Bonds
in sentence
2285 examples of Bonds in a sentence
I still can't describe this story in few words, is one of those one in a life time experience, its very short but great, you have not a full, crude view of any relationship or the
bonds
among characters but everything is there.
Two female high school grads plan to get jobs and hang together, but
bonds
become frayed and paths separate after one of the girls ends up on an unintended journey of self-discovery.
And, in a few years, how about a film about Vladimir Guerrero breaking
Bonds
record ?
He made the film in between
Bonds
(Moonraker & For Your Eyes Only) and wow - what a film!
For you fellas and girls: Don't let ya' temptations lead you to the big city, 'cause it surely will get you to "sell them
bonds"
.
(He shares some screen time with Dukakis, as a policewoman, who would later play his wife in "Moonstruck" and take home an Oscar!) Keats, as Tolan's husband, tries just a little too hard to engender familial
bonds
with Bronson and comes off as quite whiny.
I began to enjoy watching it, but about two- thirds of the way through, I began to get tired of the sappy
bonds
between Baryshikov's and Hines's characters.
"WEST" explores the durability of
bonds
forged in youth (between Pete and Jerry) via the introduction of a catalyst (Cheryl) and unapologetically portrays the potency of unbridled sexual love for another in a young mind.
He works in Los Angeles for Eddie Moscone (Joe Pantoliano) who is a bail
bonds
man.
It's a passionate and heartfelt movie about the
bonds
of family and the love of class that gives you a sense of majesty and flavor.
All of a sudden they find a wounded baby elephant and Angela
bonds
with it naming it Dandy, but there are still poachers around hunting for elephants.
A key sign of this is that the yield on ten-year Treasury
bonds
has doubled in the past two years.
Investors will demand higher yields on
bonds
to compensate for the resulting loss of purchasing power.
It would not be surprising if the rate on ten-year Treasury
bonds
rises to 5% or more over the next few years.
The ECB could keep interest rates stubbornly high and fail to reach the agreements with peripheral governments that are needed so that it can buy their
bonds
on the secondary market.
Consider catastrophe
bonds
(or “cat bonds”), which contain clauses that stipulate that the issuer of the bond (the borrower) does not have to repay the money if a specified catastrophe occurs.
The
bonds
can be sold to a worldwide market by insurance companies that incur major risks by writing policies.
If the insurance companies can get a good enough price for such bonds, they can eliminate their exposure to the risk of a major disaster, thereby allowing them to issue policies to homeowners at a lower cost.
Cat
bonds
have been growing in importance in recent years.
According to estimates by Lane Financial, there were $1.8 billion worth of cat
bonds
issued in the year April 2004-March 2005.
The total value of outstanding cat
bonds
is small by Katrina standards.
But the trend towards increasing sophistication and breadth of our financial markets suggests that we can expect to see much further growth in cat
bonds.
In past times of trouble, skittish investors and prudent central banks have all piled into dollar-denominated assets, not least US Treasury
bonds.
When investors and central banks place their wealth in Treasury
bonds
and other US assets, the US government can go on spending whatever it needs to sustain its many security commitments around the world, and to finance its trade and budget deficits.
At this writing, Yam is widely criticized in Hong Kong for failing to protect small investors against the dishonest sales tactics of a number of banks in their selling of toxic Lehman Brothers derivatives disguised as
bonds.
Indeed, the most curious aspect of the ECB’s position was its threat not to accept restructured government
bonds
as collateral if the ratings agencies decided that the restructuring should be classified as a credit event.
If the
bonds
were acceptable as collateral before the restructuring, surely they were safer after the restructuring, and thus equally acceptable.
De facto monetization is the inevitable result, with the Bank of Japan purchasing each month more
bonds
than the government issues, even while it denies that monetary finance is an acceptable policy option.
The higher interest rates go, the better are investments in bonds, which compete with investments in other assets such as stocks or homes.
Every year, US residents take some of what they earn in overseas investment income – interest on bonds, dividends on equities, and repatriated profits on direct investment – and reinvest it then and there.
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