Announcement
in sentence
548 examples of Announcement in a sentence
In a hypothetical eurozone Britain, the very
announcement
of a referendum on membership would have triggered a bank run.
Foreseeing this, depositors would have responded to the
announcement
of a referendum by immediately withdrawing their euros in cash or by wiring them to Frankfurt, Paris, New York, or elsewhere.
This is akin to an
announcement
on a cruise ship approaching an iceberg that the crew will definitely rescue first-class passengers but not necessarily others.
The joint
announcement
by the C-6 cements the great divide between first-class and coach economies.
On the same day as the EBA’s announcement, the worst performer, Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, announced €5 billion ($5.6 billion) in new funding, pursuant to its €5.6 billion capital requirement.
Still, market reaction to the
announcement
was negative (the EuroStoxx Banks index fell 7.5% in two days), most likely because the EBA did not include specific estimates of European banks’ capital shortfalls or outline a recapitalization plan.
Indeed, the Indian government’s decision to welcome foreign retailers coincided with French retailer Carrefour’s
announcement
that it will shut down its substantial operations in Singapore by the end of this year.
The second was the
announcement
that Yale University economist William Nordhaus will share this year’s Nobel Prize in economics for his work “integrating climate change into long-run macroeconomic analysis.”
But a clear, precise
announcement
of the decision to pursue it, together with a bold European Central Bank policy in line with its recently announced bond-purchasing program, might be enough to convince both financial markets and EU citizens that a lasting solution is within sight.
The ECB’s
announcement
of a new program to purchase sovereign bonds has lowered market interest rates.
But, while such an
announcement
is an obvious no-brainer for those in the Macroeconomic Camp, it would make all bankers who hold nominal assets or who think in nominal terms physically ill.
Banking on the BRICSBERKELEY – For the leaders of the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), the
announcement
in July of their agreement to establish a “New Development Bank” (NDB) and a “Contingent Reserve Arrangement” (CRA) was a public-relations coup.
President Bush's
announcement
that the US, Japan, and Saudi Arabia have created a $180 million fund to reconstruct Afghanistan's trunk highways is the most recent measure to speed up the flow of development assistance.
That is a message that the European Central Bank’s board members could usefully take to heart, given their
announcement
on August 2 that they were ready to respond to events as they unfolded but were taking no action for now.
A combination of falling oil and primary commodity prices, an over-ripe business cycle, and the Fed’s
announcement
of its intent to start “tapering” its asset purchases brought the decade-long boom in many emerging markets to an end.
When the International Olympic Committee awarded Beijing the 2008 Summer Games in July 2001, the
announcement
ignited wild celebrations across the country.
So the
announcement
that he wants competitive presidential elections is an important first step.
But the
announcement
of this policy change at the February meeting also did not go smoothly.
Don’t Cry for Me, Ben BernankeWASHINGTON, DC – Financial volatility since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s
announcement
in May that the Fed would “taper” its monthly purchases of long-term assets has raised a global cry: “Please, Mr. Bernanke, consider conditions in our (non-US) economies when you determine when to end your quantitative-easing policy.”
Last weekend’s
announcement
that Iraqi lawmakers have finally formed a unity government is welcome news, both for Iraq and for George W. Bush and Tony Blair.
Mubarak’s
announcement
that he would not seek re-election would likely have averted a crisis had he issued it in December.
The
announcement
alone would help Ukraine in its acute financial plight.Many of Europe’s leaders will meet this week at the Munich Security Conference.
The
announcement
alone would help Ukraine in its acute financial plight.
Yet a major and destabilizing confrontation over public finance now seems unavoidable, particularly following House Speaker John Boehner’s surprise
announcement
that he will resign his position and his seat in Congress at the end of October.
That explosion was not unanticipated – nor was the
announcement
by Armenia’s police that the car had caught fire due to technical problems.
NATO leaders have been grappling with this question since US President Barack Obama’s
announcement
of his administration’s “pivot” to Asia last year compelled them to examine the Alliance’s global role.
As it turned out, a “mini-crisis” followed Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke’s
announcement
that the Fed might “taper” its quantitative-easing (QE) policy – its open-ended commitment to monthly purchases of long-term assets worth $85 billion – before the end of 2013.
From this perspective, Saudi Arabia’s surprise
announcement
of a 34-country anti-terror alliance, with a joint operations center based in Riyadh, is a logical step, aimed at blunting growing Western criticism, while boosting Sunni influence in the Middle East.
Obama’s
announcement
received a decidedly unsympathetic reception from Europeans, who perceived his initiative as a unilateral move that would undermine international coordination of financial regulation.
The
announcement
had come without international consultation.
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