glasshalffull
Well-Known Member
Blame Brexit 


Not correct. Pound has been drifting around $1.17 to $1.11 for most of that time. The reporting is both biased and wrong, I agree about that.
I think it owes more to the incompetence of the Bank of England. The war in Ukraine isn't really all that responsible for the energy crisis. It has just exposed the idiocy of the bureaucrats who designed such a dysfunctional energy policy.
Currency forecasts more than a couple.of months ahead are no more than a stab in the dark. Where did you find someone foolish enough to predict monthly currency levels years into the future as in the table below? Completely absurd.
In your world is the BBC to blame for everything?
BTW which media outlet(s) do you trust to report accurately and without bias?
Chatting about this earlier, with the increase in house prices over the years, and wages not keeping up they think that 6% is the equivalent to the 15% back in 70s so I fear many people will see some major upheaval in their life
The money markets analyse and forecast and slice and dice every which way. I’ve been tracking the pound against the dollar against this forecast for several months now and it’s been scarily accurate. It’s put together by the Economy Forecast Agency. If you deal in currency markets ignore it at your peril.
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POUND TO DOLLAR TODAY AND GBP TO USD FORECAST 2026, 2027-2030
Today's GBP To USD exchange rate and forecast for free. GBP To USD Converter. Pound to Dollar forecast for tomorrow, this week, months, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030poundf.co.uk
It isn't, is it? The Bank of England has been buying bonds for years, and other central banks have been doing the same. For the whole of the past decade, in fact.BOE has to step in to buy the bond's nobody now wants as the result from it's own countries government policies now that's unprecedented![]()
The BOE had swapped quantitative easing for quantitative tightening and after today's announcement they've done a U-turn as nobody wanted to buy their treasury bonds from the pension funds to the mortgage lenders the whole system was at loggerheads clogged up and a total cluster f..kIt isn't, is it? The Bank of England has been buying bonds for years, and other central banks have been doing the same. For the whole of the past decade, in fact.
However you want to present that, ultimately it the latest iteration in a long line of iffy decision making by the Bank of England. It certainly is not unprecedented, because it has been happening on a wide scale worldwide for over a decade. The BoE already holds £850,000,000,000 or so of bonds which it has previously bought without eliciting the sort of drama you're assigning to the latest in a very long line of purchases and policy shifts.The BOE had swapped quantitative easing for quantitative tightening and after today's announcement they've done a U-turn as nobody wanted to buy their treasury bonds from the pension funds to the mortgage lenders the whole system was at loggerheads clogged up and a total cluster f..k![]()
Its not an argument, or a point of view, its a fact.
That's how it is a storm in a tea cup life will go onHowever you want to present that, ultimately it the latest iteration in a long line of iffy decision making by the Bank of England. It certainly is not unprecedented, because it has been happening on a wide scale worldwide for over a decade. The BoE already holds £850,000,000,000 or so of bonds which it has previously bought without eliciting the sort of drama you're assigning to the latest in a very long line of purchases and policy shifts.
You're missing the point which is the BOE and the Truss government are running opposite agendas the former trying to curb inflation the later trying to stoke inflationHowever you want to present that, ultimately it the latest iteration in a long line of iffy decision making by the Bank of England. It certainly is not unprecedented, because it has been happening on a wide scale worldwide for over a decade. The BoE already holds £850,000,000,000 or so of bonds which it has previously bought without eliciting the sort of drama you're assigning to the latest in a very long line of purchases and policy shifts.