Food for thought.
Value of £ now: 1.1 euro
Value of £ at the time of euro launch: 1.6 euro
What a total disaster that euro has been! We're well out of it.
30% of our nation's food comes from the EU. Cliff edge 6 months away.
30% of our nation's food comes from the EU. Cliff edge 6 months away.
That's a lot of companies about to go pop in the EU then30% of our nation's food comes from the EU. Cliff edge 6 months away.
That's a lot of companies about to go pop in the EU then
Thought it was only us that would feel the pinch for a minute
According to the EU we will suffer badly while in the EU it will have little affect....what bullshite !!
I think you have confused the $ rate and the EURO rate.
Here’s a graph of the GBP/EURO for the last 10 years. As you can see, it’s been as low as 1.02 in that time. Yes, Brexit uncertainty has caused the rate to drop, but markets hate uncertainty. It’s highest point in the last 10 years is 1.44 not 1.60.
I would estimate (from looking at the 10 year chart) the average rate has been close to 1.20 - 1.25.
https://www.xe.com/currencycharts/?from=GBP&to=EUR&view=10Y
No confusion: I was going back further than 10 years. But what the graphic shows rather starkly is the sterling fell off a cliff in 2016. So this is the market's view of Brexit - just as when Mrs May shut her gob on Friday sterling took another hit. On just about every level the thing - or the prospect of the thing - isn't working. It's a plain as the nose(s) on your face(s). Politically there's a case (arguably); economically there's a virtually a consensus that it's a gonner.
I could mention that my Spanish property lost 50% of it's value after the banking crisis in 2008, it's slowly coming back to what we originally paid for it. This is life, this is finance, this is the property market, things go up and things go down.
This isn’t life, this is a very bad investment. I’m not going to listen to the views of someone who made such a woeful judgement. Sorry.
No confusion: I was going back further than 10 years. But what the graphic shows rather starkly is the sterling fell off a cliff in 2016. So this is the market's view of Brexit - just as when Mrs May shut her gob on Friday sterling took another hit. On just about every level the thing - or the prospect of the thing - isn't working. It's a plain as the nose(s) on your face(s). Politically there's a case (arguably); economically there's a virtually a consensus that it's a gonner.
No. There may (or may not be) a few more people who would vote 'Remain' now, but not twenty million of them.Perhaps there are 20 million undemocratic loons stalking the country.
Basically, it doesn't...........Can someone explain to me how Mrs May can call a General Election ? I thought that under the terms of the Fixed Term Parliaments it would need more than her alone to make that decision.
I bought the property in 2002, how the hell did I know there would be a banking crisis in 2008. It wasn't bought for investment purposes either, it was bought as a holiday home, and I was just using it as an example of how things bounce back.