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The pound has fared poorly on the foreign exchange markets since TMay’s speech on Sunday setting out her plans to extract the UK from the EU with the aim to invoke Article 50 in March next year.
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Have to laugh at all the luvvies, most of whom didn't know him, who posted Assange's bail in London though. They were mightily pissed off when Her Majesty cashed the cheques!
I understand that the A50 English high court case main proceedings start this month. Draft submission for both sides are available https://www.bindmans.com/uploads/files/documents/Article_50_final_corrected_and_unredacted_version.pdf https://www.bindmans.com/uploads/files/documents/Defendant_s_Detailed_Grounds_of_Resistance_for_publication.PDF
and well worth reading.
Northern Ireland high court case starts today http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-37545894
There were substantial falls in the pound during Labour's last period in office, wasn't there? Never became a serious issue.
Blimey Mike, which opposition can you remember that was worse?
Is it just me, or is she proposing politically motivated extra-judicial sentencing?
Once Nixon closed the gold window, all currencies floated - it was not a political 'decision' as such to devalue.
It was a matter of national prestige that Sterling should trade at $2.80, and so it was a blow to national prestige, once the government could no longer sustain this rate. Once you cease to treat exchange rates as a matter of national prestige, they cease to matter very much.
Its clearly going to take time for remainers to get used to a home secretary who can actually DO stuff as opposed to being hamstrung by our myriad European commitments.
And if you don;t like it, campaign against it.
Next he might discover decimalisation.
Movements are market and trade determined not government determined and happen over a long period of time instead of a single day, so people don't really notice much, beautifull isn't it ?
And people have learned the lesson of an artificially expensive pound:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_oET45GzMI
I for once welcome OGH's and TSE's discovery of the 1990's, lets hope the eurozone discovers the 1990's as well.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LS37SNYjg8w
I now freely admit it looks like I read May wrong. If she's got the cojones for a hard Brexit as now seems likely, well that's ten times as much bottle as I thought she had.
UK industry will certainly be happier with the reduction though, Jaguar just found their cars got 10% cheaper than their German competition in the key markets of USA, Middle East and China. Ditto McLaren against their Italian competition and JCB against their American rivals.
Maybe we'll see the cars on a proper track soon, as they get fast enough not to be embarrassed by Formula Ford cars and don't have to change the car half way through the race!
The second major difference is the death of inflation and the spectre of deflation. With an inflation rate that's been hovering around 0, inflation currently is too low. If inflation goes up to 2.5% (Treasury forecast I believe) then that's an improvement on the situation we have now, not a failure. It's supposed to be close to 2% and we are too low currently.
If at some point in the future, the pound appreciates against those currencies, it won't say very much either.
McLaren already provide a lot of the tech for FE, I'd love to see them give Jenson a car in 18/19 for FE since he probably won't get an F1 seat.
I don;t know Mr Sean, I can see Iran being quite attractive for the likes of Goldman Sachs....
(((Harry Enten))) Verified account
@ForecasterEnten
Fun fact: Trump's margin among white voters right now is less than Romney's was in 2012.
By the way, I had a drive in one of McLaren's road cars (650s) the other day. God is it quick, insanely so for something with number plates!
In otherwords you're being even more dishonest than a Lib Dem bar chart.
My guess is that Trump could get this tax story out of the press if he finally shoots someone on 5th ave.
The exchange rate only matters to the vast majority for a couple of weeks when they buy travel money.
I can't see the attraction of a high value currency that damages exports and UK tourism myself.
If only there was a dismal science to explain such weird events...
That may be her high point for a while, not sure how the betting market prices are for Trump
What % of our consumption is domestic and what imported though ?
Nick Herbert was spot on, we're spending more time discussing the colour of the UK's passports and not enough on financial passporting.
It was Howard on steroids. Excellent stuff.
seems to suggest little correlation between the two. Which is right? I know intuition might support it but the data is hard to naysay.
Ooh, and thanks for posting the Guardian long read article on Dan Hannan yesterday, a really good read once I finally caught up!
I can't back that up with hard figures, just an intuition (Increased globalisation the root cause)
Doctors will have to repay thousands if they leave NHS too soon after training. The first consequence of their botched strike
https://wealth.barclays.com/en_gb/smartinvestor/market-review/how-british-is-the-ftse-100.html
5 United Kingdom 2,760,960
6 France 2,464,790
7 India 2,288,720
8 Italy 1,848,690
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)
They are also ramping up the supply of new medics. Both long overdue.
Anyway, Italy's GDP is about 2/3 that of the UK.
Probably.
I'm only 33, but when has there been worse?
Who wants to go south of The delightful Isle of Wight anyway? There be dragons and seamonsters...
Ruth Davidson opposes new grammar schools in Scotland
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/10/03/ruth-davidson-opposes-new-grammar-schools-in-scotland/
The 100 are the largest companies, all global players who book a very high proportion of their revenues in foreign currency. The FTSE 250 is more representative of most British firms, hasn't followed the 100 quite so high.
https://www.wisdomtree.com/blog/index.php/uk-equities-and-the-british-pound-becoming-inversely-related/
That was a snoozathon.