Brazil and Argentina’s presidents have launched discussions on a common currency, but their plans are nothing like the euro, which replaced national currencies like the lira, franc and deutsche mark ...
American currency as we know it today has been in circulation since 1792. Founding Fathers, past presidents, and a selection of other notable historical figures appear on the country’s paper bills and ...
The new coins, coming after the administration stopped issuing new pennies earlier this year, underscore Trump’s drive to put his own stamp on the presidency far beyond the confines of the White House ...
NEW YORK, Jan 23 (Reuters) - South America is not likely to have a common currency bloc to rival the euro any time soon, analysts said on Monday, despite excited chatter sparked by officials in Brazil ...
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva proposed creating a common currency in the region during a meeting with South American heads of state in Brasilia on Tuesday. The single currency would ...
When it comes to local currency trades in Latin America over the awards period, it is impossible to ignore America Movil’s Ps15bn (US$1.2bn) dual-listed 10-year, as well as the series of taps that ...
Could America lose the global currency race? Understand the historical dominance of the U.S. dollar, the emerging threats from geopolitical shifts and digital currencies, and the profound implications ...
It is said that those who do not remember the past are doomed to repeat it. Evidently, Brazil’s President Lula and Argentina’s President Fernandez have not remembered Europe’s unfortunate experience ...
A Republican-backed House Bill would establish a gold- and silver-backed currency system in Ohio, letting residents convert U.S. dollars into pirate money that could be used as legal tender. Backers ...
As we watch our economy collapse under the weight of doubt, debt, and deficit, it is well to recall that where financial troubles exist, so do rumors. For some five years, some conspiracy minded ...
The recent volatility in Latin American currencies in likely to persist as global investors adjust their allocations to the region to a level more consistent with a tighter US Federal Reserve policy, ...