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OT. The futures Bright, the Futures Brexit!!!

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  • Originally posted by MadAmster View Post
    Oh how I wish we still had the exchange rate from when I moved here in 1984 of £1 = 4.2 Dutch Guilders, which is 1.90 Euro rather than the €1.19 it currently is. That would mean another 4 or 5 holidays a year. Come on UK sort yersens aht
    it was 1.30 the day before the vote and lost 10 cents immediately and then nearly hit parity for a short while as confidence remained low.

    It has been doing better of late I know our holiday last year we only got around 1.09 and this time was 1.18 ish.

    We were promised sunny uplands and only good things by the likes of farage and Bozo, still waiting to see those unicorns. Seems we are still living in the 'brexit hasn't been as bad as it might have been', rather than being able to detail any improvements it's made to our lives.

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    • Originally posted by SithHappens View Post
      it was 1.30 the day before the vote and lost 10 cents immediately and then nearly hit parity for a short while as confidence remained low.

      It has been doing better of late I know our holiday last year we only got around 1.09 and this time was 1.18 ish.

      We were promised sunny uplands and only good things by the likes of farage and Bozo, still waiting to see those unicorns. Seems we are still living in the 'brexit hasn't been as bad as it might have been', rather than being able to detail any improvements it's made to our lives.
      It would seem the only oven ready thing BoJo ever had was that pig at Eton...

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      • Originally posted by SithHappens View Post
        It's still got some way to go to recover to the amount it was before it fell off the cliff after the brext vote.
        It has been £0,88 to the euro before,when actually in the EU. Do you remember that?

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        • Over the last 10 years the euro sterling exchange rate has varied between 1.06 and 1.44. it's currently 1.20, broadly mid market.

          TTR's (inverse) 0.88 is equivalent to around 1.14. there has never been a scenario where euro was worth more than £ (or $ but that has got close a few times)

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          • Originally posted by Trickytreesreds View Post
            It has been £0,88 to the euro before,when actually in the EU. Do you remember that?
            it was 1.02 euro to the gbp in 2008

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            • What is beyond dispute is it dropped significantly because of brexit and has never recovered

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              • Originally posted by SithHappens View Post
                What is beyond dispute is it dropped significantly because of brexit and has never recovered
                and you can deduce from that, that the freedom from Brexit has never been exploited. The current regime is trying to go through the back door now. Factor in the lack of enthusiasm to push on our industrial freedoms. You can see where the political elites loyalties lie.

                REMEMBER THIS QUOTE

                In January 2023, Emily Maitlis asked Labour Party leader Keir Starmer:

                You have to choose now between Davos or Westminster?

                Starmer replied:

                Davos

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                • I disagree

                  In October 2019 the euro rate was pretty much exactly what is is today with a few minor fluctuations between the dates

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                  • Originally posted by Trickytreesreds View Post
                    and you can deduce from that, that the freedom from Brexit has never been exploited.
                    Hmmm…that’s perhaps what you - an arch Brexiteer in denial - might deduce. The more rational amongst us might ‘deduce’ that Brexit hasn’t been terribly beneficial for our country and was based on a pack of lies. ‘Proof’s in the pudding’ and all that…or was that an ‘oven ready deal’?

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                    • The big drop from 1.40s to 1.20s happened in 2015 which may have been the market anticipating calling referendum and it's result ,- but maybe not

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                      • Originally posted by Geoff Parkstone View Post
                        The big drop from 1.40s to 1.20s happened in 2015 which may have been the market anticipating calling referendum and it's result ,- but maybe not
                        it dropped 10 cents the day after the referendum, it continued to struggle after that and while recovering slightly has never gone back up to pre referendum levels

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                        • Originally posted by Geoff Parkstone View Post
                          I disagree

                          In October 2019 the euro rate was pretty much exactly what is is today with a few minor fluctuations between the dates
                          Likewise agreed, not sure where folk get their info from, and the rate was often much worse during our membership of EU

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                          • Originally posted by Andy_Faber View Post
                            Likewise agreed, not sure where folk get their info from, and the rate was often much worse during our membership of EU
                            As a statement true but to add some context, its lowest rate was during the financial crisis of 2008.

                            On average over the last decade, the pound's value against the Euro has been lower than the previous decade.

                            Following the Brexit referendum result, the Pound dropped sharply in value against the Euro.

                            The Pound fell 16% against the Euro in the 4 months following the Brexit referendum, including 6% on the actual day of the result.

                            The rate has yet to rebound to pre-Brexit levels.

                            For the last few years, the Pound to Euro rate has spent most of the time in a range between €1.10 – €1.20, although it has briefly traded outside this range on a few occasions.

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                            • The drop in the value of the pound vs euro when the result of brexit was announced was the single biggest drop ever, the value against the dollar also hit a 30 year low.

                              Must be just coincidence mind.

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                              • So the market crashed the day after ",out" but not just against the euro - so it was as much a refection of £ weakness as relative Euro strength. In the next few years before Brexit day the currencies were volatile but inconsistent. Since B Day it's interesting how the £ has held its own despite dire warnings of economic plight resulting. Was the steam taken out of the markets on that fatal day and those leveraging currencies have since been neutral?

                                I'd say the parity over the last 5 years is a reflection that the consequences of Brexit may not have been as bad as many on here predicted. Maybe the Eurozone itself is equally weak and suffering from the same fundamental flaws as Team GB? But if both are piss poor, why hasn't the dollar stormed ahead?

                                I don't know the answers but the option of others being as bad as us does emerge as likely. Yet global stock markets are in good shape despite the Truss effect 2 years ago and as inflation calms and interest rates abate, things look positive-ish

                                But the whole things a big Ponzi scheme....waiting to collapse, letting the Chinese in

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