Forex
1293jdhdfoierkjdjd/finance/api/quoteE31000000000008146/baseE31000000000025224

#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. × yen. The yen (Japanese: 円, symbol: ¥; code: JPY) is the official currency of Japan. It is the third-most traded currency in the foreign exchange market, after the United States dollar and the euro. It is also widely used as a third reserve currency after the US dollar and the euro. The New Currency Act of 1871 introduced Japan's modern currency system, w
#Dec.31.2999

#economist.com. × Will Trump’s tariffs turbocharge foreign investment in America?. Companies from Asahi to TSMC are expanding production in the country—for now
#Mar.17.2025

#economist.com. × 7-Eleven is still struggling to fend off its Canadian suitor. The saga points to the sluggish pace of corporate reform in Japan
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Has Japan truly escaped low inflation?. Its central bankers are increasingly hopeful
#Jan.23.2025

#economist.com. × What next for US Steel?. The faded industrial icon has few good options without a Nippon deal
#Jan.09.2025

#economist.com. × A tie-up between Honda and Nissan will not fix their problems. Speed, not scale, is what they require
#Dec.18.2024

#economist.com. × Can Japan’s toilet technology crack global markets?. The leading maker of electronic bidets shows the difficulties facing Japanese companies abroad
#Oct.31.2024

#economist.com. × Masayoshi Son is back in Silicon Valley—and late to the AI race. This isn’t the first time the Japanese tech investor has missed the hot new thing
#Oct.10.2024

#economist.com. × Why the hype for hybrid cars will not last. Fully electric vehicles will win the race
#Sep.17.2024

#economist.com. × Japan’s sleepy companies still need more reform. The country’s corporate-governance crusade has a long way to go
#Sep.09.2024

#economist.com. × Is the era of the mega-deal over?. Nippon’s acquisition of US Steel is not the only mega-merger falling apart
#Sep.08.2024

#economist.com. × Can Japan’s zombie bond market be brought back to life?. Ueda Kazuo begins on a dangerous mission
#Aug.29.2024

#economist.com. × What a takeover offer for 7-Eleven says about business in Japan. Its merger with a Canadian firm would create a convenience-store goliath
#Aug.22.2024

#economist.com. × Why Japanese stocks are on a rollercoaster ride. Volatility in global markets continues
#Aug.06.2024

#economist.com. × Why Japanese markets have plummeted. The global rout continues, with the Topix experiencing its worst day since 1987
#Aug.05.2024

#economist.com. × Why fear is sweeping markets everywhere. American and Japanese indices have taken a battering. So have banks and gold
#Aug.02.2024

#economist.com. × Japanese businesses are trapped between America and China. Could geopolitics kill off an incipient corporate revival?
#May.28.2024

#economist.com. × Japan will struggle to rescue its plummeting currency. Expensive government intervention looks likely to provide only brief respite
#Apr.29.2024

#economist.com. × Why Japan Inc is no longer in thrall to America. As the home of capitalism turns protectionist, Japan is opening up
#Apr.02.2024

#economist.com. × Japan ends the world’s greatest monetary-policy experiment. For the first time in 17 years, officials raise interest rates
#Mar.19.2024
Filter: #economist.com. × #Forex ×
Showing 1-20 of 20 items - Time: 0.1929 s. Memory: 13.6258 mb.
