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Hampster Gull

New member
Dec 22, 2010
13,462
Don't go near the Rand. It's put on almost an entire Rand to the Pound in a little over a week.

I'm not a currency speculator. I just went on holiday there and realised I could have had 10% more sauvignon blanc if I'd waited a month.

Ha. I just got back too and its moved from 20 to 21 i think. Really good value for us down there. Where did you go?
 






gregbrighton

New member
Aug 10, 2014
2,059
Brighton
I reckon the property market will crash soon. Sell and sit for a while (rent or move in with parents) then you will be quids in soon enough. :thumbsup:
 










Justice

Dangerous Idiot
Jun 21, 2012
18,995
Born In Shoreham
I reckon the property market will crash soon. Sell and sit for a while (rent or move in with parents) then you will be quids in soon enough. :thumbsup:
House prices are so false it has to crash sooner or later. Shitty terraced two bedrooms are going for 320k round my way and the mugs are buying them.
 








Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,513
Haywards Heath
I reckon the property market will crash soon. Sell and sit for a while (rent or move in with parents) then you will be quids in soon enough. :thumbsup:

House prices are so false it has to crash sooner or later. Shitty terraced two bedrooms are going for 320k round my way and the mugs are buying them.

I might be having a woooooshh moment, but house prices aren't going to crash.
 






Stat Brother

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
73,870
West west west Sussex
Is this not all academic anyway.

Shirley the moment the 'fat cats' look like losing proper money the government will give them every last penny the rest of us have.
 




Steve in Japan

Well-known member
NSC Patron
May 9, 2013
4,474
East of Eastbourne
Does anyone else feel a bit manipulated by the media....Black Monday, Armageddon etc etc. Emotive language designed to make us tremble in our boots. And keep us suitably nervous.
 






larus

Well-known member
Don`t bet on it.....Thats what everyone said in 2007

I've said for years that house prices are over-valued. Howeever, we have a chronic supply-side issue, and insane interest rates. The stock-market adjustment (which is a bubble created by QE, same as the US), is linked to the economic changes in China, and not the fundamentals of the UK. Look at the comapnies which have been hardest hit; Rio Tinto, Glencore, BHP. All natural resources, impated by the slow-down in China.

The real fireworks will start if/when the US raises rates. Then you will see real problems IMO.
 


LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
46,957
SHOREHAM BY SEA
I've said for years that house prices are over-valued. Howeever, we have a chronic supply-side issue, and insane interest rates. The stock-market adjustment (which is a bubble created by QE, same as the US), is linked to the economic changes in China, and not the fundamentals of the UK. Look at the comapnies which have been hardest hit; Rio Tinto, Glencore, BHP. All natural resources, impated by the slow-down in China.

The real fireworks will start if/when the US raises rates. Then you will see real problems IMO.

Doubt thats going to happen anytime soon
 






The Maharajah of Sydney

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
1,367
Sydney .
I'm not a financial investor but I have dabbled a bit in currency in the past. Funny how the Euro is up on almost everything except the Swissy. Investors around the world see the Euro as a safe haven? Unusual to say the least. Especially as the U.S. Interest rates are expected to rise, I'd have expected the Dollar to strengthen during market sell offs. However is it the type of sell off that's causing it. Tech firms seem to be taking the hit as its China that is slowing, commodities seem to be holding. So why the Euro rise? I haven't been following the markets over the summer.


Why is the euro strengthening as global stocks take a beating you ask ?

The three word answer : The Carry Trade.

Because of ECB interest rate cuts and QE, the Euro is cheaper and easier to borrow than virtually anything else.

Market participants have borrowed Euros and invested in higher-yielding assets or risky assets. Those assets are generally in other currencies - like US stocks.

And in in a market rout, investors cut trades back to cash and look for safety. So all the euro borrowing and selling is unwound.
 




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