Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
Investors
naturally asked whether this amounted to a change in policy regime.
Going to the IMF imposes a political cost, but it had to be done: only with sufficient firepower can Argentina convince
investors
that debts will be paid and the currency will not keep plunging.
The sharp rise in domestic interest rates was necessary not only to stabilize the currency, but also to make it attractive for
investors
to roll over large amounts of peso bonds coming due in early May.
If the Argentine peso turns out to be stronger than that in real terms, which it probably will,
investors
stand to profit handsomely.
Investors
are apparently banking on the fact that nothing significant will happen for at least another year, because Europe will be in the throes of its own elections in France, Germany, and probably Italy.
Restrictions on foreign investors’ equity holdings or investments in services are being sequentially eliminated.
Second, for most global investors, these economies’ bonds are a quasi-automatic component of portfolio allocations, so their governments’ budget deficits are financed in part by other countries’ savings.
The problem may be that there are not many
investors
who want to take a long position on oil and Nigerian credit risk simultaneously.
In recent years, shrewd creditor lawyers have argued that investment treaties give bondholders the same rights as foreign direct investors, and have smuggled sovereign-debt cases into international arbitration proceedings wherever they have found investment treaties with broad, open-ended definitions.
Resolving a sovereign-debt crisis requires a collective agreement by creditors, which can be achieved only by individual investors’ incentive to try to grab their money and run.
The IMF proposed one in 2002; but, in the face of concerted lobbying by investors, the scheme was rebuffed and instead an agreement was reached to use collective action clauses (CACs) in debt contracts.
Moreover, many of the treaties provide
investors
with direct access to arbitration.
On the one hand, US investment treaties are designed to secure the strongest possible protection for US
investors
overseas.
Instead, the decline in Indian stocks reflected foreign investors’ liquidity problems: they withdrew from holdings in India because they needed their money back home, not because it wasn’t growing for them.
Of course, economies that depend on foreign investment are bound to be hurt nowadays, because those
investors
have less capital to invest.
Second, once things have begun to stabilize in the West,
investors
looking for a place to put their money will look anew at India, owing to the opportunities for growth and the sheer size of the market.
They struck at symbols of the prosperity that have made the Indian model so attractive to the globalizing world, a magnet for
investors
and tourists alike.
Investors
are returning, and FDI inflows this fiscal year are set to exceed the $25 billion received in 2007-08.
As in Hong Kong,
investors
will argue that, in a recession, the temptation to devalue your way out of it is just too overwhelming.
A currency board is the only plausible way for
investors
and the public to believe that the exchange rate is safe.
Undertaking such a lengthening while events can be controlled need not cause any losses other than taking away the illusion of liquidity which
investors
now entertain but could not exercise because Brazil could not pay them.
US equities and bond yields rallied after Trump delivered a victory speech that seemed to signal that he was tacking to the center, which
investors
had originally expected him to do this summer, after he won the Republican nomination and entered the general election campaign.
Markets will give Trump the benefit of the doubt, for now; but
investors
are now watching whom he appoints to his administration, what shape his fiscal policies actually take, and what course he charts for monetary policy.
But
investors
will be on the lookout for protectionism, Wall Street- and immigrant-bashing, and overly aggressive monetary hawkishness.
Moreover, low and especially negative interest rates make holding cash costly, prompting
investors
to seek riskier investments with higher potential returns.
It deserves a vote of confidence from
investors
and political leaders alike.
The World Bank report also points out that, as a consequence of banking retrenchment, institutional
investors
with long-term liabilities – such as pension funds, insurers, and sovereign wealth funds – may be called upon to assume a greater role in funding long-term assets.
These
investors
must focus on the small and medium-size enterprises that banks often neglect.
And the romance has resulted in both parties living happily: the Fed feels better positioned to pursue its dual mandate of high employment and stable inflation, while
investors
feel that they have the opportunity for sizeable financial rewards.
For their part, developed-country governments want private
investors
to fill the gap, arguing that scarce public funds could be used more effectively to leverage profit-seeking green finance.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Foreign
Would
Financial
Markets
Which
Market
Companies
Private
Assets
Capital
Rates
Other
About
Interest
Government
Institutional
Countries
Global
Economic