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- 1,664 Results (1,645 Replies, 19 Comments)
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Can you not understand that Spanish babies born today will procreate in 20 or so years from now, their offspring will very likely be around in 80 years from their birth, meaning their will DEFINITELY be a Spanish person around in 100 years from ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Read my post again. Follow my example and you will see that there will DEFINITELY be a Spanish person around in 100 years from now. You badly paraphrasing (and probably not understanding the contect in which the statement was used) something Jim ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Okay, there are Spanish children born this year, yes? And in about 20 years or so they will follow their urges to procreate, will they not? And much of this procreation will be with fellow Spaniards, will it not? Therefore, with future life ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009
Projected by whom? Ronald McDonald? You really do talk some utter s....!EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Just seen your edit.... You're right, it was quite a generalisation.
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Is that why Zimbabwean dollars were so strong in the past decade?
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009It's the weekend, Micho. I'm just responding to a clown, nothing more.
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Germany is a net creditor nation. The external debt you mention merely picks up on the foreign liabilities' section of the country's balance sheet. It fails to consider the asset side of the equation.
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 28, 2009Brilliant.....
Not only do you make a sweeping generalisation about a huge continent, you also fail to pick up on the fact that this vast swathe of land contains the most undemocratic and sometimes brutal regimes and dictatorships in the ...EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 27, 2009Correct.... The creditors are for the most part European banks, with HSBC and Standard Chartered holding the largest exposure to the region.
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 27, 2009It's the fear of contagion effects that is spooking investors so much, in that it raises the question: could this scenario also be played out in certain highly indebted emerging market nations? In itself, the technical default on Dubai's debt is ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 26, 2009Your post says that you were aware their quotes were lagging the market. Therefore, you knew they were quoting off-market prices and you subsequently attempted to use this to your advantage and arbitrage this discrepancy in your favour. On this ...
Cable Update (GBPUSD)
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gammase1 replied Nov 26, 2009Did you manage to avoid being margin-called? I checked in yesterday and saw your balance was a mere $65, which meant over 80% of the account had been wiped out in a single trading session.
$500 to $1M Part II
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gammase1 replied Nov 20, 2009You're talking about collateral management side of the transaction, rather than the trade itself. The collateral required from one deal would be netted against the mark to market value of all other transactions with that particular counterparty. ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 19, 2009So long as we're equally honest and upfront when we suffer these bad days, then I agree with your point. If he says he's made 1,200 pips, then I applaud his skill. Whether it's actually true or not, is of no real concern in the greater scheme of ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 19, 2009That is the biggest tally of daily pips I've ever seen claimed on Forex Factory. An almost unbelievable amount, in fact. I'm not knocking your remarkable trading skills, but is there any point of posting these kind of retrospective claims? Does it ...
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 19, 2009That's brilliant going, mate! Can't wait to see your journal updated. You're coming back from the previous heavy losses. Well done.
EURUSD
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gammase1 replied Nov 19, 2009As Malcolm rightly said, it is heavily weighted to the value of USD against EUR. The full breakdown of the index, together with the weightings, are as follows: EUR (57.6%), JPY (13.6%), GBP (11.9%), CAD (9.1%), SEK (4.2%), CHF (3.6%)
Cable Update (GBPUSD)