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How Do You Trade An Approaching Currency War?

PostPosted: Tue Jan 22, 2013 2:42 pm
by fb101
Brought to you by forex

A currency war is an all-out determination by a central bank to debase or weaken their currency so they can boost exports and strengthen their economy.Now that most economies have stabilized themselves from the credit crisis, which is the paradigm we’ve been trading under for the last 4 years, the central banks are trying to get an economic edge by weakening their currencies.

http://www.dailyfx.com/forex/education/ ... y_War.html

Re: How Do You Trade An Approaching Currency War?

PostPosted: Tue Jan 22, 2013 2:54 pm
by shinnosuke
By getting out of all paper except that used on the white throne.

Re: How Do You Trade An Approaching Currency War?

PostPosted: Wed Jan 23, 2013 5:36 pm
by johnbrickner
shinnosuke wrote:By getting out of all paper except that used on the white throne.


Funny you should mention that. Luxury toilet paper sales have jumped significantly since 2009 and the current financial crisis. Seems people will cut back on discretion spending during bad times but will spend more on "small" everyday luxuries.

"Morsecode wrote:
If there is sufficient interest, maybe now, at the year's start, would be an appropriate time to kick off an entirely new board dedicated to paper commodities. Heck, if it could include Softwood/ lumber pricing I might even follow it."

I wonder if this thread is headed this direction? :P

Re: How Do You Trade An Approaching Currency War?

PostPosted: Wed Jan 23, 2013 6:56 pm
by Mossy
johnbrickner wrote:
shinnosuke wrote:By getting out of all paper except that used on the white throne.


Funny you should mention that. Luxury toilet paper sales have jumped significantly since 2009 and the current financial crisis. Seems people will cut back on discretion spending during bad times but will spend more on "small" everyday luxuries.

"Morsecode wrote:
If there is sufficient interest, maybe now, at the year's start, would be an appropriate time to kick off an entirely new board dedicated to paper commodities. Heck, if it could include Softwood/ lumber pricing I might even follow it."

I wonder if this thread is headed this direction? :P

No, TP is not protected from inflation.

Re: How Do You Trade An Approaching Currency War?

PostPosted: Thu Jan 24, 2013 1:06 am
by Engineer
johnbrickner wrote:Funny you should mention that. Luxury toilet paper sales have jumped significantly since 2009 and the current financial crisis. Seems people will cut back on discretion spending during bad times but will spend more on "small" everyday luxuries


I'm guessing the jump is because people are spending more time at home instead of work, shopping, eating out, or the other places you find cheap TP.