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Currency Update 15th February 2010

Filed under: Business,Money — Tags: , , , — John @ 1:35 pm February 15, 2010

Here is this weeks update from currency expert  Keith Spitalnick.

Hola amigos!

Well what a week to have been part of the European dream!.

Even Freddie Kruger walking down Elm Street would have got a warmer reception than the way the Greeks have been treated. The ongoing saga reminds me of 2 things:

1) When all the weedy kids in school ganged up on the really weedy kid…

2) When I use to cry and my mother promised to give me a smack so I had something to really cry about…

The 16 euro zone members who for the past 10 years have built the European dream on low productivity and high debt and appalling fiscal management have decided they have had enough and the Greeks are squarely to blame. On the face of it, yes the Greeks have completely mishandled their own affairs with a tax collection rate of only 30%, but they have done this under the eyes of their 15 European neighbours and they are not alone and will certainly not be the last to have their fiscal affairs laid out in full view of a global audience.

So what to do?

Well, as ever, the remaining Europeans will try to ignore the problem and hope it goes away. It won’t though. What is needed is for savage cuts in the Greek economy and…wait for it…..this bit you’re going to love:

Last Monday 70% of the Greek population backed the tough measures needed, on Thursday the other 30% went on strike, you couldn’t make it up… well, you could …. It’s known as the European dream.

The answer: Greece will not be allowed to go to the wall, the Euro will survive, you will see a large dose of European fudge, a bit of rule re-writing and then the finger pointed at someone else to blame for all their problems. Ironically what the euro zone needs is a much weaker currency and the Euro has only dropped a few cents on the back of these supposed apocalyptic events.

Deep budget cuts and a huge increase in productivity is also required…we wont get it.

Pass me the Ouzo……

For more information on currency exchange you can click here.

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Currency Update

Filed under: Business,General,Money — Tags: , , , — John @ 5:10 pm February 1, 2010

Here is the latest look at the pound & euro by currency expert Keith Spitalnick.

Hola amigos!

The release of the latest Consumer and Retail Price Indexes for December, the quarterly assessment of our economic growth (GDP) and the motivation behind the Bank of England’s monetary policy decisions at the start of January have all caused significant volatility for the pound versus the euro since the New Year, but have ultimately seen a gain for sterling. Price increases exceeded forecasts by 0.3% on both RPI and CPI, and despite a late surge in retail sales over the Christmas period it would appear that the UK economy is still the lame horse of the global recovery because of risk aversion and tighter regulation in the financial sector.

In the real economy, and as far as the figures are concerned, domestically we are crying out for more flexible lending from the banks, and this has kept both small businesses and important economic sectors from featuring prominently in the recovery. On 26 January preliminary GDP figures were released revealing that although Christmas and the cold snap are over, credit is still frozen, consumers are more cautious about frivolous spending and our dependency on financial services and liquidity has not changed.

The mid-month Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee Minutes showed a 9-0 vote in favour of an unchanged monetary policy. The tone was more positive than in December. Reference was made to the upturn in the global economy, which was largely Asian driven, although there was evidence of stronger US growth in the fourth quarter of 2009. At the beginning of January the Agents Summary of Business Conditions made reference to a very gradual improvement in business sentiment, in part due to a recovery in export demand, and it is this export demand that should drive the pound higher over the first half of 2010.

The number of people claiming Jobseeker’s Allowance in December 2009 was fewer than expected, which is encouraging news, but it did not translate into more spending by the newly employed consumer.  An increase in prices, the level of unemployment and positive news from the Bank of England prompted the strengthening of the pound at the start of the month, but these key economic indicators do not add up to or convey the whole of our economy.  The fact that the pound rallied just before GDP figures came out, and fell by over a cent shows that we are still in a very fragile position economically.  Although sterling has the potential to push higher against the euro in February, we still run the risk of tripping up if Quantitative Easing is increased and the banks remain frigid.

With the early weeks of February seeing the release of a huge amount of potentially positive information, we could see the 1.1650 rate genuinely tested during February.

Hasta la proxima!

For more information on currency exchange you can click here.

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