Thursday, December 31, 2009

Currency Changes - Sterling Recovers

Sterling recovers from 2-1/2 month low vs dlr

* Sterling recovers from earlier 2-1/2 mth low vs dollar

* Thin end-of-year volumes cause choppy trade

* Ongoing UK debt concerns weigh on sterling sentiment
 

By George Matlock

LONDON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - Sterling recovered from multi-month lows on Wednesday, caught up in end-of-year flows and holiday-thinned trading volumes.

Earlier, the pound hit a 2-1/2 month low against the U.S. dollar and a two-month low versus a basket of currencies on Wednesday, weighed down by gloom over the economy and rising public debt.

However, traders said late month-end flows towards the end of the session helped spark a solid recovery in euro/sterling, with extremely thin volumes helping to exaggerate price movements.

Ongoing concerns about Britain's fiscal profile kept downward pressure on sterling after ten-year UK gilt yields rose above those of 10-year Italian BTPs on Tuesday. YLDS5

This year has been challenging for the UK currency. Although sterling has appreciated by around 6 percent against the euro in 2009, this was from a record low point late in 2008.

"Sterling sentiment is struggling for positives at the moment -- any positives are being drowned out by the negatives," said Geoffrey Yu, currency strategist at UBS in London.

By 1523 GMT, sterling was up 0.4 percent at $1.5962 GBP=D4. Earlier it fell as low as $1.5832 -- its lowest level since Oct. 13 according to Reuters charts.

"Yesterday's sharp pullback that broke below $1.5922/03 opens $1.5708 key low next. Resistance is at $1.6068," said UBS in a research note.

The pound recovered from earlier falls against the euro. The single currency traded down 0.8 percent at 89.56 pence EURGBP=D4 having peaked at 90.43 pence this session -- its highest level since Dec. 14.

Trade-weighted sterling =GBP was at 79.3 against a basket of currencies, having earlier fallen to 79.1, its lowest since Oct. 26.

Sterling was hit last week by a disappointing revision to third quarter UK growth figures, and as minutes from the latest Bank of England policy meeting were perceived as leaving the door open to further monetary easing.

A Reuters poll last week showed economists almost unanimous in expecting the BoE to leave its asset-buying programme capped at its current level. [ID:nLAG006010]

A majority of those polled also did not expect the BoE to raise rates until the fourth quarter of 2010 when they see them climbing to one percent.

If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Foreign Exchange - Pounds / Euros

Article Reference: uk.reuters .com/article/idUKLDE5BT14120091230?pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0

Photo: 8vsb.files .wordpress .com/2008/09/00_world_economy.jpg
 

 

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Overseas Investment Opportunites

Banks 'must lend more' next year
Bank signs
 

The FSB wants more lending to be made available to businesses

There should be more competition in the banking sector with more lending from non-UK banks made available to small firms, a group has said.

In its new year message, the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) called for banks to return to their "normal lending criteria".

There are five million small businesses in the UK. The FSB represents 215,000 small firms across the UK.

The government said it was "determined" to support small businesses.

"2010 must see the route to recovery," said FSB chairman John Wright. "Small businesses deserve a big vote of confidence and the sector in turn will return the compliment with jobs, guaranteeing a sustainable recovery.

"2010 may be a general election year, but for small firms, it will be business as usual as they strive to complete the route from recession and back into recovery."

A Department for Business spokesman said: "We have extended the Enterprise Finance Guarantee for a further 12 months to encourage additional bank lending to viable smaller firms and announced that businesses will be able to continue to defer tax payments to help with cash flow as they prepare for growth.

"We are working with the FSB to offer up to 10,000 graduates a chance to boost their future employability through internships in small and micro businesses."

If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Currency Banking - Foreign Exchange

Article Reference: news.bbc .co.uk/1/hi/business/8434406.stm

Photo: newsimg.bbc .co.uk/media/images/47008000/jpg/_47008409_006217833-1.jpg
 

 

Monday, December 28, 2009

Foreign Exchange - Economy Boost for British Stores

J. Lewis has record online start to clearance sale

LONDON, Dec 28 (Reuters) - Bellwether British retailer John Lewis [JLP.UL] reported a strong online start to its seasonal clearance sale, adding to signs shoppers might be out in force ahead of a rise in VAT on Jan. 1.

