T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
393.1 | My 2 cents.... | YIELD::KHAN | | Tue Feb 23 1993 13:46 | 19 |
| RE: -1
> 3, What percentage of assets in the US (eg real estate) is owned by
> non US entities? What is the $ amount of this.
I can answer part of this one....$90-100 billion invested by
British firms and individuals...They are # 1 in buying up the
US contrary to popular belief that it is the Japanese....I recall
that the Japanese have invested around $50-60billion in the US
Of course, not forgetting that the Japanese and the British hold
and buy regularly huge amounts of T-bills....so I am not sure
what one can call that 'their investments' or 'our debt'.
Standard Disclamiers apply.....
AK
|
393.2 | A reference | DEMING::SORRELLS | Like to heah it? Heah it go. | Wed Feb 24 1993 15:02 | 16 |
| .1 is in the right order of magnitude, but those numbers include
plants, machinery, land, mineral rights... I think The Netherlands
is right behind Japan.
Note:
A confusing factor is the definition of a foreign entity: A
company whose ownership is x% foreign??? US subsidiaries of
foreign interests???
Anyway, I can give you the place to look: The Statistical Abstract
of the United States - Any Library (e.g. Town of Maynard) has it.
Numbers may be two years old, though. You'll get a breakdown by
country such as the numbers in .1, or by property as in my first
sentence or by state. You'll also see that these foreign-owned
interests employ around 3 million Americans.
|
393.3 | Currency too | MAYDAY::ANDRADE | The sentinel (.)(.) | Wed Jul 07 1993 05:20 | 18 |
| Also need to look at the currency.
How much forein currency does the US hold, and how much US currency do
foreign nations hold.
US currency held outside of the US, means that the US owes the holders.
And that if those same holders call in for payment all at once, the US
currency could suffer a serious inflationary surge.
Just look at what just recently happened to half of the European
currencies. Forced devaluation that will delay that much longer their
recovery.
It just goes to show that currency also represents governament debt,
one not often called in, but that is there never-the-less and that
should not be ignored. Less it hit you when you lest can aford it.
Gil
|
393.4 | Datum, if it helps | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed Jul 07 1993 08:46 | 1 |
| I have read that U.S. foreign currency holdings amount to ~ $33 billion
|
393.5 | Only a blip | TLE::JBISHOP | | Wed Jul 07 1993 11:06 | 18 |
| When the dollar was backed by gold (until 1972 for international
exchanges), this was an issue, but it no longer is.
If Germany, to take an example, holds N billion dollars, it can
buy US products and services, but it can't "call for payment" in
anything else. This might create a slight upward blip in prices,
but in a multi-trillion dollar GNP it wouldn't be huge.
If Germany were to sell the dollars on the markets for marks (or
yen or pounds...), that would drive the dollar down a bit, which
would raise import prices, but again without a big impact.
If all the holders of dollars were to simultaneously use them to
buy US goods, land, and so on, there would be a biggish upward
blip. But not a huge one--and it would be a one-time event, not
a trend.
-John Bishop
|
393.6 | $39 CD with macroeconomic data and a whole lot more | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri Aug 05 1994 14:48 | 29 |
| From a flyer I got in the mail:
"Instant Investor (TM) Over 200MB of financial - business - trading
software - extensive economic statistics - exchange data
This is the product you have been waiting for! A complete collection of
software, tools, data and information to help you make wise investment
ddecisions.
Only $39 from Traders Press, POB 6206 Greenville SC 29606 USA"
(In Europe call the Penta Group, Austria (+43-1) 330-0979 or Email to
[email protected])
I don't usually post ads, but this is first economical :-) source of
economic data. Things like CPI monthly data, economic-related census
data, monthly employment figures, petroleum imports/usage/etc.,
personal income, salaries, inventories, disposable personal income,
defense expenditures, on and on and on. A lot of the data goes back
to 1947, energy to 1973 (guess why?) and a few items date only from 1980.
Plus statistics from Germany, Canada, Switzerland, Japan and the UK.
Some of the data are in Lotus format, some in ASCII.
So if you've ever had a hankering to compare housing starts against
next quarter's change in business inventories, or CPI less food and
energy against GDP, this is an inexpensive source.
John
|
393.7 | | RANGER::DIFONZO | | Mon Aug 08 1994 14:26 | 8 |
| re: .6
John,
Do you have the phone number to call from the US?
Thanks,
John
|
393.8 | Oops | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Aug 09 1994 09:22 | 7 |
| Voice 1.800.927.8222
Fax 1.803.298.0221
Sorry about that.
John
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