BBSA
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Disclaimer: this is not my field of expertise whatsoever, but I do find it interesting.2.3Trillion dollars created out of thin air!
I remember how I was watching the ZAR - USD exchange when I was shopping for a 3D printer a few years ago (i think 3?). Man I was grumpy when it hit 13.30... Man those were the days![]()
Yes it should, but the US dollar never really devalue as it is reserve currency of the world and oil has to be settled in dollars. There is just always a demand for dollars.Disclaimer: this is not my field of expertise whatsoever, but I do find it interesting.
Does this mean they are "printing" money? If yes, doesn't that devalue a currency quite a bit? Isnt that good for us?
It was R12 just 2 years ago.
Wait until the covid-19 pandemic ends. Rand will eventually stabilise.
Certainty more than policy. You can have a reasonably stupid policy as long as you are consistent in its implementation and the message around it. Investors will find a way to work with you.I know they mention on they Money show on 702 (or used to) that our currency is undervalued. How does one go about getting this fixed though? Just through decent policy decisions? Surely a rubbish currency hurts everyone that imports anything (and we are heavy importers in SA)
Yes and no. They're printing, but it doesn't go to actual people they buy junk bonds, mostly held by financial institutions to ensure liquidity. It's just bailing out banks over and over again. There's no real benefit and the money doesn't really enter the economy to cause inflation.Disclaimer: this is not my field of expertise whatsoever, but I do find it interesting.
Does this mean they are "printing" money? If yes, doesn't that devalue a currency quite a bit? Isnt that good for us?
Like buying bad debt, they probably end up writing it off with tax payer money right?Yes and no. They're printing, but it doesn't go to actual people they buy junk bonds, mostly held by financial institutions to ensure liquidity. It's just bailing out banks over and over again. There's no real benefit and the money doesn't really enter the economy to cause inflation.
I know they mention on they Money show on 702 (or used to) that our currency is undervalued. How does one go about getting this fixed though? Just through decent policy decisions? Surely a rubbish currency hurts everyone that imports anything (and we are heavy importers in SA)
They going to export to whom exactly?But exporters will be rubbing their hands gleefully... there's always a winner somewhere in everything.

Thanks for a great reply around the Rand. And yes the Rand is now indeed trading stronger than R18. It was intersting how people were quoting a web page that put the Rand at R24/$ in a few months time. Also they forecast the level for the next 3 years. Within 8 hours their 3 year model suddenly shows no sign of the R24 level.
The Rand was steady between R14 and R15.30 and only Corona caused people to move away from weak currencies to the stronger $. Things will look better in months to come.
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Thanks for a great reply around the Rand. And yes the Rand is now indeed trading stronger than R18. It was intersting how people were quoting a web page that put the Rand at R24/$ in a few months time. Also they forecast the level for the next 3 years. Within 8 hours their 3 year model suddenly shows no sign of the R24 level.
The Rand was steady between R14 and R15.30 and only Corona caused people to move away from weak currencies to the stronger $. Things will look better in months to come.
Linked to the gold price in US dollars
I think it's about at its peak at $1600 and R16 for a dollar.