Jockey wrote:Surprisingly, the Baht against the UK pound has remained more or less static throughout the year. The year started at 70 baht to the pound and is now 69 to the pound. The US dollar on the other hand has plummeted from 41 baht to the dollar to 35 baht to the dollar. As I see it, the baht isn't really that strong against world currencies, its just the US dollar is so weak. It also seems financial analysts in Thailand relate the baht only to the US dollar, thereby saying the baht is strong is technically not correct -indeed its really the US dollar that's weak.
GBP has actually varied quite a bit through the year, it is coincidental that the rates at the start and end of the year are so close.
The average GBP buy/sell closing rate on electronic transfers has ranged from 66.37625 to 72.41938.
On the same basis, USD has ranged from 40.855 to 35.225 (pretty well all downhill).
The USD is weak primarily due to the most financially incompetent administration the US has ever had; at the same time that the USD has been weakening the THB has been strengthening, actually having the largest rise (until today) of all the Asian currencies against USD.
The reason that analysts relate the value of THB to USD is that the US is its most valuable trading partner; this can be seen in the close spread on currency deals between THB & USD which (in Thailand) is approx 0.2%.