Sentences with phrase «swiss franc»

Andrea Maechler / banks / Bitmain / Canton of Zug / Central Bank / Commercial Banks / crypto / Crypto Valley / Cryptocurrencies / Cryptocurrency / cryptos / Currency / Economy & Regulation / financial stability / Gazprombank / N - Economy / Poland / Regulation / Regulations / russia / SNB / state - issued / state - sponsored / Sweden / swiss / Swiss franc / Swiss National Bank / Switzerland / Venezuela
And since the Swiss franc is no longer backed by gold, it's just another fiat currency.
We expect a number of «safe haven» assets to be boosted by the UK referendum result in the short term, including the Swiss franc, the US dollar, Japanese yen, gold and core government bonds.
The most heavily traded forex pairs are: EUR / USD, USD / JPY, GBP / USD, and USD / CHF, which are the euro, Japanese yen, British pound, and Swiss franc rates versus the US dollar.
The yen and Swiss franc were up big, 2 % and 1 % respectively.
Major currencies are U. S. dollar, Euro, Swiss franc, etc. and the examples of exotic currency are Indonesian Rupiah, Taiwanese Dollar, Uruguay peso etc..
Whereas the Canadian dollar is up just over 3 % versus the US dollar in the last 12 months, the Swiss franc, Japanese yen and Chinese yuan have appreciated in the high single digits, while the euro and British pound have strengthened in the teens.
In my monthly dividend income posts I present the effective net amounts (after taxes) credited on my bank account, which is denominated in Swiss franc.
Components of «MASH» include zero - coupons, TIPS, munis, long - dated treasury bonds, gold, German bunds, Japanese government bonds, the yen, the dollar and the Swiss franc.
This fund is based on the U.S. Dollar Index, an index that tracks a weighted performance of the euro (57.6 %), Japanese yen (13.6 %), British pound (11.9 %), Canadian dollar (9.1 %), Swedish krona (4.2 %), and Swiss franc (3.6 %).
Monday — Hogs, Corn, Soybeans, Gold, Eurocurrency, Australian dollar, Cocoa, Swiss franc Tuesday — Wednesday — Soy meal, Silver, Eurocurrency Thursday — Soybeans, Bean oil, Treasury bonds Friday — Japanese yen, Cotton, Coffee... read more
The Pyramis researchers explain that the US dollar, euro and Swiss franc tend to have negative correlation with the global equity markets.
according to the CFTC COT data and calculations by Reuters which calculates the dollar positions against the euro, British pound, Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar and the Swiss franc.
LIBOR is determined daily and is based on rates that a reference panel of banks can borrow from other banks on the London market for each calculated currency, including the U.S. dollar (USD), Euro (EUR), pound sterling (GBP), Japanese yen (JPY), and Swiss franc (CHF).
The stocks in VDU are denominated in a basket of overseas currencies: the euro, pound, yen, Swiss franc, Australian dollar, and others.
During 2013, for example, the Canadian dollar declined against the euro, the pound and the Swiss franc, but appreciated against the yen and Australian dollar (see chart above).
A rarity among U.S. banks, EverBank offers CDs denominated in a variety of global currencies, from the Australian dollar to the Swiss franc.
The following currencies are considered the most popular in Forex: USD (United States dollar), JPY (Japanese yen), GBP (Pound sterling), EUR (Euro), CHF (Swiss franc), CAD (Canadian dollar) and AUD (Australian dollar).
Commercial traders are also long the Swiss franc in a big way.
For example; the pair CHF / JPY, worth 84.50 which would mean that one Swiss franc is equal to 84.50 Japanese yen.
In general, the carry trade currencies, the yen and the swiss franc, underperformed, and higher yielding currencies did better.
In general, a substantial portion of the ETF's foreign currency exposure is hedged against the movement of the euro, Swiss franc, pound and so on against the Canadian dollar.
Without that devaluation, my YoC would be significantly higher (but again to be clear, I am not complaining about a strong Swiss franc).
My portfolio is denominated in Swiss franc and I hold major positions in EUR, USD and GBP so there might be some devations e.g. with regard to my projections concerning YoC due to exchange rate fluctuations.
Over the long term, these fluctuations will smooth out and of course as an investor in the accumulation phase, a strong Swiss franc towards other currencies is a real blessing (see also The day when my portfolio dropped by 15 %).
My holding in Unilever is in GBP which has depreciated quite a lot against the Swiss franc.
These are the U.S. dollar and euros; the U.S. dollar and Japanese yen; the U.S. dollar and the British pound sterling; and the U.S. dollar and the Swiss franc.
The Intercontinental Exchange Benchmark Administration (IBA) produces benchmarks in five currencies: the US dollar, euro, British pound, Swiss franc and Japanese yen.
Also, the carry trade currencies (yen / swiss franc) have been running as well.
So it is pretty clear, that the exchange rate between the Swiss franc and the euro plays a significant role for my portfolio which is denominated in Swiss franc.
It features the Australian dollar, the Brazilian real, the Japanese dollar, the Singapore dollar, and the Swiss franc.
The strong Swiss franc of course is a drag and I expect slow growth regarding my Swiss stocks and prices to remain rather flat for some years, which is not per se a bad thing, especially when new funds are added to these positions and dividends are reinvested (see also Slowing dividend growth is nothing to lament about).
The SNB had installed that floor in 2011 and communicated to the markets that it will sell Swiss franc in unlimited quantities to ensure the value of the currency didn't appreciate beyond 1.2 against the euro.
On January 2015 the Swiss central bank took markets by surprise by announcing that the three year old floor under the euro / Swiss franc pair was not maintained any longer.
As an investor in the accumulation phase, a strong Swiss franc — particularily towards the EUR, GBP — is a real blessing.
My USD - stocks such as ExxonMobil and Chevron as well as my GBP - shares (BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto) gave a slight support against the drop as the devaluation of the USD and the GBP against the Swiss franc was not that strong.
In just a few minutes after the central bank's accouncemend, the Swiss franc shot up against all major currencies.
To monitor the exchange rate, go to any foreign exchange website and look for the US dollar / Swiss franc rate.
With regard to my stocks in euro, the devalutaion against the Swiss franc was very negative, causing the same effect as if there was a dividend cut of 25 % regarding all my European holdings.
If we got a boost here it was because of a rising euro, yen, Swiss franc, yuan, etc..
EU and Australia - regulated forex broker XM changed on Monday the margin requirements for the Swiss franc (CHF) forex pairs.
Although VXUS trades in USD, its underlying stocks are denominated in a host of native currencies, including the euro, yen, pound, Swiss franc and Australian dollar.
Soon after the announcement, the euro was trading at just above the 1.20 Swiss franc target after earlier being at around 1.10 francs.
The Swiss franc has appreciated quite a bit recently against the Euro as the European Central Bank (ECB) continues to print money to buy government bonds issues by Greek, Portugal, Spain and now Italy.
The SNB interventions have failed to suppress the Swiss franc and its value has continued to rise.
In response, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has tried to intervene multiple times in the currency market to keep the value of the Swiss franc low.
This has increased the value of the Swiss franc.
According to the Newedge Trend Indicator - a model portfolio that replicates the trades managed futures funds might make - bets this year on the euro, Swiss franc, Australian and New Zealand dollars were loss - making trades.
The Japanese yen and Swiss franc are often referred to as «safe havens» similar to gold (they generally have +20 % -40 % correlation with the precious metal).
Due to high interest rates in the Hungarian forint, Hungarian home buyers were very interested in lowering their monthly payments by taking out mortgages dominated in lower - yielding currencies like the Swiss franc.
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