m.m.f
Forumer storico
130 il suo prezzo....retifico...140.
Ultima modifica:
e nessun analista tecnico (del forum) si è pronunciato, sorprendente!intanto la 2034 in dollari è oltre 116
io posso pronunciarmi sulla 36 che è a 106 , mi accontento ma c'è poco da analizzare, son cose al di fuori di analisi tecnichee nessun analista tecnico (del forum) si è pronunciato, sorprendente!
(nel frattempo 117,10)
io posso pronunciarmi sulla 36 che è a 106 , mi accontento ma c'è poco da analizzare, son cose al di fuori di analisi tecniche
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey’s budget deficit jumped 70% last year as the government boosted spending before local elections in the face of a recession, while aggressive monetary stimulus gave the housing market a big boost heading into the new year. New buildings are under construction next to the Innovia 4 project of Yesil GYO, a Turkish real estate investment company, in the western Esenyurt district of Istanbul, Turkey, July 8, 2019.
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey’s budget deficit jumped 70% last year as the government boosted spending before local elections in the face of a recession, while aggressive monetary stimulus gave the housing market a big boost heading into the new year. New buildings are under construction next to the Innovia 4 project of Yesil GYO, a Turkish real estate investment company, in the western Esenyurt district of Istanbul, Turkey, July 8, 2019.
The deficit was 123.7 billion lira ($21 billion) in 2019, just below a government forecast. One-off contributions, including tapping central bank legal reserves, offset the spending and could make future forecasts hard to meet, analysts said. Once 2019’s economic output is calculated, the deficit is likely to come around the government’s estimate of 2.9% of GDP.
In December alone, the deficit was 30.8 billion lira ($5.2 billion), while the primary budget balance, which excludes interest payments, showed a deficit of 26.59 billion lira, the Treasury and Finance Ministry said.
Ankara said in September that it expected to limit deficits in 2020 and 2021 to 2.9% of GDP tmsnrt.rs/36WwbI2, while it expects GDP growth to jump to an ambitious 5%. The economy emerged from recession in 2019 after a currency crisis in 2018.
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey’s budget deficit jumped 70% last year as the government boosted spending before local elections in the face of a recession, while aggressive monetary stimulus gave the housing market a big boost heading into the new year. New buildings are under construction next to the Innovia 4 project of Yesil GYO, a Turkish real estate investment company, in the western Esenyurt district of Istanbul, Turkey, July 8, 2019.
The deficit was 123.7 billion lira ($21 billion) in 2019, just below a government forecast. One-off contributions, including tapping central bank legal reserves, offset the spending and could make future forecasts hard to meet, analysts said. Once 2019’s economic output is calculated, the deficit is likely to come around the government’s estimate of 2.9% of GDP.
In December alone, the deficit was 30.8 billion lira ($5.2 billion), while the primary budget balance, which excludes interest payments, showed a deficit of 26.59 billion lira, the Treasury and Finance Ministry said.
Ankara said in September that it expected to limit deficits in 2020 and 2021 to 2.9% of GDP tmsnrt.rs/36WwbI2, while it expects GDP growth to jump to an ambitious 5%. The economy emerged from recession in 2019 after a currency crisis in 2018.