Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › FXE – et all
- This topic has 75 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 6 months ago by gdcox.
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June 7, 2008 at 12:34 PM #219074June 7, 2008 at 1:41 PM #219101waiting for bottomParticipant
Thanks for the feedback.
This is all in retirement accounts so cap gains vs. regular income is not an issue.
The expense ratio is 0.4% which is less than the loss on a bid/ask spread or bank buy/sell rates.
Finally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
June 7, 2008 at 1:41 PM #219083waiting for bottomParticipantThanks for the feedback.
This is all in retirement accounts so cap gains vs. regular income is not an issue.
The expense ratio is 0.4% which is less than the loss on a bid/ask spread or bank buy/sell rates.
Finally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
June 7, 2008 at 1:41 PM #218991waiting for bottomParticipantThanks for the feedback.
This is all in retirement accounts so cap gains vs. regular income is not an issue.
The expense ratio is 0.4% which is less than the loss on a bid/ask spread or bank buy/sell rates.
Finally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
June 7, 2008 at 1:41 PM #219134waiting for bottomParticipantThanks for the feedback.
This is all in retirement accounts so cap gains vs. regular income is not an issue.
The expense ratio is 0.4% which is less than the loss on a bid/ask spread or bank buy/sell rates.
Finally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
June 7, 2008 at 1:41 PM #219154waiting for bottomParticipantThanks for the feedback.
This is all in retirement accounts so cap gains vs. regular income is not an issue.
The expense ratio is 0.4% which is less than the loss on a bid/ask spread or bank buy/sell rates.
Finally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
June 7, 2008 at 3:25 PM #219032EugeneParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
Health of the economy does not translate directly into exchange rates. Dollar goes down when the Fed lowers rates ( makes US treasury bonds less attractive than foreign treasury bonds ). Dollar goes down when US consumers go on a shopping spree and increase trade deficit.
June 7, 2008 at 3:25 PM #219173EugeneParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
Health of the economy does not translate directly into exchange rates. Dollar goes down when the Fed lowers rates ( makes US treasury bonds less attractive than foreign treasury bonds ). Dollar goes down when US consumers go on a shopping spree and increase trade deficit.
June 7, 2008 at 3:25 PM #219192EugeneParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
Health of the economy does not translate directly into exchange rates. Dollar goes down when the Fed lowers rates ( makes US treasury bonds less attractive than foreign treasury bonds ). Dollar goes down when US consumers go on a shopping spree and increase trade deficit.
June 7, 2008 at 3:25 PM #219142EugeneParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
Health of the economy does not translate directly into exchange rates. Dollar goes down when the Fed lowers rates ( makes US treasury bonds less attractive than foreign treasury bonds ). Dollar goes down when US consumers go on a shopping spree and increase trade deficit.
June 7, 2008 at 3:25 PM #219125EugeneParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
Health of the economy does not translate directly into exchange rates. Dollar goes down when the Fed lowers rates ( makes US treasury bonds less attractive than foreign treasury bonds ). Dollar goes down when US consumers go on a shopping spree and increase trade deficit.
June 7, 2008 at 4:30 PM #219140sakina96ParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
I am far from being a currency expert. However, in the near term a flailing US economy has already been built into the current exchange rate. US interest rates are not bound to go much lower. Europe has their own problems and I could easily see the dollar gaining on the euro over the next year. If you are looking for true stability then perhaps Swiss francs are the way to go.
June 7, 2008 at 4:30 PM #219157sakina96ParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
I am far from being a currency expert. However, in the near term a flailing US economy has already been built into the current exchange rate. US interest rates are not bound to go much lower. Europe has their own problems and I could easily see the dollar gaining on the euro over the next year. If you are looking for true stability then perhaps Swiss francs are the way to go.
June 7, 2008 at 4:30 PM #219188sakina96ParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
I am far from being a currency expert. However, in the near term a flailing US economy has already been built into the current exchange rate. US interest rates are not bound to go much lower. Europe has their own problems and I could easily see the dollar gaining on the euro over the next year. If you are looking for true stability then perhaps Swiss francs are the way to go.
June 7, 2008 at 4:30 PM #219046sakina96ParticipantFinally, no way this strategy is too late. Do you really think the US economy is going to improve anytime soon??
I am far from being a currency expert. However, in the near term a flailing US economy has already been built into the current exchange rate. US interest rates are not bound to go much lower. Europe has their own problems and I could easily see the dollar gaining on the euro over the next year. If you are looking for true stability then perhaps Swiss francs are the way to go.
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