Your reply is totally irelevant to what you quoted. If I were Soros, I wouldn't bet my money on luck(HK government intervene). And later he praised HK government's performance. Which indirectly proves he knew it was best choice for HK government.
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It's not a couple of billions dollars, OK? UK, Tailand and other SE countries all lost huge amount of money because of Soros attacks. And losing money is not even the biggest issue. The upcoming recession is most terrifying. After witnessing so many tragedies, how HK government would response to Soros' attack was very hard to guess. Soros must know what would happen.
You have no investment portfolio and have no idea how investment work, right?
First of all, he is not betting on luck, he is betting on something he think Hong Kong wouldn't do, you don't know how much Market integrity means to Hong Kong Government, he knows, and he think the government wouldn't, because he thought no amount of money loss would make Hong Kong dump their free market status on the market.
The gamble itself is NOT whether or not Hong Kong government have enough money to fend off an attack, the gamble is on whether or not Hong Kong government would do such a thing. And he lost.
If it's not a couple of billions dollars, how much would that be? Trillions dollars? Hong Kong Foreign Reserve have around 100 billions in 1997, that does not mean if they win or lose, it would be goes up with the net fortune entirely. That's because if and when you lose, Hong Kong dollars will not become valueless but at a lower price, depends on how deep the exchange rate was affected. You only lose several billions of Foreign Reserve. Notice losing 10 billions Foreign Exchange reserve would mean a 10% decrease of whole HKD value, which would already been a lot.
In case you are wondering, when Soros shorted GBP in 1992, he gained $1 billions dollar form it and GBP actually get stronger after the short, not worse..
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/08/george-soros-bank-of-england.asp
The British government gave in and withdrew from the ERM as it became clear that it was losing billions trying to buoy its currency artificially. Although it was a bitter pill to swallow, the pound came back stronger because the excess interest and high inflation were forced out of the British economy following the beating. Soros pocketed $1 billion on the deal and cemented his reputation as the premier currency
speculator in the world.
And lol. Again, you don't understand how currency work. Hong Kong dollar, exchange rate specially is pegged to USD, no matter how much you depreciated HKD, it will keep 1 USD : 7.7-7.9 HKD exchange rate, this would limit the recession, unless you are trying to say HKD is so strong it will drag USD into recession as well. You can't do much damage to the aftermath, because it will always kept in equilibrium, as we are pegged with USD, if that did happen, people will simply exchange their HKD to USD, and since it is not free flow (as the rate is pegged) you lose nothing when you eventually revert back to HKD when the aftermath subsided.