Good analysis. Most years rupee has depreciated by more than 3 percent and this flattening against dollar is good sign. China is exporting deflation and rupee falling more than Yuan may reduce imports - but alas - no one can get you things so cheap. Small video but interesting
Hey how you guys do this type of research. I am asking about the source you relying on as i am a cfa student and interested in such type of studies myself. So, it would be a big help if you enlight us
Hey Chandu, in this case the research is by IndiaDataHub. They publish a newsletter every week and we simplify it and turn it into a video. Check the link in the description. But in general all these data points are public. So it depends on what you want to look for. If you have any questions you can ask us here open.substack.com/pub/thedailybriefing?r=1eft5
I am watching from last many days but the interest is going down for some time I would like if you guys could add stocks in it as a reference of the news to get affect on it appreciate the graphic on it but adding stock would make more sense would love to tell more changes as a consumer make videos love it
well it's good for the economy in perspectives of exports and production in country , cheaper for importers to buy from india , similar to what china has been doing for 20+ years , with yuan staying the same . all net exporters have weak currencies , all net importers like UK , USA , Australia , Europe etc have strong currencies while having less intrinsic value to their currencies
@@aaryanganglas i dont think it should come at the cost of increasing prices inside the country, thus shrinking the middle class who drive the entire consumption part of the economy. The moment govt slowed down capex spend, you see the gdp numbers (however cooked they are) came down lower. Without consumption an economy cannot sustain secular growth.
@@sormaziDid you miss out on the whole segment where the rate of this depreciation has slowed down to 1 % ? The biggest mistake you can make here is looking at these numbers in absolution and that's exactly what you're doing, the second is actually bringing politics into it. Anyways. Instead of looking at it that way, things like the 'rate' and 'trend' wrt to the historical context matter wayy more. Look at the volatility of the rupee since 2005, where at certain times this rate of change exceeded 7% median mentioned here y.o.y basis (the graph here only show takes into account 2016 and onwards) and you will realise this volatility has slowly tapered off. The current aim as quoted by the minister is to bring this rate under 1% which would be really good sign.
@@Rudi_Mentary723 wtf bro 3 day before it is going down now up wtf is going on i recommend don't put money now it is going up to fast big company's can cash out
Watch this in Hindi by clicking on this link : th-cam.com/video/jWtnOZy_vJQ/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
China's 4.6% growth in volume terms is still wayyy above India's 7.x% because their economy is 5x the size of India's.
Good analysis. Most years rupee has depreciated by more than 3 percent and this flattening against dollar is good sign. China is exporting deflation and rupee falling more than Yuan may reduce imports - but alas - no one can get you things so cheap. Small video but interesting
Insightful maiden episode🎉, Looking for more eye catchy and contemporary topics in the furthering weeks.
Excellent! Crispy and lucid
Ooooh another new segment after the Daily brief that I'm looking forward to.
Guess this will be for my lunch time viewing now !
Wow, thanks for watching 😍
Excellent analysis and delivery
Thanks Kashish! Liked your content on LinkedIn and now here as well :)
Thanks brother 😁
Excellent!!
Loved it - great analysis!
Thanks Sarthak
Aren't you missing a comma in the name, it should be "it's the economy, stupid"
"Is the economy stupid?"
All the sugar rush from diwali sweets 🤪
Hey how you guys do this type of research. I am asking about the source you relying on as i am a cfa student and interested in such type of studies myself. So, it would be a big help if you enlight us
Hey Chandu, in this case the research is by IndiaDataHub. They publish a newsletter every week and we simplify it and turn it into a video. Check the link in the description.
But in general all these data points are public. So it depends on what you want to look for. If you have any questions you can ask us here open.substack.com/pub/thedailybriefing?r=1eft5
Skip first 2 mins (for those who are not here to watch school level macro)
I am watching from last many days but the interest is going down for some time I would like if you guys could add stocks in it as a reference of the news to get affect on it appreciate the graphic on it but adding stock would make more sense would love to tell more changes as a consumer make videos love it
Is this guy Anurag everyone talking about
Umm, we can neither confirm nor deny. Just keep watching 😉
NOP
Thank you modiji and team for rupee at all time low 🤣
well it's good for the economy in perspectives of exports and production in country , cheaper for importers to buy from india , similar to what china has been doing for 20+ years , with yuan staying the same . all net exporters have weak currencies , all net importers like UK , USA , Australia , Europe etc have strong currencies while having less intrinsic value to their currencies
@aaryanganglas too bad we're a net importer and not a net exporter like china or japan where currency devaluation makes sense.
@@sormazi agreed but we're trying to become self reliant and promoting manufacturing , we need
@@aaryanganglas i dont think it should come at the cost of increasing prices inside the country, thus shrinking the middle class who drive the entire consumption part of the economy. The moment govt slowed down capex spend, you see the gdp numbers (however cooked they are) came down lower. Without consumption an economy cannot sustain secular growth.
@@sormaziDid you miss out on the whole segment where the rate of this depreciation has slowed down to 1 % ?
The biggest mistake you can make here is looking at these numbers in absolution and that's exactly what you're doing, the second is actually bringing politics into it. Anyways.
Instead of looking at it that way, things like the 'rate' and 'trend' wrt to the historical context matter wayy more. Look at the volatility of the rupee since 2005, where at certain times this rate of change exceeded 7% median mentioned here y.o.y basis (the graph here only show takes into account 2016 and onwards) and you will realise this volatility has slowly tapered off.
The current aim as quoted by the minister is to bring this rate under 1% which would be really good sign.
Kashish
You hate him?
Devaansh
Are you calling us stupid ??!
No bro. The name is based on a famous quote.by James Carville.
china's economy is to saturated
Doesn't look like it going by how FII are buying Chinese stocks/shares after their governments latest lot of financial schemes to help it's economy.
@@Rudi_Mentary723 than now stock crashed jitna tezi sa passi aya itna tazi sa gaya bhi
@@picest_ It's the Indian stock market that crashed ? The Chinese stocks is gradually strengthening after it's economic slowdown the last few years.
@@Rudi_Mentary723 wtf bro 3 day before it is going down now up wtf is going on i recommend don't put money now it is going up to fast big company's can cash out