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Kauppalehti: Whether lat be devaluated before Christmas or in 2-3 months?

THIS PUBLICATION HAS 64 COMMENTS
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I hope the journalist from Kauppalehti who wrote this story is not planning to visit Latvia. He might not come back! answer
~AR [21.11.2008, 14:03]
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First Polpa, now Kauppalehti and tomorrow Björn Wahlroos, CEO of Sampo concern. Why Finns have so big problems adjusting to reasonable laws? answer
~Dag [21.11.2008, 14:14]
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"Pasi Harttunen, CEO of Finnish-Estonian chamber of commerce wasn’t willing to speculate"

Clever man. You will be safe, harra Harttunen. Maintain this attitude and you will have nothing to fear! answer
~AR [21.11.2008, 14:23]
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Is there a law in Estonia as well, if you speculate about devaluation of the Kroon?
I hope not.
You never know, with this collaboration of this three countries. answer
~Maarten van Gent [21.11.2008, 15:17]
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Maarten, no there are no such laws in Estonia. But in Latvia they called you from security police even before the law was in effect.
The last case applies to Estonia as well. KAPO can sometimes be quite annoying for supposedly minor stuff. answer
~Government Bond [21.11.2008, 15:22]
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Björn Wahlroos, beware what you are talking about!!! Latvian police probably is already after you! Such statements are damaging Latvian financial industry and according to Law are criminal act!!!

Just yesterday I already arrested couple of professors in Latvia who were speaking in public what I dont like to hear!!! answer
~Mr Rimsevics [21.11.2008, 16:48]
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Mr Rimsevics

Are you referring to this story:

http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/21815/

The guy's comments are a little, shall we say, unorthodox, but I thought in a free democratic country on is allowed to air wacky views without fear of state prosecution.

I wonder if Latvia is aware just how much these stories make it look like a tinpot third world dictatorship. answer
~AR [21.11.2008, 16:55]
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Something very strange... when I try to go to delfi.lv to try and get more background on this situation, the webpage appears to be down... probably nothing but still, given the timing, quite strange... answer
~AR [21.11.2008, 17:05]
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"First Polpa, now Kauppalehti and tomorrow Björn Wahlroos, CEO of Sampo concern. Why Finns have so big problems adjusting to reasonable laws?"

The Latvian police released me. Their judge had already given a verdict to burn me at stake as a heretic, but it seems nobody there had any lats left to buy firewood. Everything had been converted into euros already...

Seriously, Björn Wahlroos is heavy artillery in Finland and has an aura (probably deserved) of making good decisions. His latest good move was selling Sampo bank to the Danish at a very good price ( - way overpriced).

Anyway, not much new to say about Latvian/Estonian devaluation, except the timescale has changed. I was expecting the devaluations late next year, but now everything is possible. answer
~Polpa di Pomodoro [21.11.2008, 17:35]
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I dont know how will profit from that. As people in case of devaluation will deal the salaries in EUR or equivalent of euros anyway. This won't make companies more competeive answer
~Janis [21.11.2008, 19:45]
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Here's the comment Finnish banker Björn Wahlroos gave the Swedish newspaper Affarsvärlden, loosely translated:

"What is your view on the general economic situation of the Baltics?

- It is a tough situation because of a single reason. All of them have overvalued currencies, in varying degrees. For those of us who lived through year 1991 in Finland, a trip to the Baltics is a deja vu. It is completely absurd that people believe there's benefit for anyone in maintaining an overvalued currency. It is the surest way to throttle all economic activity in those countries, they lose totally their competitiveness vs. foreign countries, now that the domestic price level is higher than it should be."

http://www.affarsvarlden.se/tidningen/article44500
2.ece
answer
~Polpa di Pomodoro [21.11.2008, 21:14]
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"It is completely absurd that people believe there's benefit for anyone in maintaining an overvalued currency."

Maybe Mr Finnish banker, Björn Wahlroos would like to explain to all the companies and families how they will survive when their EUR loans goes up
25%+ and they all lose their businesses and homes after devaluation! answer
~Dragon [22.11.2008, 00:24]
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