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Forex
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#wikipedia.org. pound sterling. Sterling (ISO code: GBP) is the currency of the United Kingdom and nine of its associated territories. The pound (sign: £) is the main unit of sterling, and the word pound is also used to refer to the British currency generally, often qualified in international contexts as the British pound or the pound sterling. Sterling is the world's oldest curre
#Dec.31.2999 ×
#wikipedia.org. United States dollar. The United States dollar (symbol: $; currency code: USD; also abbreviated US$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies; referred to as the dollar, U.S. dollar, American dollar, or colloquially buck) is the official currency of the United States and several other countries. The Coinage Act of 1792 introduced the U.S. dollar at par w
#Dec.31.2999 ×
#economist.com. How Xi Jinping plans to overtake America. Digital twins, nuclear fusion and the small matter of fixing China’s economy
#Mar.31.2024 ×
#economist.com. Dave Calhoun bows out as chief executive of Boeing. The beleaguered aerospace giant announces a management shake-up
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. After pushing its economy to the brink, Egypt gets a bail-out. But a record-setting investment from the UAE will not fix its chronic problems
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. The pros and cons of corporate uniforms. A quarter of the American workforce wears one. Why?
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Meet the digital David taking on the Google Goliath. Jeff Green has built The Trade Desk into a plucky online-advertising powerhouse
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. How India could become an Asian tiger. The world’s most selective bureaucracy is struggling to make it happen
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Regulators are forcing big tech to rethink its AI strategy. Startup acquisitions have been replaced by hiring sprees and tight partnerships
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Making accounting sexy again. The profession needs a makeover to attract newcomers
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. How the “Magnificent Seven” misleads. Forget the supergroup of stockmarket darlings
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Gaza is on the brink of a man-made famine. Israel and Hamas reject a ceasefire even as people starve
#Mar.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Senegal proves the doomsayers wrong. Bassirou Diomaye Faye’s win is a triumph for the country’s democracy
#Mar.26.2024 ×
#economist.com. Dave Calhoun bows out as chief executive of Boeing. The beleaguered aerospace giant announces a management shake-up
#Mar.25.2024 ×
#economist.com. Have McKinsey and its consulting rivals got too big?. The golden age for CEO whisperers may be coming to an end
#Mar.25.2024 ×
#economist.com. Three decades after Rwanda’s genocide, the past is ever-present. Paul Kagame sees himself as indispensable to a still fragile country
#Mar.25.2024 ×
#economist.com. America’s trustbusters wage war on Apple. Whatever the outcome, a wide-ranging antitrust case will hurt the firm
#Mar.22.2024 ×
#economist.com. TikTok is not the only Chinese app thriving in America. What happens to them if the short-video sensation is banned?
#Mar.21.2024 ×
#economist.com. Could Aldi’s supermarkets conquer America?. The European discount chain is the fastest-growing retailer across the Atlantic
#Mar.21.2024 ×
#economist.com. Jacob Zuma’s new party could swing South Africa’s election. If it stays on the ballot it will make a coalition government much more likely
#Mar.21.2024 ×
#economist.com. A new leader offers little hope for Palestinians. They fear Mohammad Mustafa will serve the president, not the people
#Mar.21.2024 ×
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