Dirua

Started by drici, July 01, 2016, 09:50:09 AM

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drici

1.19833

1.29997

drici

1.19786

1.30411

drici

1.20052

1.30375

drici

1.20205

1.30155

drici

1.19207

1.28447

drici

1.18682

1.27231

rosnarun

Quote from: muppet on July 05, 2016, 01:04:56 PM
Quote from: Lar Naparka on July 05, 2016, 12:58:00 PM
Any harm in asking WTF this is all about?

Brexit's effect on sterling.

Falling slowly.......


TODay 1.19033
then    1-19919

after 6 years  is it not pretty Obvious that despite the naysayers brexitt has had feckk all effect on the english economy and were all happier apart.  the EU is not such a roaring success that it cant be lived without
If you make yourself understood, you're always speaking well. Moliere

drici

1.18828

1.25127

drici

1.19171

1.25686

drici

1.18761

1.25225

Franko

Quote from: rosnarun on April 26, 2022, 11:07:43 AM
Quote from: muppet on July 05, 2016, 01:04:56 PM
Quote from: Lar Naparka on July 05, 2016, 12:58:00 PM
Any harm in asking WTF this is all about?

Brexit's effect on sterling.

Falling slowly.......


TODay 1.19033
then    1-19919

after 6 years  is it not pretty Obvious that despite the naysayers brexitt has had feckk all effect on the english economy and were all happier apart.  the EU is not such a roaring success that it cant be lived without

This thread was started over a week after the vote

Before the vote, it was over 1.30

Also, in reality, Brexit hasn't really begun.  Grace periods for various products are still carrying on at all ports and the UK are still accepting CE marked products until the beginning of 2023.

So I suppose the answer is yes - it is pretty obvious.  But only if you don't really look.

bennydorano

In the financial crash of the late 2000s Sterling was at €1.08.

Brexit is the UK spiting itself economically for non quantifiable benefits in other areas, namely sovereignty & immigration. The red tape at ports etc.. are nuisances economically but the UK will only really pay for Brexit if the EU nobbles the City of London / big Finance.

Franko

Quote from: bennydorano on May 03, 2022, 05:39:04 PM
In the financial crash of the late 2000s Sterling was at €1.08.

Brexit is the UK spiting itself economically for non quantifiable benefits in other areas, namely sovereignty & immigration. The red tape at ports etc.. are nuisances economically but the UK will only really pay for Brexit if the EU nobbles the City of London / big Finance.

Yeah, I understand that rates can fluctuate.  ::)

But this drop was quite clearly driven by a single event.

Define "only really pay"

drici

1.18509

1.25010

marty34

Interest rates up again!

Is a reccession on the way?