Creditors
in sentence
1217 examples of Creditors in a sentence
This anxiety is readily transferred to national debt – the debt owed by a government to its
creditors.
My
creditors
will have the first claim on my estate – everything that I wanted to leave to my children.
If their (foreign)
creditors
put too much pressure on them, they simply default.
In an effort to regain access to capital markets, her economic team patched up things with the Paris Club of sovereign
creditors
and Spain’s Repsol (the former owner of nationalized oil giant YPF); but the fight with the vultures has set the country back.
The US is gradually transferring resources from
creditors
to debtors through financial repression.
Only very recently, as a result of the Greek government’s intense negotiations with its creditors, did Europe’s citizens realize that the world’s largest economy, the eurozone, is run by a body that lacks written rules of procedure, debates crucial matters “confidentially” (and without minutes being taken), and is not obliged to answer to any elected body, not even the European Parliament.
So, if Greece’s tussle with its European
creditors
was not a left-right standoff, what was it?
Finally, despite China’s status as one of the world’s largest net creditors, it has been running a deficit on its investment balance for years.
Roberto Shapiro, a former number two in the Clinton-era Department of Commerce and a man close to the Democratic Party, is now co-chairman of the United States Taskforce for Argentina, an alliance of investment funds and institutional
creditors
who were hit hard by Argentina’s default on its international debts.
Instead, through its structural-adjustment lending, the World Bank, along with the International Monetary Fund, effectively became a debt collector for
creditors.
If you want to negotiate a change of tack with your creditors, you are unlikely to succeed if you destroy your own credibility and rant and rave about those whose money you need to avoid default.
ZURICH – The International Monetary Fund has resurrected an old technique – commonly used in the 1980s during the Latin American debt crisis – that would allow Greece to avoid a payment default next month on debt owed to European
creditors.
This is not the only area of disagreement between Greece’s two major
creditors.
The champagne that Enron’s Jeff Skilling drank when the US Securities and Exchange Commission allowed him to mark long-term energy contracts to market was paid for by the company’s shareholders and creditors, but they would not know that until ten years later.
That is because the Board’s plan gives priority to the island’s
creditors.
In the long run, even the
creditors
will lose.
Those who advocate servicing part of the outstanding debt payments now claim that this would show that Puerto Rico is willing to pay, which in turn would inspire confidence on the part of
creditors
and investors.
They feel comfortable taking big risks, because if they lose, they just turn the bank over to the government to pay off depositors and other
creditors.
Meaningful debt renegotiations are seldom swift:
creditors
want repayment, and debtors want a write-down.
Unlike Greece (post-2010), where official
creditors
held the lion’s share of the debt stock, domestic residents hold most of Italy’s public debt.
Likewise, loans by eurozone governments to Ireland, Portugal, and Spain primarily bailed out insolvent local banks – and thus their German
creditors.
The eurozone desperately needs mainstream alternatives to this lopsided “Berlin Consensus,” in which creditors’ interests come first and Germany dominates everyone else.
End “Extend and Pretend” With GreeceLONDON – Greece needs an agreement now with its
creditors
(the so-called troika comprising the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission, and the European Central Bank).
That plan was supposed to restore the island’s economic health while also providing money to
creditors
who were clamoring for repayment.
Hence, the recent evolution of Puerto Rican bond prices reflects an expectation that the additional funds will go not to Puerto Ricans still suffering from the devastating effects of Maria, but rather to the commonwealth’s
creditors.
Following an impressive election victory by his Syriza party in January, Greece’s prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, appointed Varoufakis to lead the delicate negotiations with the country’s
creditors.
Indeed, many observers view the agreement on a third bailout program that Greece reached with its
creditors
– barely a week after Varoufakis resigned – as simply more of the same.
For example, investors holding derivatives and repo contracts with a weakened financial institution can grab the firm’s assets ahead of – and at the expense of – its regular creditors, possibly sealing its fate, when, with a little extra time, the firm might have survived.
It hardly helped that the negotiations between Greece and its
creditors
produced a growing mistrust in the competence and intentions of Syriza.
Greece’s Aid AddictionNEW YORK – The ongoing Greek debt saga is tragic for many reasons, not least among them the fact that the country’s relationship with its
creditors
is reminiscent of that between the developing world and the aid industry.
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