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Holy shit - Canadian dollar down to $0.86 v USD and dropping
Holy shit - Canadian dollar down to $0.86 v USD and dropping
Canadian dollar slumps below 86¢ amid oil bust - The Globe and Mail . . . . |
Go USD GO!
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our dollar being on par with the US did us zero good from what I could tell. we've had bigger booms with lower dollars before.
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Keep it going. :)
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Might be time to take a long weekend in Toronto soon. :-)
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Economists say it will bottom out around 85 cents. Oil and our housing market has kept it pretty insulated from the global economic downturn. Certainly better when converting USD to CAD
http://i.imgur.com/KKzSsVM.gif |
Time for Canada to embrace alternative energies so oil price fluctuations dont' impact you loonies.
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But it does nothing for my OVH bill!
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if you work online, you should be making money in USD and should be liking this
anyone that buys anything online is American, can't make shit from any other country... USD go way way up !! against CAD or any other currency. Make money in USD from US customers and live anywhere else on the planet = win |
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**********, always about what the other guy can do to save the planet.
I couldn't give shit other than pointing that out, so enjoy your bitch slapped loonie this christmas while we're cashing in! in the meantime, seriously, Canada needs to embrace alt energies so this shit doesn't happen. funny thing? USA is embracing so much alt energy these days our economic # are no longer associated with oil stats. 'Merica, Fuck Yah! |
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I need to find a new forex site, this market is insanely predictable.
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Better do it fast as they wont hold prices low for long. The prince increase here in the stores is staggering. we are right now at 14.4 to one Mexican peso against the dollar. |
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:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh fyi, fracking is a technology for getting oil and gas out of the ground, it's not an energy at all. hope that helps! |
.80 wouldn't surprise me...not that I'm complaining at .86 :)
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Here's my responses to your stupid comments: Quote:
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Toots bitch! |
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as I stated:
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Yeah I saw that too
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So....time to come to Canada and tour the strip clubs, eh? :)
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Enjoy! |
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:1orglaugh |
yo it's dyna momo
/driveby |
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well done :1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
The slide in oil prices will probably cut Canadian economic growth by 1/3 of a percentage point in 2015, not the 1/4 point the Bank of Canada estimated in late October, bank Governor Stephen Poloz told Reuters on Friday.
He was speaking on the sidelines of an International Monetary Fund forum in Santiago two days after he held the central bank's policy rate steady at 1 percent. In the interest rate decision, he pointed to the stimulative impact of U.S. economic strength but also to the chilling effect on Canada, a major oil exporter, of cheaper crude. "When we're predicting growth somewhere between 2 and 2.5 percent, 0.3 (the percentage point reduction from oil) or thereabouts is an important factor. That's downside risk," Poloz said in Santiago. On Oct. 29, he had estimated the effect of the lower oil price on economic growth to be a quarter point, but prices have continued to slide since then. He said that while lower oil is negative for the Canadian economy, it is a little positive for the United States, and that it has a spillover effect in the form of stronger U.S. demand for Canadian goods. But the U.S. economy is performing well independently of the oil price, he said, and the lower Canadian dollar is also helping to lift Canadian growth. |
In the past five years, sales by U.S. renewable-energy companies increased at a 49 percent annual rate, while sales by oil, gas and coal companies climbed 9.4 percent. Renewable-power production rose to a record 252 million megawatt-hours in 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Oil generated 13 million megawatt-hours, down 88 percent since 2003.
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from wikipedia: "Renewable energy in the United States accounted for 12.9 percent of the domestically produced electricity in 2013,[1] and 11.2 percent of total energy generation" is it a lot ? |
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I would guess not. But the important parts are 1) we are trending towards more & more renewable energy sources as the statistics show, so while it may be 11-12% today, that # is going in the right direction - up. 2) the combination of several things, including using alt energy is what has separated the gdp and oil consumption link. We are becoming a much more efficient 'Merica, fuck yah! |
this is what I mean, oil production is a huge part of canada gdp.
while you use alt energies at home, your gdp is massively tied to oil production, that's going to be a problem. http://www.cepa.com/wp-content/uploa...24-billion.png |
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I didn't even know Canada had real money, I bought they just traded beaver pelts and bottels of molasses:winkwink:
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the trend has been in the making since 2013. lower gold & oil prices only made it accelerate. now Canada is facing a recession due to the end of a very long secular commodity bull market AND a looming real estate crisis. a double whammy coming up. and all of us running operations in Canada while getting revenue in USD are going to look like kings for years to come. I'm glad I rode out the low in the CAD/USD in 2010-2012 instead of shifting more operations to the US when it seemed to make sense. too bad for everyone else living here though...
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Surprised you would have a French company as your host :warning |
This means that for every six French Canadian escorts you fuck, one will be like getting a freebie.
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http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-rLHpEHrXcW...s1600/yawn.png Quote:
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tourism = 2% canada gdp, that's insignificant. but hey, keep thinking a crashing loonie is a good thing, I couldn't care less. |
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learn to read, then come back and read this thread then gofuckyourself. |
Hallmark will make millions on this.
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Oil price drop means lost billions for Canada, CIBC says Recent dive in oil prices 'an unprecedented development for the Canadian economy,' bank says The dramatic decline in oil prices will cost Ottawa about $5 billion in lost revenue and provincial economies a little more than that, one of Canada's biggest banks suggested today. That's one of the main takeaways from a CIBC report that attempts to quantify the impact of plunging oil prices on many aspects of Canada's economy. "The recent dive in crude oil prices is an unprecedented development for the Canadian economy," the report by CIBC economists Avery Shenfeld, Peter Buchanan and Warren Lovely says. There's a broad consensus that the declining price of oil is bad economic news for Canada, since the country has made major moves in the last decade or so to increase oil output and become a major global player in energy. Oil price drop means lost billions for Canada, CIBC says - Business - CBC News Happy Canadians are very happy about this news huh! :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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generally nothing is that dramatic, this current trend wont be either. |
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