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Strategies & Market Trends : The coming US dollar crisis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ggersh who wrote (10626)8/21/2008 12:29:18 PM
From: RockyBalboa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71456
 
Why not? It could go to parity!



To: ggersh who wrote (10626)8/22/2008 7:52:32 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Respond to of 71456
 
Oh. there´s a small correction underway. British pound crashed...UK not growing anymore:

AP
UK economic growth ground to a halt in Q2
Friday August 22, 6:52 am ET
By Emily Flynn Vencat, AP Business Writer
UK economic growth ground to a halt in Q2, ending more than 15 years of continuous growth

LONDON (AP) -- British economic growth ground to a halt between April and June, ending more than 15 years of continuous expansion, the government said Friday, as many fear the country is headed for recession.

The growth figure of 0.0 percent is below even the modest 0.2 percent that the Office for National Statistics had predicted.

It ends a run of 63 consecutive quarters -- nearly 16 years -- of growth since the April to June period of 1992, when Britain's gross domestic product shrank.

The figures are the strongest indicator yet -- amid a crashing housing market, falling consumer confidence and inflation running at double government targets -- that Britain is teetering on the brink of a recession.

Economists say that preliminary data shows that the British economy is performing even worse now than it did in the second quarter, meaning that GDP shrinkage is likely to be recorded in the upcoming July to September quarter.

"We've entered a period of quite acute weakness that's unlikely to be short-lived," said Jonathan Loyns, chief European economist at Capital Economics. "There's a good chance we're facing at least two consecutive quarters of negative growth." Two quarters of contraction is one common definition of a recession.

In the midst of the worst housing crash for 30 years, Britain's construction industry has been hit the hardest, the national statistics office said, with construction output falling 1.1 percent.

Meanwhile, manufacturing output fell by 0.8 percent, according to the government figures. That confirms a survey published by the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply earlier this month showing that the Britain's manufacturing activity declined by the most in almost a decade in July.



To: ggersh who wrote (10626)8/22/2008 11:25:02 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71456
 
CAD... It holds up like a champ. All other currencies are way down. Yen, Pound, and Eur off one to 2 cents.