@HansrajMeena Aur wahi muslman tere n pure parivaar ko maar dega .... Bangladesh, pakistan dehk raha hai na ...tum jaise log jati pati mein hi bate rahoge
Traders lost around ₹50k Crore in F&O trading last year.
SEBI is looking to create entry barriers for small capital traders to 'solve' that problem.
Similarly, Indians spent (as good as lost) ₹4.5 Lakh Crore on Alcohal during the same time.
Dear FFSAI - pls increase the price of every alcohol bottle or can or whatever you regulate.
@Abhinav_Pan Aur wo hinduo ko mara jaa raha hai ... temples ko burn kiya jaa rha ...wo b tumhare yuva saky ki jeet hai ..
Do you really think this is just a youth protest.. moron
Hadd gire hue ho ...
Tum jaiso hinduo ke karan hi hindu marr raha hai ....
Why are global markets falling, including India's?
It's mainly due to the 'Yen Carry Trade.'
1. Investors borrowed cheap yen from Japan to invest in higher return assets globally.
2. Bank of Japan hiked rates by 0.25% last week.
3. The Fed signaled future rate cuts.
Result? The yen is rising against the USD and other currencies and sell off in risky assets.
Let's understand it with an example.
Before Interest Rate Hike:
1. An investor borrows 1,000,000 yen at 0.1% interest from Japan.
2. Converts the 1,000,000 yen to USD at an exchange rate of 1 USD = 100 yen, getting $10,000.
3. Invests $10,000 in a global asset with a 5% return, earning $500.
After Interest Rate Hike and Yen Appreciation:
1. Bank of Japan raises interest rates to 0.25%.
2. The yen appreciates to 1 USD = 90 yen.
3. The investor needs to repay 1,000,000 yen + 0.25% interest = 1,002,500 yen.
4. Converts $10,000 + $500 (returns) = $10,500 back to yen at the new rate, getting 945,000 yen.
5. The investor now has a shortfall of 57,500 yen due to the stronger yen and higher interest rate.
This increased cost forces investors to sell off their global investments to repay their yen loans, causing markets to fall.