Worldwide Financial Planning has, over the years built up a valuable source of information that can help you in making important decisions in conjunction with your adviser.
Whether you are a first time buyer looking for a mortgage or an experienced investor we can give you access to a whole range of tools, old articles, facts and figures. Take advantage of this information before you speak with one of our advisers.
Registering your details means you will be able to log on any time and view the resources that are relevant to you and your needs. We do not make this information available to anyone that comes on the site and want to share this with clients who are already working with WWFP and people that value the knowledge that we have created. We do not share your details with any third parties and will only contact you on occasions with what we feel is relevant information.
It’s easy to do but if you need any help please call us on 01872 222 422.
After a wild round-trip, markets are heading back to where they were at the start of the month, before Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs sparked the sell-off. But not much has significantly changed – US imports are now subject to 10% tariffs, while the more punitive rates are suspended, not cancelled.
In itself, it’s a two-part sub-series – the problems of weaponization, and then what they are doing about it, but it’s very important in the overall understanding of the future of the dollar and the motivation and where we might one day find peace. Long sigh.
The relationship between loudmouthing Tariffs and Dedollarisation
By Worldwide Financial Planning
Categories
Financial Planning
Hopefully you may remember my comments on dedollarisation in June 2023 – ‘it will happen’. This journey of explanation of dedollarisation turns to the calamity and farcical charade that is - tariffs.
Please log in to view this resource
Posted
MARKETS CONTINUE TO BE DRIVEN BY CHAOTIC US APPROACH TO TARIFFS
After resuming their slide at the start of the week, global equity markets jumped on news that the highest tariffs would be delayed by 90 days. Did Donald Trump blink in the face of market turmoil, or does he think the threat of higher tariffs has done its job by forcing countries to the negotiating table?
Please log in to view this resource
Posted
The architecture of post-dollar trade – and what that means
By Worldwide Financial Planning
Categories
Financial Planning
You can have all the water in the world, but if the pipes are clogged or run through someone else’s tap, good luck getting a clean wine glass mate. That’s what we’re seeing now with global finance. The water - money - isn’t the only story anymore. It’s the pipes: how it flows, who controls the taps, and what happens when someone upstream decides to turn off the supply.
The US president unveiled a sweeping package of additional tariffs on US imports, with the largest hikes being added to goods from its biggest trade partners. But Trump and his trade advisers are in a very small minority that think these measures will be anything other than damaging to US and global economic growth.