Archive for September, 2007
Posted: Sunday, September 30th, 2007 @ 11:36 pm in Blogroll | No Comments »
Now I just want to tell you something about Asian and US market which have different types of market like oil market commercial market.
Asian market
Oil market: Asian oil stocks skip on record crude oil prices for the very first time Asian oil stocks rose above $80 a barrel, paced by ‘Cnooc Ltd’, and ‘Inpex ‘Holdings […]
Posted: Saturday, September 22nd, 2007 @ 12:38 am in Foreign Capital | No Comments »
Here I wish to explain the meaning of this term in more detail. The swap rate is to the foreign exchange market what the interest differential is to the money market.
The swap rate is not an exchange rate; it is an exchange rate differential When the interest differential between the U.S. dollar and the pound […]
Posted: Tuesday, September 11th, 2007 @ 12:49 am in Foreign Capital | No Comments »
In the United States, explicit authorization for foreign-exchange intervention is technically in the hands of the Treasury. The Gold Reserve Act of 1934 created an Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) expressly to enable he Treasury to intervene in the market when necessary to stabilize the dollar. According to that act, the ESF is under the exclusive […]
Posted: Tuesday, September 11th, 2007 @ 12:33 am in Foreign Capital | No Comments »
Throughout the 1980s, Japanese banks were significantly undercapitalized. Although by the end of 1989 most of Japan’s big banks had achieved the 8 percent capital ratio required by the Bank for International Settlements, the criteria for “capitalization” were dubious. Under Japanese regulations, big banks could count 45 percent of their “hidden assets” as capital-assets […]
Posted: Tuesday, September 11th, 2007 @ 12:06 am in Foreign Capital | No Comments »
By the early 1990s it was apparent that Japan would insulate itself from the U.S. depression by expanding into other markets, reducing its reliance on U.S. trade, and decreasing its holding of U.S. money instruments. These tactics, combined with Japan’s refusal to make a major commitment of funds to the Gulf War, served to […]
Posted: Monday, September 10th, 2007 @ 11:30 pm in Foreign Capital | No Comments »
One of the givens of a multinational power is that it cannot default on its debt. There are an almost infinite number of refinancing schemes available when one controls the currency with which the debt is repaid and the moody supply from which repayments are made. (By contrast, when a Third World nation cannot […]