My experience with cow pie
My 8 year old son and I were traveling through a rural area of my city that had lots of cows. My son asked what those round plate sized things were all over the pasture. I explained that they were cow pies. When a cow takes a dump, when it hits the ground it flattens out forming a cow pie. I went on to explain that when the early settlers were here they discovered that if you turned the cow pie over it was soft and if you took a little of that soft cow pie on your finger and rubbed it on your lips it helped with chapped lips. He said how disgusting. I said well it really didn't help heal your chapped lips but it kept you from licking them. A few days later at supper with the entire family my son said "[i]You know dad, my teacher asked us what we learned during summer break, and I told her my dad taught me how to cure chapped lips.[/i]" After I explained it to her she didn't say anything but she had a very odd look on her face.
My cow pie story.
Talk to the Issuer of your Debit Card
" I have a debit card".
First talk to whoever issued the debit card and see if they will approve the transaction if you can find a willing UY bank.
Then ask them if they have any relationship with a particular UY bank to make things a little easier.
Good luck.
Peso falling against the dollar at an annual 132% rate?
I am posting so that Dickhead will check my math. The number is so high I do not trust my own work. You can tell I work for a large organization.
So On June 5, using [URL]Xoom.com[/URL] I exchanged at 10.31 P to $1.
Today September 12, I can exchange at 12.9515 P to $1.
So we have seen a ((12.9515/10.31) -1)*100 = 25.6% increase.
It has been 99 days so the daily percentage increase has been ((1. 256^(1/99)) -1)*100 = . 231%.
To the get annual rate: ((1. 002307^365) -1)*100 = 131.88%.
Wow! What is annualized inflation? Do I receive 23.82 P to $1 next June? Simple extrapolation is obviously not the way to forecast currency movements.