Post
by Bump » July 11, 2007, 8:33 pm
No I don't think your wrong at all in the short term, there will be profits. the problem here is what happens to Thailand when the profits are taken.
Tha actual goods produced are now more expensive to buy with the dollar. The factory that closed today produced sports clothing for Nike. To expensive they have other sources my guess is they decided to buy where it was cheaper for them. Hence the factory had no orders and 5,000 people lost thier jobs overnight.
Now to a guy doing the stocks that means nothing, but to those people that lost those job that was the money they were using to live, not to speculate. I honestly believe there will be many more before this is over.
If you had the money to do it and knew when to get it you could a fortune right now. Which is exactly what these investors are doing. Relaxing the rules opened the flood gates for short term investors. The reason they picked Thailand is it and the thier market is small easy to manipulate.
The problem doesn't lie in the money coming in for Thailand it's when it goes out.
If I can buy a gidget from you that costs. three dollars and I can buy the same gidget from Vietnam for a dollar. Where do you think I might buy a million gidgets?
That is what is happening in the export market for many items exported from Thailand. Many companies have already been running a break even or loss to keep the doors open, in the clothing sector. Then another hit in the baht this week, was maore then this company could handle and they closed the doors.
If yuo are a smart investor it doesn't get much bettre then this, but it is not good for the average Thai, nor the Average American retiree.
If these were long term investors it would a completly differrent thing, but they already bailed out once. When the government controls were put in palae a huge exodus. For thi type of investors, things start not looking good a ton of money will go out of the country very quickly. A terrible prospect for an unemployed Thai. Won't hurt the avrerage Ameican retiree, matter of fact will probably help that person. He just has to go through some uncomfort for a while.
This is my home I hate to see this happeing, in the long run whats good for the average Thai is good for me as well. There were huge amounts of money made in the 97 crash, but the country nor did the average Thai make any.
Those 5,000 people were earning 190 a day, that one move means that there 950,000 baht per day not going back into the local economy , if my math is correct and that just one business. However, those that can maipulate the marked didn't lose that today..
So the good or bad at the moment depends on where you stand in this?
There areas that export is still good, but the people laid off today can't fill those positions. One they are already full, and electronics requires a different kind of skill then making clothes.
So I don't disagree wih you at all, I'm just looking a little further down line. If the economy colapses here it will help me, not hurt me But it would be a much better deal if no one got hurt, I don't think that is what is going to happen.
I could be very wrong. On a long term basis of the baht at 25 and he inflation that happened over a ten year period. make this a much more expenisive place to visit or live, for dollar holders. 25 to a dollar wouldn; bothe me at all, if tat 25 baht had the same purchasing power it had ten years ago. It doesn't and more the likely never will
Some changes are coming and time will tell. My views can be very wrong, the economy is an area where I have no experience, actually started this thread a very long time ago to learn from others. I hope I have learned for those on the forum much more knowlegable then I.