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. What Chipotle and McDonald’s say about the consumer slowdown. Americans still want more than just the lowest price
#Jul.31.2024 ×

#economist.com. Bibi Netanyahu offered spectacle over substance in America. His fourth address to Congress was historic, but held few answers for Israelis
#Jul.25.2024 ×

#economist.com. Revisiting the work of Donald Harris, father of Kamala. The combative Marxist economist focused on questions related to growth
#Jul.25.2024 ×

#economist.com. Donald Trump wants a weaker dollar. What are his options?. All come with their own drawbacks
#Jul.25.2024 ×

#economist.com. Google wants a piece of Microsoft’s cyber-security business. A $23bn acquisition of Wiz, an Israeli startup, is the search giant’s biggest ever
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. China is the West’s corporate R&D lab. Can it remain so?. Foreign firms want Chinese boffins. America and China may have other plans
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. Africa’s surprising new age of rail. Sino-American tensions are playing out on the tracks
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. Can anyone save Macy’s?. America’s biggest department store has rejected a takeover. Now what?
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. At last, Wall Street has something to cheer. Consumer banks, on the other hand, are starting to suffer
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. Americans are wrong to wish for an era of stable bipartisanship. Even though political instability is an economic threat
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. Why investors have fallen in love with small American firms. The Russell 2000 puts in a historic performance
#Jul.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. Tech bros love J.D. Vance. Many CEOs are scared stiff. Donald Trump’s running-mate has a deep-rooted resentment of big business
#Jul.17.2024 ×

#economist.com. Betting markets are useful when politics is chaotic. Why, then, are they largely outlawed in America?
#Jul.11.2024 ×

#economist.com. Trumponomics would not be as bad as most expect. Opposition would come from all angles
#Jul.11.2024 ×

#economist.com. Once high-flying Boeing is now a corporate criminal. Its woes illustrate the excesses of a lean-and-mean era in corporate America
#Jul.08.2024 ×

#economist.com. America’s giant armsmakers are being outgunned. Why there is little sign of a defence-industry bonanza in a post-peace world
#Jul.07.2024 ×

#economist.com. A reformer wanting a nuclear deal with America wins Iran’s election. Voters turned their backs on hardliners for Masoud Pezeshkian, a reformist candidate
#Jul.06.2024 ×

#economist.com. America’s banks are more exposed to a downturn than they appear. To understand why, consider the ouroboros theory of financial risk
#Jul.04.2024 ×

#economist.com. Hollywood enters a frugal new era. As austerity hits Tinseltown, rivalries are giving way to alliances
#Jul.03.2024 ×
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