Ashraf Laidi News
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Switzerland, the nation that hasn’t gone to war with a foreign power since Napoleon, is reluctantly debating a generational taboo: ceding monetary independence to win a battle over its runaway currency.
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Switzerland, the nation that hasn’t gone to war with a foreign power since Napoleon, is reluctantly debating a generational taboo: ceding monetary independence to win a battle over its runaway currency.
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The pound may rise on faster-than- forecast inflation and lower jobless claims, CMC Markets said.
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The Group of Seven may have been counted out too soon.
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The pound may climb to its strongest level this year against the dollar should it end the week above $1.6320, according to CMC Markets.
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The euro fell for the first time in three days versus the dollar and yen on concern the region’s most-indebted nations will struggle to contain deficits even after policy makers provided an almost $1 trillion bailout.
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The dollar fell against most of its major counterparts on speculation a resumption of asset purchases by the Federal Reserve tomorrow will spur inflation and extend a five-month slide in the greenback.
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The pound climbed above $1.62 for the first time since January after the Bank of England kept its bond-purchase program unchanged and held its benchmark interest rate at a record low of 0.5 percent.
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The dollar may extend its decline to a level versus the euro last seen in May as concern shifts from Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis to slowing U.S. growth prospects, according to CMC Markets.
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Traders may use the combination of U.S. election results and a Japanese holiday to push the dollar below 80 yen, according to CMC Markets.
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