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| | | ... from being made." Andy was talking about sterling and UK interest rates but he could just as well be talking about the US dollar and US interest rates. The Fed needs to thread very carefully for rushing a lift-off to normalise policy under these abnormal ... |
| | | | ... did not answer Financial Standard's questions about the issue. HUB24 clients will have access to three equity ETFs, a US Dollar currency ETF and a physically-backed gold ETF. "ANZ ETFS products are now available on a range of platforms in Australia," ... |
| | | | ... to Indian growth - down to 7.4% from 7.8% -- and Southeast Asia - down to 4.4% from 4.9%. And where the Fed (strong US dollar) and China (weak commodity demand), there surely are lower commodity prices and the ill effects they have on commodity exporting ... |
| | | | ... greater volatility in the financial markets, continued capital flight out of China and emerging markets, an even stronger US dollar which depresses commodity prices even more, slowing the global economy and pressure on inflation. All these threaten to ... |
| | | | ... immediately followed with action yesterday when the PBOC issued a circular commanding the country's banks to set aside US dollar reserves when selling foreign currency in the forwards market. China Money also reported that the Chinese central bank have ... |
| | | | ... these still aren't enough, expect more. But methinks what really gives is the Fed. The tree is the rise and rise of the US dollar and the root is expectations of a Fed lift-off. I've already discussed this last week on this space -- Should the Fed re-launch ... |
| | | | ... find their wares more competitive in the world market. Not only that, exporters would receive an extra boost from their US dollar earnings when it is translated back into Australian dollars. Wait there's more! Australian import-competing industries would ... |
| | | | ... devaluation - for why the sky is falling on financial markets, the root of all this evil is the rise and rise of the US dollar - prompted, of course, by speculations that a US interest rate hike is coming soon to a theatre near us. The yuan devaluation ... |
| | | | The 2.7% drop in Thailand's SET index and the half a percent drop in the Thai baht to 38.58 versus the US dollar - the lowest since April 2009 -- dominated the financial press headlines the day after the night (17 August) Bangkok was bombed. As it should. ... |
| | | | ... for a long while longer? More so, if you consider that the index had been hit by export weakness because of the strong US dollar because of Fed lift-off expectations. More so, if you consider that the index had been hit by energy equipment purchases ... |
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