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by xiphias2 2705 days ago
You're right, bonds are globally extremely inflated. It's predictable that people are losing confidence in fiat currencies with such an asset bubble and without a country to escape to anymore. I was proud owner of CHF as an exception from other fiat currencies until it got pegged to EUR.
2 comments

The CHF is not pegged to the EUR, what are you talking about? The had a expensive monetary policy by using a floor against the EUR for a while that however was not a peg.

Furthermore there is no evidence at all that people are losing confidence in fiat currencies.

And I'm not sure why you trusted CHF more before, its just another fiat currency. You could by Australian, New Zealand currency, they are well managed fiat as well.

Well, the peg only lasted for three years.
Only? I lost enough money in 1 day that I lost my trust in the Swiss National Bank. I'm not complaining though, I started diversifying to other asset classes and easyly made it back, so I view it as a lesson learned.
Guess what, monetary policy about managing your personal check book. The SNB acted pretty well, one of the best in the world and the Swiss economy was much better of then most comparable countries because we could devalue when people like drove up the demand for CHF and almost pushed Switzerland in a deflation. That might be good for your check book but it would be a disaster for the economy.
It's bad for exporters, great for everybody else in Switzerland. Anyways I didn't own any fiat since then, but of course living with the volatility of other assets have their downsides. I'll move back partly to fiat, as it still has its advantages.
Its not bad for exporter, the opposite actually. Exporters were the people wanting expansionary monetary policy because high CHF made their products more expensive.

In fact this was great for the majority of people as nobody profits in the long run from a deflationary spiral.