May 23rd, 2009 stanley
I am using MS Access 2007 and am trying to enter dollar amounts, such as $23.99, but they are showing as the rounded value of $24.00. The field size is Long Integer, the Format is Currency, and Decimal Places is set to 2. How do I make it NOT round my dollar amounts?
Posted in Currency Trading | 1 Comment »
May 23rd, 2009 stanley
Hi has anyone purchased or used this forex commercial Package to trade the forex market. PLease can you advice to the Pro's and Con's
Only answers from ppl who have used the package and and actively trade the forex market.
Posted in forex trading | 4 Comments »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
is it the same as the u.s? or do they have a different name for it like mexico and other countries?
Posted in Currency Trading | 2 Comments »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
the relationship?
Posted in Currency Trading | 2 Comments »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
for ex: coins, federal reserve notes, gold-backed securities, treasure bills
Posted in Currency Trading | 1 Comment »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
lets assume that X country does not import (significantly) from overseas, and does not export (significantly). What will be the effect on the local prices of product if the currency is devalued. Please give me some detailed info.
thanks a ton !
Posted in Currency Trading | 1 Comment »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
what do u think
Do u keep other reserve like Gold and USD or other currencies
Posted in Currency Trading | 3 Comments »
May 22nd, 2009 stanley
"hasn't crashed and burned"
Why do you think they're borrowing and lending trillions of dollars - like NEVER before? It's the modern equivalent of printing up more money just to literally throw it around and make people think, "Gosh, yesterday I had only $2 on me and now I have ten - things must still be okay." But what they don't realize is that the watered-down soup is only being watered down more.
Posted in Currency Trading | 3 Comments »
May 21st, 2009 stanley
Posted in Currency Trading | 18 Comments »
May 21st, 2009 stanley
Posted in Currency Trading | 1 Comment »