John Lewis said on Monday online sales rose a record 23 percent in the first three days of its clearance event, which started at 1800 GMT on Dec. 24.
 

The employee-owned group, whose in-store clearance sale starts on Monday, said Dec. 26 saw the highest ever number of visits to its department stores Web site.

Retailers are increasingly using the Internet in a bid to steal a march on rivals and capture a big chunk of the traditional post-Christmas spending frenzy.

Some analysts think clearance sales this year could be especially strong ahead of a rise in VAT sales tax on Jan. 1. [ID:nLDE5BL18N]

Researchers Experian said on Sunday shopper numbers were up 18.6 percent on Dec. 26 compared with the same day last year.

Prospects for a sustained pick up in consumer spending look less certain, however, with economic growth likely to remain sluggish, wage increases muted and more tax rises expected in order to reduce government borrowing. [ID:nLDE5BG0XT] (Reporting by Mark Potter; editing by Chris Pizzey)

If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Currency Conversion - Foreign Exchange

Article Reference: uk.reuters .com/article/idUKLDE5BR0B220091228

Photo: static.guim .co.uk/sys-images/Business/Pix/pictures/2007/11/19/johnlewis460.jpg
 

 

Pounds to Euros - Will there ever be a Poll?

Euro poll question revealed

Gordon Brown
 

The referendum question the UK may use if a vote is held on joining the euro has been published by the government.

The question, revealed in the government's draft euro referendum bill, is: "Should the United Kingdom adopt the euro as its currency?"

Gordon Brown announced the paving bill in his pre-Budget report speech to MPs.

Vote coincidence?

The chancellor announced in June that the UK had yet to meet his five economic tests for joining the single currency.

The government says the new bill gives "maximum flexibility" over holding a referendum if the tests are passed.

Ian Davidson, chairman of Labour Against the Euro, said the bill included a clause specifically stating that a euro vote could be combined with an election.

The five tests

The MP warned: "Plans to hold a euro referendum on the same day as a general election are another sign of desperation by the euro enthusiasts.

"In their zeal to bounce Britain into the euro, they are willing to place at risk Labour seats and votes.

"A Labour Party seeking re-election would be deeply divided in a referendum, while the Tories would be handed the bonus of a campaign in tune with the majority of British voters."

'Ruled out'

But Downing Street said the government's stance had not budged since Mr Blair was questioned about the idea in May.

He had told reporters: "I have never had the idea of holding a referendum on the same day as the general election."

A Number 10 spokesman said: "The position has not changed. It is pretty categorical in terms of ruling it out."

The timing of the draft bill's publication has prompted Conservatives to accuse ministers of trying use the diversion of the pre-Budget report on Wednesday to hide the "controversial" wording of the referendum.

Tory constitutional affairs spokesman Alan Duncan said: "The government are back to their old tricks of trying to 'bury bad news'.

"The proposed referendum question breaches Electoral Commission guidelines on fair wording. It makes no mention that the pound would be replaced if people vote 'yes'.

"A fair question would make clear the implications for our existing national currency.

"The government are using sleight of hand to hide a euro referendum fix."

'Guidelines followed'

Mr Brown has said he will reveal in his Budget next year whether he thinks there is a case for another assessment of possible UK-membership of the euro according to his five economic tests.

In his statement on the single currency to MPs in June, Mr Brown said four of the five tests had yet to be met - the one relating to financial services being the only one to get the chancellor's approval.

But he said progress on passing two of the tests - on economic flexibility and convergence with the eurozone - would lead to the remaining two tests being satisfied.

The Department for Constitutional Affairs said the question had been drafted using Electoral Commission guidelines.

The Commission - which has a statutory obligation to assess the question - will formally review it when the bill is introduced into Parliament.

