Currencies wax and wane. Perhaps this question is old as, in recent times (while I am answering this, the Singapore Dollar has strenthened significantly vis-a-vis the US Dollar. In my opinion, the long term future of the US Dollar is bleak.
yes
Since the pound is stronger than the dollar right now.
The Euro is quoted Indirect Vs the US Dollar, so 1.4 is actuallyUSD1.4 per EuroTypically, currencies are quoted Directly which is the inverse of the above relationship, e.g.USD1 = JPY100The Indirect currencies,by convention, are Euro, British Pound, Australian Dollar and New Zealand Dollar. Gold is also quted Indirectly.
There are many different currencies in the world. Some countries share currencies like the euro and some countries have the same name for the currency but they are not the same currency like American dollar and the Canadian dollar. the most popular currencies are dollar, euro, pound, yen, ruble ect.
No, two different currencies.
all
the USA and Canada use dollars as their currency, the USA dollar is a bit higher than their Canadian countgerpart
It's unofficial, but most of the world's currencies are measured relative to the dollar.
Being connected like it is to the struggling debt ridden country to the South - The U.S - things will get worse without question, for both currencies.
ETF is an acronym which stands for Exchange Traded Fund. Dollar ETF's involve the prices of different nationalities' currencies and the trading of these currencies to make a profit.
The Yahoo currency converter is able to convert hundreds of different currencies around the world, including every major currency. The most common converted currencies are the US Dollar, Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar, British Pound, Japanese Yen, and Euro.