GU is having a tough time
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Cable Update - Continued 118 replies
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cable short for gbpusd? 10 replies
Why is GBPUSD called cable? 76 replies
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Disliked{quote} The statement is misleading. bank loans to individuals don't increase the money supply. Banks have to have liquidity to be able to make loans to individuals. Bank liquidity either comes from deposits or treasury notes held by the bank. It comes back to cash and treasury notes to create money supply.Ignored
Disliked{quote} The statement is misleading. bank loans to individuals don't increase the money supply. Banks have to have liquidity to be able to make loans to individuals. Bank liquidity either comes from deposits or treasury notes held by the bank. It comes back to cash and treasury notes to create money supply.Ignored
Disliked{quote} lol, the Bank of England is telling you banks print money; they DO NOT lend other people money.That's not good enough to change your mind?Ignored
Disliked{quote} Higher rates don't dry up the money supply! You have to retire treasury notes, other debt instruments or do something similar.Ignored
Disliked{quote} But it does increase saving, since rewards on saving becomes more attractive. Folks less likely to spend their money on consumption. Demand pressure reduced. Money in circulation is reduced. This whole concept is good to see in book. In reality, majority of Americans are soo broke, that they have no other choice but to simply use their credit cards to fight inflation(they got no cash in hand) They are induced to pay higher interest on their overdraft to be able to afford the higher prices for their consumer products.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Banks print the mortgages and base the loan on the risk of getting it back. The asset, the deposit the person are all factors. The reserve requirement is 0%, as there is no reserve system, its a myth. We live in a debt-based system.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Couldn't find anything more recent. All banks have to have deposit reserves to allow them to function as banks. They all have limits on how much they can lend as well. It is simple economics for banking to exist and continue as viable businesses without damaging the economy. https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/quar...er-definitionsIgnored
Disliked{quote} But it does increase saving, since rewards on saving becomes more attractive. Folks less likely to spend their money on consumption. Demand pressure reduced. Money in circulation is reduced. This whole concept is good to see in book. In reality, majority of Americans are soo broke, that they have no other choice but to simply use their credit cards to fight inflation(they got no cash in hand) They are induced to pay higher interest on their overdraft to be able to afford the higher prices for their consumer products.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Can't help that they don't appear to have updated their information.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Countries and districts without reserve requirements[edit] Canada, the UK, New Zealand, Australia, Sweden and Hong Kong[14] have no reserve requirements. This does not mean that banks can—even in theory—create money without limit. On the contrary, banks are constrained by capital requirements, which...Ignored