That would only happen if the Treasury decided its convergence criteria had been met and the economic conditions were right for Britain to lose to the pound.

Cabinet and then Parliament would then have to approve the decision before it went out to the British people.



If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Currency Conversion - Pounds Quotation

Article Reference: news.bbc .co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3307487.stm

Photo: news.bbc .co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3307487.stm
 

 

Sunday, December 27, 2009

UK Sterling News - A One World Currency?

One World Currency in the News Again

US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner shocked global markets by revealing that Washington is "quite open" to Chinese proposals for the gradual development of a global reserve currency run by the International Monetary Fund.


 

The dollar plunged instantly against the euro, yen, and sterling as the comments flashed across trading screens. David Bloom, currency chief at HSBC, said the apparent policy shift amounts to an earthquake in geo-finance.

"The mere fact that the US Treasury Secretary is even entertaining thoughts that the dollar may cease being the anchor of the global monetary system has caused consternation," he said.

Mr Geithner later qualified his remarks, insisting that the dollar would remain the "world's dominant reserve currency ... for a long period of time" but the seeds of doubt have been sown.

The markets appear baffled by the confused statements emanating from Washington. President Barack Obama told a new conference hours earlier that there was no threat to the reserve status of the dollar.

"I don't believe that there is a need for a global currency. The reason the dollar is strong right now is because investors consider the United States the strongest economy in the world with the most stable political system in the world," he said.

The Chinese proposal, outlined this week by central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, calls for a "super-sovereign reserve currency" under IMF management, turning the Fund into a sort of world central bank.

The idea is that the IMF should activate its dormant powers to issue Special Drawing Rights. These SDRs would expand their role over time, becoming a "widely-accepted means of payments".

Mr Bloom said that any switch towards use of SDRs has direct implications for the currency markets. At the moment, 65pc of the world's $6.8 trillion stash of foreign reserves is held in dollars. But the dollar makes up just 42pc of the basket weighting of SDRs. So any SDR purchase under current rules must favour the euro, yen and sterling.

Beijing has the backing of Russia and a clutch of emerging powers in Asia and Latin America. Economists have toyed with such schemes before but the issue has vaulted to the top of the political agenda as creditor states around the world takes fright at the extreme measures now being adopted by the Federal Reserve, especially the decision to buy US government debt directly with printed money.

Mr Bloom said the US is discovering that the sensitivities of creditors cannot be ignored. "China holds almost 30pc of the world's entire reserves. What they say matters," he said.

Mr Geithner's friendly comments about the SDR plan seem intended to soothe Chinese feelings after a spat in January over alleged currency manipulation by Beijing, but he will now have to explain his own categorical assurance to Congress on Tuesday that he would not countenance any moves towards a world currency.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard


If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Euros to Pounds Quotation

Article Reference: telegraph. co.uk/finance/economics/5050407/US-backing-for-world-currency-stuns-markets.html

Photo: telegraph. co.uk/finance/economics/5050407/US-backing-for-world-currency-stuns-markets.html
 

 

Friday, December 25, 2009

Currency Table Close of Business December 2009

Currency Table – December 2009
 

Currency Table

Currency Last Day High Day Low % Change Bid Ask
GBP/USD 1.5962 1.5988 1.5962 -0.02% 1.5962 1.5964
GBP/EUR 1.1085 1.1127 1.1057 -0.12% 1.1085 1.1090
USD/EUR 0.69430 0.69620 0.69280 -0.12% 0.69430 0.69480
GBP/JPY 145.72 146.43 145.47 -0.26% 145.72 145.82
GBP/CHF 1.6500 1.6586 1.6489 -0.36% 1.6500 1.6510
GBP/AUD 1.8041 1.8105 1.8029 -0.21% 1.8041 1.8051



If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Pounds to Euros Quotation

Article Reference: uk.reuters. com/business/currencies

Photo: pictures.directnews. co.uk/liveimages/Euro+Notes_901_18366634_0_0_2057_300.jpg
 

 

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Currency Quotation News

Currency News – December 2009
USD – Dollar Continue to Strengthen Against Rivals

The Dollar was up again most major rivals Monday on expectations of continuing improvement in the U.S economy ahead of this week's data release. The Dollar rose to a six week high versus the Yen and traded near a three and a half month high against the EUR. The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a trade-weighted basket of currencies, was at 78.059 from 77.758.

The Dollar has been gaining in recent sessions, as concerns over Greece's government deficit have weighed on the EUR as well as upbeat economic data from the U.S which is prompting investors to reassess when the Federal Reserve will begin tightening the U.S. monetary policy.

While a slow news day is expected today ahead of the Holliday weekend, the release of the Existing Home Sales at 15:00 GMT is expected to provide some volatility to the Dollar, with better then expected results intensifying the Dollar's recent upward trend.
EUR – EUR Trades near a 3 Month Low versus the USD

The EUR traded yesterday near a 3 month low versus the USD as the European Commission expressed concerns about a strong EUR. Monday, the EUR was at $1.4283 from $1.4335 late Friday and at Y130.25 from Y129.57. The U.K. Pound was at $1.6051 from $1.6127.

The Swiss Franc touched its strongest level since March against the EUR extending its advance past the 1.50 level on speculation the Swiss National Bank has relaxed its resistance to gains in the currency.

A slow news day is expected today from the Euro-Zone today ahead of the long holiday weekend, the release of the British Current Account and Final GDP at 9:30 GMT will likely provide some volatility for the GDP with
JPY – Yen Down versus USD and EUR

The Yen was at 91.06 against the USD from 91.17 yesterday and at 130.09 per EUR from 130.18. The Japanese currency received some support from a report that showed Japan posted a wider than expected trade surplus in November. The surplus came to 373.9 billion Yen, greater than the 319.2 billion Yen expected by economists.

Recent economic data released from Japan, including the merchandise trade data and the current-account surplus, is pointing towards economic improvement and an upward trend, which will likely put upward pressure on the Yen in the longer term, possibly reversing the recent losses.
Crude Oil – Oil Down on Strengthening Dollar

Crude futures fell Monday as the Dollar strengthened, offsetting gains on colder weather expectations and geopolitical worries. Light, sweet crude for January delivery settled 89 cents lower at $72.47 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after touched an intraday high of $74.32 a barrel. The contract expired on Monday. Crude for February delivery settled 70 cents, or 0.9%, lower at $73.72 a barrel. Oil prices were supported recently by the massive snowfall in the U.S and Europe as well as geopolitical concerns in Iraq and Nigeria.

Today investors should pay attention to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting in Luanda, Angola, where they will discuss production levels. While quotas are expected to stay unchanged this might still affect negatively on Oil levels as supply is still abundant.

If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Pounds to Euros Quote

Article Reference: forexcare. net/currency-news-tuesday-22-december-2009/

Photo: networkingreinvented.files. wordpress. com/2009/10/forex-trading.jpg
 

 

Economy, Currency Forecasts for 2010

HTML clipboard

by Stephanie Flanders BBC

What are the most intriguing economic questions for 2010? Here are my top four. I'm sure you can come up with others.

1. Will QE need a Plan B?

The dearth of credit around the major advanced economies has monetarists convinced that the world is heading for a double-dip. I'm not sure I agree, but the lack of finance available for the UK corporate sector is a serious worry.

As the MPC know well, buying nearly £200bn worth of gilts as part of quantitative easing is, at best, a roundabout way to ease credit conditions for British firms.

QE has helped push up asset prices, as it was supposed to to, and triggered a flood of UK corporate bond issuance this year. But I suspect the government's rather under-rated "time to pay" initiative, giving companies extra time to pay their tax, has done more to support the working capital of Britain's small and medium-sized enterprises.

At the Treasury and the Bank, they're still crossing their fingers and hoping that QE will have more impact on lending throughout the broader economy in the first half of 2010 - just as all the economic models suggest it should.

