Isn't the strong stock exchange due mostly to a weak pound?
Don't ruin [MENTION=23440]Seagull58[/MENTION]'s little moment.
Isn't the strong stock exchange due mostly to a weak pound?
Anarchy?
I do like the current value of my investments compared to earlier in the year!!!!
Don't ruin [MENTION=23440]Seagull58[/MENTION]'s little moment.
Are you going to cash in and sell? If not, then the only value your investments have is the hope that you have that the future will be OK.
And if you don't think the future is okay and you do cash in, where do you keep your money?
Tattoo removal companies
You have not been charged for this information
I do understand QE. It's de-facto devaluation
Actually the main purpose of QE was to increase the reserves of the banks in the belief that this would encourage them to lend which in turn would stimulate the economy. As it was the additional money didn't result in more lending but it was used to purchase assets which in turn raised prices. The BofE persist with QE as it believes that some of the money still ends up in the real economy, in reality however most of the beneficiaries are the top 5% wealthiest who own 40% of the stock market...and instead of spending their new found wealth, these people tend to reinvest it to benefit from rising prices! Its estimated that 8p out of every £1 of QE money makes it in to the real economy, the rest gets trapped in the financial markets making the rich richer and increasing inequality.
QE is a major contributory factor to why the FTSE has been increasing in value since 2009.
The main purpose of the Asset Purchase Scheme was to buy government bonds.
On 4 August 2016 the MPC voted to increase the stock of purchases of UK government bonds by the APF to £435bn. In addition, the MPC voted to make up to £10bn of purchases of corporate bonds over 18 months. It also voted to introduce the Term Funding Scheme, to reinforce the transmission of Bank Rate cuts to those interest rates actually faced by householders and business by providing term funding to banks at rates close to Bank Rate.
The purpose of QE is to increase the overall amount of usable funds in the financial system, the method of doing that is to use the newly created money to buy government (and more recently corporate) bonds from financial institutions such as banks, pension funds and insurance companies.
QE is a major contributory factor to why the FTSE has been increasing in value since 2009.
Being totally honest, if you're not putting much into a pension scheme, you can't expect to get much out. If you don't earn enough, then I am sorry to hear that (genuinely meant BTW), but maybe you should think about what can you do to improve your prospects. Worry about what you can influence and not what you can't.
Thanks for your concern, i'm sort of stuck in a job that will not really give me much hope of improvement no matter how hard I work. I could put more in to my pension scheme but my take home is currently about £1,200 a month so do I whack loads in now and scrimp while working or pay the more standard amount ( company 1% and me 1% which builds over the next 5 years to company 2% me 5%) and hope that something turns up ? failing that it will be time to downsize my house the longer I live.
Mainly to buy government debt, of the £435bln, only £10bln has not been Government debt I believe. So it's like turning on the printing presses.
its a factor but not the main one. QE buys up bonds which are mostly held by insurnace or investment funds that want income, so they seek out other bonds not the stock market. btw its supposed to stay in the financial markets, which is why its not the same as printing money. if it were to actually increase money supply we'd have outragous inflation across the western world. either way, its pretty irrelevent to Brexit debate as QE has only been increased another 15% in the name of brexit and we couldnt say it wouldnt have been done anyway.
I'm afraid you've fundamentally misunderstood this. Most FTSE 100 companies are international and therefore earn most of their money in currencies other than Sterling.
Because the FTSE values companies in Sterling, if the pound crashes those companies automatically become worth more pounds than before.
That is not an indicator of health, it is an indicator of the weak pound.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yes, this is the elephant in the room. It will happen and the impact is very difficult to predict. China is still a relatively closed economy so the direct impact may be less than the indirect one of causing a crisis of confidence in other advanced economies that are still fragile. My advice is to hold some gold, preferably at least partly in actual metal as opposed to ETFs. I have seen a couple of predictions that gold could go to $7,000 an ounce (currently $1150ish)
Got to love all these amateur economists telling us exactly why record exports and a booming stock exchange is not necessarily a good thing. Maybe they could all get jobs with the IMF, BoE and the Treasury because NONE of the experts there correctly predicted what would happen in the few months after a Brexit vote with anything resembling the reality of the situation.
Are you going to cash in and sell? If not, then the only value your investments have is the hope that you have that the future will be OK.