C
Quote from post above-'then your deposit will get converted into a new currency and most likely suffer devaluation'
Can anybody give any idea roughly how much this devaluation would be?
Would it be extreme that €100 would end up being €5 or is this totally extreme?Thanks
There was an article in the Sunday Times last week predicting a devaluation in excess of 50%.
Ireland has a large balance of trade surplus and broadly balanced balance of payments, why should we devalue hugely? Nomura suggest a 25% devaluation but Bank of America suggest a 9% revaluation! A modest devaluation seems most likely, say 10%.
I didn't read that article and doubt if it said that, exactly.
Some Euro currencies could decline by that amount, Greece certainly and possibly Portugal. Ireland has a large balance of trade surplus and broadly balanced balance of payments, why should we devalue hugely? Ireland has a large balance of trade surplus and broadly balanced balance of payments, why should we devalue hugely?
Nomura suggest a 25% devaluation but Bank of America suggest a 9% revaluation! A modest devaluation seems most likely, say 10%.
I don't see why we should leave the Euro, unless it breaks up.
Our problem is debt and devaluation makes debt even harder to repay. We could devalue and repudiate the debt, but it would be easier to just repudiate the debt and stay in the Euro!
Yes, I've read a few reports along these lines and I tend to agree with them.
There might be an initial devaluation, but it would tend to appreciate provided we maintain the net surplus.....
And of course it goes without saying that people who have stuffing money into Germany would stand to loose!
People are fooling themselves if they think that moving their Euros to Germany will protect them... it will not. The amount of foreign deposits with German banks is at such a level that it would cause serious economic problems in German if they were to convert them to the Neu Mark on the break up of the Euro and I can't imagine the Germans going along with that!
I didn't read that article and doubt if it said that, exactly.
Some Euro currencies could decline by that amount, Greece certainly and possibly Portugal. Ireland has a large balance of trade surplus and broadly balanced balance of payments, why should we devalue hugely? Nomura suggest a 25% devaluation but Bank of America suggest a 9% revaluation! A modest devaluation seems most likely, say 10%.
I don't see why we should leave the Euro, unless it breaks up. Our problem is debt and devaluation makes debt even harder to repay. We could devalue and repudiate the debt, but it would be easier to just repudiate the debt and stay in the Euro!
Bottom line is though that Marc made a good point about why you would have any significant amount of money in cash in the first place. If you're afraid of a Euro breakup then you should look at putting your money in physical things like equities and commodities, which is what I have done. The small amount of cash in my investments is not in Ireland though, because of the reasons I mention above.
+1, my thoughts exactly. I own one property with no debt and everything else is in cash. Most of it is in various Irish State Savings now thanks to good interest rates and favourable tax.It really depends on where you are in your life cycle, I've worked almost 30 years in the financial sector and right now I'm all cash and staying that way, I don't propose a long reply as each to their own although in general I always agreed with diversification, an old client of mine sitting on millions disagreed strongly and apart from purchasing a pad in London ( that did really well by the way ) they stayed in cash, many people tried to tempt them away with claims of inflation risk, diversification is good and so on but the do nothing approach worked and that's working for me now, I'm diversified across several Irish and foreign owned Banks and mindful of the applicable Govt guarantees, yes I considered a day return flight to Germany but quickly discounted it, If a person where to believe or rely on much commentary on this site then the poor Euro would be dead and gone a long time back, 4% annual deposit rates...Yes please I'll have that all day thank you very much !
celebtastic said:Have you been shopping to Northern Ireland recently?
Chris said:Contrary to your statement devaluation would result in the debt burden being reduced, but this would come at the expense of the creditors and savers.
+1, my thoughts exactly. I own one property with no debt and everything else is in cash. Most of it is in various Irish State Savings now thanks to good interest rates and favourable tax.
There are plenty of people out there like you, me and your multi millionaire former client. They tend to stay fairly quiet and generally don't post on internet forums though.
I'm keeping a close eye on inflation and am pleased with how things are working out. Inflation is my main concern, not "eurogeddon". Far too much hysteria about the latter and it is quite amusing to see people using the Sunday Times (one of Murdoch's europhobe rags, abysmal paper) as sources for their views.
FWIW if the eurogeddon that is being described here does happen (which it won't) all bets are off, there are absolutely no guarantees that having a German bank account, gold, shares etc. will protect a person's wealth in the way they hope.
I really think that people have skewed ideas when it comes to assessing risk and making subsequent investment decisions. There was a comment in this thread or another eurogeddon thread about how people should take all their money out of Irish banks even if the chance of euro collapse is 0.01%. This post will be deleted if not edited immediately wept.
kdoc said:Ghoul, that's my position too: one property and no debt. My money is in a mix of State Savings, Irish banks & Irish branches of foreign banks. So far the sky hasn't fallen down, despite the doomsday pedlars.
In early 2009... since then UK inflation has been 10%.
Two of the most sensible posts amid a mass of hysteria.
celebtastic said:Complete and utter hogwash
[broken link removed]
So do you think Brendan's post on how to protect yourself against a eurozone break up is hysterical?
I found it very sensible and far more reasoned than most of the "head in the sand" posts in from some in this thread.
It makes timely reading, as the end game with Greece approaches:
http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?t=163133
celeb, I'd love to know exactly - or even roughly - how many AAMers have actually got on a plane and opened accounts in Germany.
According to some posts, it's not all plain sailing opening such an account over the phone. One poster, when he identified himself as Irish was almost told to hump-off.
I have no idea of the numbers - neither do you
I suspect it's quite small.
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