Bank of England

But behind the scenes in Whitehall and the Threadneedle Street, they are quietly thinking about a Plan B - some more direct way to channel credit to firms. Just in case.

We'll know by the spring - or summer, at the latest, whether it's needed. But whatever happens, I'd be surprised to see the Bank of England create a lot more money than already agreed. If £200bn doesn't work, it's hard to believe that an extra, say, £50bn is going to make all the difference.

2. Will Britain's showdown with the international bond markets come before, or after the election?

Everyone thinks that the markets will politely wait until Britain has gone to the polls to draw its verdict on the UK. Well, maybe.

But if sovereign debt is indeed the new sub-prime - at least where the markets are concerned - it's difficult to believe that Britain will get through the months before the election without at least one major market wobble.

Perhaps one ratings agency will put the UK on negative watch. Or investors will get seized with the idea of a hung Parliament. Or Britain will simply get caught in the crosshairs of a market panic over sovereign debt in Central and Eastern Europe. Who knows what the trigger will be. But my hunch is there will be something, this side of polling day. The question will be how the major political parties react.

3. Will the private sector finally show up for the US recovery?

For anyone outside the UK this would probably be the first question on the list. Chances are, US growth in the last three months of 2009 will make up for yesterday's downward revision to growth in the third quarter, to an annual rate of 2.2%. But the new data brought home once again how lopsided the US recovery has been to date.

All the growth that the world's largest economy achieved in those three months was due to government demand, "cash-for-clunkers", and rising inventories. And the personal savings rate actually fell, suggesting that the adjustment process for households is rather less far advanced than people hoped.

2010 was supposed to be the year when the Federal Reserve could start taking its foot off the floor, and the Obama administration could at least sketch out a road map for bringing that enormous budget deficit back down. It still could be. But if the private sector doesn't show up, the administration's going to be doing the sums for yet another stimulus package as well.

4. Will the Euro area start to look like deflationary zone?

I took part in a mini-debate about the Eurozone on the Today programme this morning. Oliver Kamm, the Times writer, suggested that, in its handling of the financial crisis, the single currency had passed it's first major test "with flying colours".

I hope so. It's certainly true that many potential disasters that policy-makers worried about in Europe earlier in the year have not materialised.

Eurozone ministers - notably the German and the French - looked into the abyss and realised that they could not afford to deal with this crisis the way they usually did. In the financial market environment of early 2009, there was no room for long months of obfuscation, followed by fudge. A clear message was sent that no country would be allowed to fail. And it worked.

But that was then. Now, Germany and the rest are pulling out of recession - even if we may wonder how strong that recovery will actually be. And that moment of solidarity may be passing as well.

I don't think that the likes of Greece or Ireland - or Spain - will default on their debt, or even come close. But the very best scenario for them, inside the Euro zone, is a long hard slog. And that long hard slog of slow growth, and savage cuts in public spending could have deflationary fall-out for everyone else.

I'm not the only one who's worried about this. Check out the interview with Athanasios Orphanides in the FT yesterday. He's a former Federal Reserve economist, now governor of the central bank of Cyprus. And he thinks there is a serious risk of "inflation continuing to undershoot".

He said "I think we can already say that we have avoided an experience as terrible, as catastrophic, as in the 1930s". I'm glad he thinks so. But as he knows well, one of the main factors that made the depression great - and global - was the deflationary impact of the gold standard. Unwilling to devalue, countries resorted to deflationary domestic policies to pay their bills, thus exporting the deflation problem to everyone else.

Europe in 2010 is not Europe 1931. Nothing close. But if policy-makers aren't thinking about the potential for a more damaging dose of deflation in the Eurozone, they should be.

So that's my top four. Not a cheery list, perhaps. But I don't know many economists who are very upbeat about the next few years - especially in the UK.

Given our past record, that's probably the best reason to think that 2010 will be a Happy New Year after all. See you then.

