Currency | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Samsung enters crypto-currency chips business Samsung Electronics has revealed it is making chips designed specifically to harvest crypto-currency coins. The firm made the disclosure in its latest earnings report, where it said the activity should boost its profits. The report also confirmed that the South Korean company overtook Intel to become the ...
| ||||||||
ECB warns on currency war and Brexit Currency war is always a losing proposition, according to Benoit Coeuré, a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, who said the ECB will not target interest rates, in an interview with RTÉ economic correspondent Sean Whelan. "We have agreements that we should not target our ...
| ||||||||
These are the 2 biggest reasons for a weaker US dollar Investors across asset classes are feeling the effects of the buck's rocky start to the year, with the ICE U.S. Dollar Index DXY, -0.32% a measure of the currency against six major rivals, dropping 3.1% in the year to date, adding on from its 10% loss last year. Last week alone, the buck dropped 1.7%.
| ||||||||
Morocco plans no more currency reforms for now as dirham stable MARRAKECH, Morocco - Morocco has no immediate plans for more currency reforms as the dirham has remained stable under a new flexible exchange system, its finance minister said on Tuesday. The kingdom made the changes two weeks ago under free-market reforms recommended by the ...
| ||||||||
US Regulators Subpoena Crypto Exchange Bitfinex, Tether U.S. regulators are scrutinizing one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges as questions mount over a digital token linked to its backers. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission sent subpoenas on Dec. 6 to virtual-currency venue Bitfinex and Tether, a company that issues a widely ...
| ||||||||
Time for a correction, a crash or a currency reset? We'll have the same sort of currency system reset as during Bretton Woods, the Smithsonian Agreement and many more. Central bankers have used up their powder. Interest rates can't go much lower. Quantitative easing risks people losing faith in the currency. Politicians will be forced to act. They'll hit ...
| ||||||||
See more results | Edit this alert |
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |