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It is out of this world trade that you have done and the debt of gratitude is to be able to offer to us,
which motivates me to fall apart in forex trading to trade legitimately.
I believe someday I will get a profit like you. Currently I am studying forex trading
by utilizing the demo record. where there is no need for speculation
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As long as you follow the trend, you will win. Beware of the big news usually on Friday.
I can say that, wuthin 6 hours must have at least 1 trade for 3 currency pairs.
For those who can not attach the indicator, I recommend visiting MQL4: automatic Forex trading,
strategy tester and special indicators with MetaTrader for similar indicators.
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trading min mehent karo ge to trading min profit to zaror hi hoga trading min hard work karo ge to es job min earning to hoge lakan trading min indicator key haq min nh hon kunke trading min indicator to ajkal min koi bhi best nh hi or na koi indicator trading min best work ker raaha hi hard work kroge success hi
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milne wala profit bhi share karte rahen taki naye traders inspire ho saken aur kamai bhi kar saken.
Hopefully you share it with your strategy will be blessed profit making more than that because
we share knowledge with the knowledge we have will not decrease in number will always
be coupled with HER where there is no investment needs. I'm sure elliot wave is a powerful
strategy in this world. Very good, bro
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Congrats, it is an amazing trade you have done and thank you for sharing with USA,
an American country that has it much in forex trading to establish trading properly.
I hope in the future I can get profit as it is. I am currently studying forex trading
by mistreating a demo account. where there is no investment desire ......... :)
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Nice good job. Keep trying best and get better. We must try from good to better and from better to the best. Keep it up....! 100% results
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Diageo said organic net sales grew 4.2 percent in the six months ended in December, above what analysts said was a 3.7 percent consensus.
Earnings per share before one-off items was 67.8 pence, 3.5 percent ahead of expectations, according to Liberum analysts.
The company said marketing spend rose 7 percent in the period, as it works to improve performance of Scotch, its key product, and vodka in the United States, which has been weak.
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But Diageo and rivals like Pernod Ricard and Brown-Forman have benefited from the current popularity of cocktails, as spirits gains market share from beer.
Like many global packaged goods companies, Diageo has adopted a plan of cost-cutting that has helped make its business more efficient, providing funds to use for generating sales.
“Diageo is a business in change,” said Jefferies analysts, citing its new chairman, Javier Ferran, and a perceived threat of a possible takeover by companies associated with private equity firm 3G.
“We see a perfect blend of productivity and top-line growth.”
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Diageo’s operating profit rose 6.1 percent to 2.2 billion pounds in the six months ended in December on net sales up 1.7 percent at 6.5 billion pounds.
Diageo had previously warned that sales and profit growth for the current financial year, ending in June, would be driven by the second half, due to a later Chinese New Year and new restrictions on selling alcohol in India.
The company said on Thursday that strength in its Chinese white spirits had reduced the effect of the later holiday, which pushes more of retailers’ purchases into the next period.
The museum room is seen at the Diageo Cardhu distillery in Scotland March 21, 2014. REUTERS/Russell Cheyne
“Despite having warned of a second-half weighting to its 2018 performance, Diageo’s first-half results were good enough,” said analysts at RBC Capital Markets.
The company stood by its goal for mid-single digit revenue growth and 175 basis points of organic operating margin improvement in the three years ending June 2019.
“Our financial performance expectations for this year remain unchanged,” Chief Executive Ivan Menezes said.
However, Diageo now expects currency to reduce the value of full-year sales by 460 million pounds and earnings by 60 million pounds. That compares to a previous expectation of an 80 million pound hit to sales and a 70 million pound benefit on profit.
“In all, then, this equates to a 7 percent reduction in actual currency EBIT guidance,” RBC said.
The company also lowered its expected 2018 tax rate to 20 percent, from 21 percent, due to changes in the U.S. corporate tax legislation.
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Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.9
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.9
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.9
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.9
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.
--- Update ---
Britain grew more slowly than every other G7 country over the first three quarters of 2017. It looks likely to lag behind both France and Germany in the next few years, according to Reuters polls, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That would represent a reversal of Britain’s outperformance of its peers since the early 1990s, barring a couple of years after the global financial crisis.
--- Update ---
Official figures due on Friday are likely to show Britain’s economy grew by a quarterly 0.4 percent in the last three months of 2017, repeating the July-September performance, according to a Reuters poll.
That would probably leave average annual growth for 2017 as a whole at around 1.6 percent -- much better than the 1.2 percent Reuters poll forecast from this time last year, but compared with around 2.5 percent for Germany, 2.3 percent for the United States, and 1.8 percent for France.
The Reuters poll pegs growth for this year at around 1.4 percent ahead of Brexit in March 2019, compared with 2.6 percent for the United States, 2.4 percent for Germany, 2.0 percent for France and 1.3 percent for Japan.
--- Update ---
Official figures due on Friday are likely to show Britain’s economy grew by a quarterly 0.4 percent in the last three months of 2017, repeating the July-September performance, according to a Reuters poll.
That would probably leave average annual growth for 2017 as a whole at around 1.6 percent -- much better than the 1.2 percent Reuters poll forecast from this time last year, but compared with around 2.5 percent for Germany, 2.3 percent for the United States, and 1.8 percent for France.
The Reuters poll pegs growth for this year at around 1.4 percent ahead of Brexit in March 2019, compared with 2.6 percent for the United States, 2.4 percent for Germany, 2.0 percent for France and 1.3 percent for Japan.
--- Update ---
Official figures due on Friday are likely to show Britain’s economy grew by a quarterly 0.4 percent in the last three months of 2017, repeating the July-September performance, according to a Reuters poll.
That would probably leave average annual growth for 2017 as a whole at around 1.6 percent -- much better than the 1.2 percent Reuters poll forecast from this time last year, but compared with around 2.5 percent for Germany, 2.3 percent for the United States, and 1.8 percent for France.
The Reuters poll pegs growth for this year at around 1.4 percent ahead of Brexit in March 2019, compared with 2.6 percent for the United States, 2.4 percent for Germany, 2.0 percent for France and 1.3 percent for Japan.
--- Update ---
Official figures due on Friday are likely to show Britain’s economy grew by a quarterly 0.4 percent in the last three months of 2017, repeating the July-September performance, according to a Reuters poll.
That would probably leave average annual growth for 2017 as a whole at around 1.6 percent -- much better than the 1.2 percent Reuters poll forecast from this time last year, but compared with around 2.5 percent for Germany, 2.3 percent for the United States, and 1.8 percent for France.
The Reuters poll pegs growth for this year at around 1.4 percent ahead of Brexit in March 2019, compared with 2.6 percent for the United States, 2.4 percent for Germany, 2.0 percent for France and 1.3 percent for Japan.
--- Update ---
Official figures due on Friday are likely to show Britain’s economy grew by a quarterly 0.4 percent in the last three months of 2017, repeating the July-September performance, according to a Reuters poll.
That would probably leave average annual growth for 2017 as a whole at around 1.6 percent -- much better than the 1.2 percent Reuters poll forecast from this time last year, but compared with around 2.5 percent for Germany, 2.3 percent for the United States, and 1.8 percent for France.
The Reuters poll pegs growth for this year at around 1.4 percent ahead of Brexit in March 2019, compared with 2.6 percent for the United States, 2.4 percent for Germany, 2.0 percent for France and 1.3 percent for Japan.
--- Update ---
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
While consumer morale in the euro zone has hit a 17-1/2-year high, the British public is more sombre, particularly about the economic outlook.
Higher inflation has hurt the spending power of consumers, especially since wages have failed to keep pace with prices.
Consumer confidence in Britain was weaker in December than in all other large European economies, according to European Commission data.
The Thomson Reuters/Ipsos consumer sentiment survey shows Britain was the only G7 country where confidence fell over 2017.
--- Update ---
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
While consumer morale in the euro zone has hit a 17-1/2-year high, the British public is more sombre, particularly about the economic outlook.
Higher inflation has hurt the spending power of consumers, especially since wages have failed to keep pace with prices.
Consumer confidence in Britain was weaker in December than in all other large European economies, according to European Commission data.
The Thomson Reuters/Ipsos consumer sentiment survey shows Britain was the only G7 country where confidence fell over 2017.
--- Update ---
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
While consumer morale in the euro zone has hit a 17-1/2-year high, the British public is more sombre, particularly about the economic outlook.
Higher inflation has hurt the spending power of consumers, especially since wages have failed to keep pace with prices.
Consumer confidence in Britain was weaker in December than in all other large European economies, according to European Commission data.
The Thomson Reuters/Ipsos consumer sentiment survey shows Britain was the only G7 country where confidence fell over 2017.
--- Update ---
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
While consumer morale in the euro zone has hit a 17-1/2-year high, the British public is more sombre, particularly about the economic outlook.
Higher inflation has hurt the spending power of consumers, especially since wages have failed to keep pace with prices.
Consumer confidence in Britain was weaker in December than in all other large European economies, according to European Commission data.
The Thomson Reuters/Ipsos consumer sentiment survey shows Britain was the only G7 country where confidence fell over 2017.
--- Update ---
* ECB’s Draghi to speak amid rally in euro
* Dollar slumps leaves greenback near fresh 3-year low
* Swiss Franc, Yuan hit highest levels since 2015
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2018 tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
By Tommy Wilkes
LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The euro hovered at 3-year highs against a weakened dollar on Thursday, as traders looked to whether European Central Bank President Mario Draghi would try to talk down the single currency from its recent rally.
Draghi was to speak at 1330 GMT after the monetary policy meeting against a backdrop of a euro that has gained more than 3 percent against the dollar already this year, following double digit gains last year.
Its rise was intensified on Wednesday when U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said a weaker dollar was “good for us”.
The euro was flat at $1.24100, down from a high of $1.2459 but still close to its best levels since December 2014.
The ECB kept its ultra-easy policy stance and guidance unchanged on Thursday, as expected, but the currency was little moved.
The dilemma facing Draghi will be how to address the euro’s surge against the dollar, a move that threatens to dampen inflation and endanger the work done by years of unprecedented stimulus amid an economic rebound in the euro region.
--- Update ---
* ECB’s Draghi to speak amid rally in euro
* Dollar slumps leaves greenback near fresh 3-year low
* Swiss Franc, Yuan hit highest levels since 2015
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2018 tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
By Tommy Wilkes
LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The euro hovered at 3-year highs against a weakened dollar on Thursday, as traders looked to whether European Central Bank President Mario Draghi would try to talk down the single currency from its recent rally.
Draghi was to speak at 1330 GMT after the monetary policy meeting against a backdrop of a euro that has gained more than 3 percent against the dollar already this year, following double digit gains last year.
Its rise was intensified on Wednesday when U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said a weaker dollar was “good for us”.
The euro was flat at $1.24100, down from a high of $1.2459 but still close to its best levels since December 2014.
The ECB kept its ultra-easy policy stance and guidance unchanged on Thursday, as expected, but the currency was little moved.
The dilemma facing Draghi will be how to address the euro’s surge against the dollar, a move that threatens to dampen inflation and endanger the work done by years of unprecedented stimulus amid an economic rebound in the euro region.
--- Update ---
* ECB’s Draghi to speak amid rally in euro
* Dollar slumps leaves greenback near fresh 3-year low
* Swiss Franc, Yuan hit highest levels since 2015
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2018 tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
By Tommy Wilkes
LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The euro hovered at 3-year highs against a weakened dollar on Thursday, as traders looked to whether European Central Bank President Mario Draghi would try to talk down the single currency from its recent rally.
Draghi was to speak at 1330 GMT after the monetary policy meeting against a backdrop of a euro that has gained more than 3 percent against the dollar already this year, following double digit gains last year.
Its rise was intensified on Wednesday when U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said a weaker dollar was “good for us”.
The euro was flat at $1.24100, down from a high of $1.2459 but still close to its best levels since December 2014.
The ECB kept its ultra-easy policy stance and guidance unchanged on Thursday, as expected, but the currency was little moved.
The dilemma facing Draghi will be how to address the euro’s surge against the dollar, a move that threatens to dampen inflation and endanger the work done by years of unprecedented stimulus amid an economic rebound in the euro region.
--- Update ---
* ECB’s Draghi to speak amid rally in euro
* Dollar slumps leaves greenback near fresh 3-year low
* Swiss Franc, Yuan hit highest levels since 2015
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2018 tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
By Tommy Wilkes
LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The euro hovered at 3-year highs against a weakened dollar on Thursday, as traders looked to whether European Central Bank President Mario Draghi would try to talk down the single currency from its recent rally.
Draghi was to speak at 1330 GMT after the monetary policy meeting against a backdrop of a euro that has gained more than 3 percent against the dollar already this year, following double digit gains last year.
Its rise was intensified on Wednesday when U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said a weaker dollar was “good for us”.
The euro was flat at $1.24100, down from a high of $1.2459 but still close to its best levels since December 2014.
The ECB kept its ultra-easy policy stance and guidance unchanged on Thursday, as expected, but the currency was little moved.
The dilemma facing Draghi will be how to address the euro’s surge against the dollar, a move that threatens to dampen inflation and endanger the work done by years of unprecedented stimulus amid an economic rebound in the euro region.