If you want a Currency Quotation please follow this link:
Changing Pounds to Euros

Article Reference: bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/stephanieflanders/

Photo: bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/stephanieflanders/bank_595getty.jpg
 

Friday, February 13, 2009

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Self Hypnosis

 

 


blogger | blogging


***** o0o *****


Hypnosis


Self Hypnosis


How to Hypnotize


Learn Hypnotism

hypnosis for quitting smoking

hypnosis for weight loss

hypnosis techniques

***** o0o *****


 


Self Hypnosis - (to read the full story first follow this link)


 


Self Hypnosis



In this modern world people have mistaken the concept of hypnosis. Strangely the television hasn't helped this belief. Many think that hypnosis is meant for humour on the cabaret stage and has little transition into our daily life.

I was explaining to my young teenage children that I remember seeing live pictures of men walking on the moon back in the 1960's. Amazingly I couldn't explain fully why further visits haven't been made. But what did come to mind, and I'm sure I've said it before myself... Why visit a distant planet when we can't cure the common cold; or have answers to why our devilish ego makes us do foolish things.

Using the various techniques involved in this type of hypnosis, you can get people to do what you want them to do. These techniques can be easily learnt, if you are willing to put in some effort and invest some time towards it.



Bizarre as it may seem we dip in and out of hypnotic states each day. Understanding this and exploring its potential allows us to put flying to the moon on hold for a few decades.

Hypnosis has gained in popularity over time. More and more people have become interested in the whole concept behind this subject and how it works.

This literally blew my mind, though now it seems obvious. A hypnotist isn't sending out magical brain-waves to put other people into trance. They only help us find that state within ourselves. We are the ones that are creating the bodily sensations and thoughts. That's why the more you trance you experience the better you get at it.



Hypnosis is effective to make a person capable of controlling his mind and overcome several problems related to the mind. Hypnosis will help to interact with the unconscious mind of a person.

Most people think of hypnosis as a way of controlling someone and getting them to do things they usually would not do. Dictionary describes hypnosis as a sleep-like state or to be in a state that resembles sleep. But most hypnotist disagree with the statement that hypnosis has anything with the sleep rather they believe that it is heightened state of acute awareness.

Hypnosis then, using a hypnotists definition, is an altered state of consciousness... and in one way or another we have all experienced a light version of it - daydreaming being a good example.

Some of the hypnotists also believe it can direct their subject's focus mind and communicating with the subject's subconscious mind. The goal it to distract the conscious mind and avoid the resistance often given by the conscious mind.

Perhaps the greatest of all hypnosis secrets is the fact that it really is not that hard to learn. So many people are intrigued behind the subject and wish they knew how to hypnotize someone.

Hypnotizing others is much easier than most people think. Confidence is the critical factor for your hypnosis success. If you don't have confidence, then you will probably fail. But if you start your hypnosis practice with confidence then you will have positive attitude and succeed in this way.

This literally blew my mind, though now it seems obvious. A hypnotist isn't sending out magical brain-waves to put other people into trance. They only help us find that state within ourselves. We are the ones that are creating the bodily sensations and thoughts. That's why the more you trance you experience the better you get at it.



The most powerful way to hypnotize someone is through what is called covert hypnosis, which is also known as conversational hypnosis or Ericksonian hypnosis. With this method you can literally walk up to a complete stranger, hold a conversation with them and induce them into a trance.

Through hypnosis, you technically can influence the behaviour of others and lead them in a particular direction. You can do this in a way that they would normally resist. In general, it is a tool that increases suggestibility.

People may have heard of the 'sugar pill' illusion. This is where they are given a medication to solve a temporary illness; and claim to feel the medication taking effect. When in reality it was only a sugar pill, with no medicinal composition at all. Meaning of course... it is all in the mind.

Hypnosis can help you alter your subconscious to achieve and overcome your weight loss goals and obstacles. There are specific hypnosis techniques that were developed to help you stop smoking. You can learn to get the best performance from your body by using your mind.



Such exploration of the power of the mind is both intriguing and fascinating. The best way to explore this subject further is to visit our Hypnotic Underworld and develop these skills yourself.
 


Self Hypnosis



Andy Bolton
from the Underworld of Hypnosis