What is the process involved in revaluation of a currency, and where can you go to find news.?

Tuesday, January 21, 2014 , Posted by Ryanita at 12:59 AM

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What is the process involved in revaluation of a currency, and where can you go/look for news and information concerning a revaluation about to happen? I am trying to PROVE, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the Iraq dinar is a scam, to some close friends of mine who are investing in that currency... They log on a website chatroom with people who claim to know "sources", and "people in high places"... about a revaluation about to happen but never seems to... I need to know how you can find information on how a currency is revalued, how you can find out about it from a verifiable source, and how, (if the currency does revalue and you have some of it), you can trade it in for money if it's profitable for you? Please source your answers, and thank you so much for this information! And also, does a currency ever revalue "overnight", and is it true that governments won't put out any information until this revaluation occurs, until you actually see it happen on, for example, forex.com???? Thanks!
I do appreciate those articles, but that does not answer my question in full. I'm still looking for more than some articles proving a scam or not. I need more information on revaluation, and how to follow one.



Answer
Here are three links that should prove beyond any doubt that dinar investing is a scam.

The sources are impeccable; Utah Securities Division, NASDAQ, Better Business Bureau. All information is still 100% accurate.

You might also point out that currency revaluations have occurred many times, never producing a profit. If a "new dinar" is worth 1000x the "old dinar", it would require 1000 old dinar to exchange for 1 new dinar. Multiply by 1000 and divide by 1000 = zero profit.

Another frequent lie is that the Kuwaiti Dinar soared after the first Gulf War. The scammers depend on their naive sheep never checking the details.




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