![]() |
USD at 1.27 today. The sky is falling
Tell us, has the crazy spike in USD affected your spending? Today's rate is 1.27, this means that if you use your Canadian credit card to shop in the USA you will likely be paying over 1.30.
Save this link http://www.bankofcanada.ca/rates/exc...d-can-summary/ Ray |
Might cause you to get a little more business as BRS for example is quickly becoming unaffordable.
Really though I will be spending less simply because I have less (each and every day). Makes me wish for gas prices to be back at 1.20... |
The thing that really gets me is I always try to buy at Canadian retailers as much as possible. All the manufactures base our pricing on US dollars. This makes buying from China more and more enticing, especially with their low shipping rates...
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Cryyyyy
Went to TD downtown to exchange for US. I'm going to Hawaii next week. The exchange is at 1.31. Wtf!!!!
|
in canada were paying $0.50+ tax on every litter of gas we buy
if China release 10-20% Of their money out of china bank USD will be worthless |
Quote:
|
Best advice I can give anyone that buys regularly in USD and pays by bank transfer. Buy a futures contract on USD.
Drop me a line if you want to know how to do it. Fyi - only worth it if the currency is ascending and or you need to fix your rates for price lists. |
Quote:
China and the U.S. got each by each other's balls. One cannot do anything to upset the other. For China to flood the market with US dollars is just not smart and suicidal. China has real financial wealth and the U.S. has intellectual wealth. Yes, there is still room to take advantage of the futures market |
The cost of crude was pushed down to strangle Russia. Once the crude goes back up, the USD will drop once again. This is crap, the USD is NOT worth this much.
|
Thats more conjecture really.
The short version of the story goes like this: For much of the past decade, oil prices have been high — bouncing around $100 per barrel since 2010 — because of soaring oil consumption in countries like China and conflicts in key oil nations like Iraq. Oil production in conventional fields couldn't keep up with demand, so prices spiked. BY 2014, OIL SUPPLY WAS MUCH HIGHER THAN DEMAND But beneath the surface, many of those dynamics were rapidly shifting. High prices spurred companies in the US and Canada to start drilling for new, hard-to-extract crude in North Dakota's shale formations and Alberta's oil sands. Then, over the last year, demand for oil in places like Europe, Asia, and the US began tapering off, thanks to weakening economies and new efficiency measures. By late 2014, world oil supply was on track to rise much higher than actual demand. A lot of unused oil was simply being stockpiled away for later. So, in September, prices started falling sharply. As prices slid, many observers waited to see whether OPEC, the world's largest oil cartel, would cut back on production to push prices back up. (Many OPEC states, like Saudi Arabia and Iran, need higher prices to balance their budgets.) But at its big meeting last November, OPEC did nothing. Saudi Arabia didn't want to give up market share and refused to cut production — in the hopes that lower prices would help throttle the US shale boom. That was a surprise. So oil went into free-fall. The oil price crash is now upending the global economy, with ramifications for every country in the world. Low prices are excellent news for oil consumers in places like Japan or the US, where gasoline is the cheapest it's been in years. But it's a different story for nations reliant on oil sales. Russia's economy is facing a potential meltdown. Venezuela is facing unrest and may default on its debt. Even better-prepared countries like Saudi Arabia could face heavy pressure if oil prices stay low. |
Quote:
Ideally, the Saudi's would like to decrease production of Canadian oil from oilsands and American shale. However, shale is a fast return project and can be started and stopped at any time, so oil prices won't have much of an effect on production over time. But low oil prices for about 3-4 years should have a significant effect on Canadian oilsands development, enough to allow the Saudi's to regain most of what they lost. They can afford to have oil as low as $15/barrel and still make significant profit... I don't see oil going back up any time soon |
Well, there are quite a few reasons for our low loonie, as has been discussed. But the latest straw was when our central banker, Polaz, dropped our interest rates by a 1/4 percent, while the US fed reaffirmed their intentions to raise them in the 2nd qtr (don't think it will happen, though, personally).
In Canada we are under the false hope that with our lower loonie our manufacturing industries will once again flourish. I don't think that will happen, as our labor costs are too high (as compared to Alabama and Georgia, not to mention China) and many of our raw materials are based on USD. Last time we needed a 65 cent loonie, now we probably will need a 40 cent loonie to make it work. And then we are also up against the Buy America First program. So, we are in for some tough times in Canada, not just in Alberta, but also Ontario and Quebec... Adapt or perish, as they say... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
True, I am working Q2 pricing now for 1.35 I dont think the CAD has the strength to go much lower.
One that is hard to predict and is causing me headaches whether to get a futures on is the GBP, with a general election round the corner and so much on it riding on an entry exit from Europe, it really could go either way. Futures are great on the ascending but a Butt kick on the opposing. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Only good news is that our lumber industry in BC will get a much needed big boost (Quebec, too). Certainly can't count on anything happening with our LNG hopes, at least not anytime soon... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I think we also need to focus more on China, and Asia in general. Big market there, and they do want things that we have, and I don't just mean oil. But domestically, we have to make the most of what we do have and can do, and stop trying to artificially support failing industries. I was in retail (big box) all my career, and it is unbelievable the hoops and regulations you now need to go through to build or remodel a store. What used to take 2 or 3 years (from plans to completion) now takes 5 - 7 years, and what used to cost 2 - 4 million, now costs 5 -7, and more. This is over a span of just 10 years. With all the govt fingers (municipal are the worst, then provincial) involved, with all their assessments, consultations, and delays, it is making it very, very difficult to do business in Canada. Only the guys with very deep pockets and very long strategic time frames (like Walmart, Costco, etc) can survive. Cdn companies are at a huge disadvantage, caused by their own govts. Sorry for the rant..., but I had to live this for the last part of my career,... and have very strong opinions here. |
|
Sucks for our imported equipment
|
Quote:
|
This is going to be a major issue.
The prices of corals will also be effected because they are always purchased from farms in US dollars. |
Quote:
Guess we just have to buy when sales are on...:smile: |
|
Good for my USD account right now ;)
http://www.xe.com/ take into account that's interbank rates in the link the consumer can pay anything up to 6.0 points above this!!! but typically around 3.0 points. I have strong Corporate connections to Canadian Forex which means we pay a small 0.1 above interbank which helps us keep pricing as low as physically possible. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Can you put a 2 part calculator on your site, it would help keep a lot of folks using and buying Canadian from you guys IMO. :idea: |
All times are GMT. The time now is 08:41 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.