involved in this thread if you simply claimed the former. |
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#11 |
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Jon, what makes you think you will get any insight as to the right answer? Nobody here is a professional fx speculator, and as the closest thing to one that poly has (closest being purely relative), I simply refuse to answer due to my lacking any real belief that I know the answer. You also seem to have a good self-taught knowledge of monetary economics, so you're probably aware that "which currency purchases more per some arbitrary unit" is a very different question than "how many people are willing to use this currency?" If I say a Euro will probably go for about $1.20 next year, that doesn't imply I think that the Eurozone will be healthy. |
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#14 |
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#15 |
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#16 |
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Double-edged sword there. If you're counting on being in a place with a strong "sticky wage" effect, then you're also going to be in a place with high unemployment and other social ills. ![]() Dollar index dropped something like 25% from just a couple years previous in 2008 didn't it? Commodities adjust on the fly of course. Wages certainly did not. Over here in the Philippines it was the opposite story. PHP appreciated about 20% against the dollar from 2009 to 2010. Wages didn't drop because of it. But if you had known this was going to happen, and you had two similar jobs (salary at the time) denominated in USD and PHP respectively... you'd have been much better off in terms of change in purchasing power to take the PHP one. (Or if back during the Asian financial crisis when PHP went from 2:1 to 40:1 against the dollar, you'd have been much better off with the USD denominated salary job.) It sounds like Jon is trying to determine if a similar situation will develop in regards to his current job in Europe vs potential jobs in the US. |
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#20 |
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Greece is a world apart from Spain. In many respects, Spain works. Greece doesn't even have the institutions necessary to maintain a first-world economy -- e.g., it was impossible to know how much it was spending, even as minister of finance.
That said, Spain is being pushed into the same corner that Greece put itself in. Greece is a failure of Greece, but I view Spain as a failure of Europe. |
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