The new space race
Elon Musk: Moving Space X to Texas after trans law
Space X founder Elon Musk intends to move his space company from California to Texas, he writes on his own platform X.
The reason is a new law that prevents school staff from informing parents if their student should identify as a different gender.
Elon Musk: Moving Space X to Texas after trans law
Space X founder Elon Musk intends to move his space company from California to Texas, he writes on his own platform X.
The reason is a new law that prevents school staff from informing parents if their student should identify as a different gender.
*****************
The development of the Swedish krona
IMF: The krone the most undervalued currency
The Swedish krona is one of the most undervalued currencies in the world, states the International Monetary Fund IMF in a report.
If you clear for inflation and take into account the current account balance, competitiveness and indebtedness in Sweden compared to other currencies, the Swedish krona is undervalued by 17 percent, according to the IMF's analysis according to the REER gap measure.
- The Swedish krona is out of balance with economic fundamentals. In the end, it should return to a normal valuation, says SEB's senior economist Robert Bergqvist to DI.
IMF: The krone the most undervalued currency
The Swedish krona is one of the most undervalued currencies in the world, states the International Monetary Fund IMF in a report.
If you clear for inflation and take into account the current account balance, competitiveness and indebtedness in Sweden compared to other currencies, the Swedish krona is undervalued by 17 percent, according to the IMF's analysis according to the REER gap measure.
- The Swedish krona is out of balance with economic fundamentals. In the end, it should return to a normal valuation, says SEB's senior economist Robert Bergqvist to DI.
****************
The election in the USA The Republican election campaign
Almost every other person believes in a better economy with Trump
Almost one in two Americans believe they will be better off financially if Donald Trump becomes president. That's according to a new survey from the Financial Times and the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan.
45 percent of respondents state that they would be much or somewhat better off with Trump in the White House. At the same time, 35 percent state that they would be much or somewhat worse off.
The survey was conducted last week, before this weekend's assassination attempt on Donald Trump.
Almost every other person believes in a better economy with Trump
Almost one in two Americans believe they will be better off financially if Donald Trump becomes president. That's according to a new survey from the Financial Times and the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan.
45 percent of respondents state that they would be much or somewhat better off with Trump in the White House. At the same time, 35 percent state that they would be much or somewhat worse off.
The survey was conducted last week, before this weekend's assassination attempt on Donald Trump.
Inga kommentarer:
Skicka en kommentar