41. A shrinking Japanese surplus supports the dollar by leaving fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home. 42. A shrinking Japanese trade surplus often boosts the dollar because it means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen when they bring profits home. 43. A shrinking surplus often helps boost the dollar because it means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen when they bring profits home. 44. A strong yen hurts NYK, which has dollar-denominated revenue that gets reduced in value when bringing profits back to Japan. 45. A shrinking Japanese trade surplus often boosts the dollar by leaving fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home. 46. A shrinking trade surplus means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home. 47. A stronger dollar typically boosts the value of U.S. earnings of European companies when profits are brought home and translated into the domestic currency. 48. A smaller deficit means foreign exporters will have fewer dollars to sell for other currencies when bringing profits home. 49. A smaller Japanese trade surplus often helps boost the U.S. currency by leaving fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home. 50. A trade deficit leaves fewer dollars in the hands of Korean exporters to sell for won to bring home profits. |