Friday, January 29th, 2010 at
6:36 pm
As the value of the Canadian currency depends largely on the performance of the economy it can deceive investors as inflation over the long term raises equity prices and therefore equity indices. Normalizing the Canadian dollar to the price of an ounce of gold eliminates a portion of currency specific noise by comparing the composite to a global estimate of value. This is assuming that gold is considered to be the most accurate representation of wealth.
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Saturday, January 16th, 2010 at
4:11 am
The Canadian Dollar, the Euro, the Peso, the Yen, the Pound… or the Yuan?
Monday, December 28th, 2009 at
11:23 pm
Canadian dollar
British pounds 18.7194
How much money is the british pounds?…I hate math.
.71 but its just a guess.
Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 at
11:54 am
I have found a Canadian coin that i have not been able to identify. I hope that someone can help. I’m pretty sure its not a common coin, though I may be terribly mistaken. Please try and help me identify it.
Obverse- What first struck me as odd about it was the date at the bottom: 1867-1992. This was beneath a picture of Queen Elizabeth II. The dates don’t make sense. The queen is wearing an interesting crown with flowers. It also says D. G. Regina.
Reverse- The other side has a picture of what looks like three tourists with a Canadian flag on Parliment Hill in Ottowa. It says Canadian Dollar on this side.
Coin in General- Both sides of the coin have small dots bordering the edge of the coin. The sides are practically round.
Please help me if you know what coin I am talking about!
I forgot to add that is is golden colored.
Thursday, December 17th, 2009 at
5:55 am
I have alot of old coins, like some of them are silver Canadian dollar.
some are ages from 1800 to 1933 or more and I wanna know where can I sell them in Toronto?
Friday, November 27th, 2009 at
6:37 pm
I’ve always noticed the price listed on the back of novels, one price for the US and one for Canada, with the Canadian price being significantly higher. Now that the Canadian dollar is worth more than the American will we be seeing a change in book prices too? I’m not sure who would know the answer to this, a publisher maybe?
Sunday, November 22nd, 2009 at
10:46 pm
I have 6.85 Canadian dollars, all in coin, left over from a trip over a year ago. Since the Canadian dollar is worth more right now, I thought I’d exchange it. I went to First Bank and they told me they don’t handle coins and I have to have an account with them to exchange bills. I have my account with a local credit union.
Do you know of a banking company that would exchange it for free, without needing an account, or will I just have to hold on to it untill the next time I happen to be at the border for the official currency exchange?