Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
The answer is that getting
investors
to agree is like herding cats.
Investors
were wise to acknowledge that, in international capital markets, the perfect is the enemy of the good.
A sound regulatory framework and effective enforcement are frequently necessary for introducing competition, as well as to protect
investors
and consumers in the presence of a newly-privatized firm that might otherwise be able to use its substantial market power to stifle and prevent competition.
But then the same people typically smile and point out that
investors
from other parts of the world still want to lend the US vast amounts of money, keeping long-term interest rates low and allowing the country to run big deficits for the foreseeable future.
Another source is
investors
who feared losing their money after the various emerging market meltdowns of the 1990's, techno-enthusiasts chasing the pot of gold that the American technology boom seemed to offer, and the third-world rich, who think a Deutsche Bank account is good to have in case they need to flee their countries in a Lear jet or a rubber boat.
In his 2005 book The Future for
Investors
, Jeremy Siegel argues that differences across countries in longevity will interact with differences in wealth levels to form a fundamental determinant of economic relations among countries.
Life insurance companies, drug firms, businesses providing services for the elderly, and
investors
in retirement real estate would all benefit from increased longevity, while defined-benefit pension plans and annuity providers would lose.
But transforming the economy will require the participation of
investors
and businesses; indeed, we calculate that by 2025, at least 70% of the investment should come from the private sector.
As a result, its weight in international investors’ portfolios is miniscule.
Global
investors
are apparently willing to accept these extraordinarily low rates, even though they do not appear to compensate for expected inflation.
Short-term market interest rates will fall, but, as
investors
begin to recognize the ultimate inflationary consequences of very loose monetary policy, longer-term interest rates will rise.
Investors
are increasingly wary of a global financial meltdown, most likely emanating from Europe, but with the US fiscal cliff, political instability in the Middle East, and a slowdown in China all coming into play.
They will be driven to tolerate higher inflation as a means of forcing
investors
into real assets, to accelerate deleveraging, and as a mechanism for facilitating downward adjustment in real wages and home prices.
Clinton and her advisors hope, instead, to tax capital gains at ordinary rates for stock held for up to two years, after which the rate would decline by four percentage points per year until, after several years, it reached the current long-term rate, which tops out for wealthy
investors
at 20%.
Private R&D is difficult to encourage when
investors
suspect that success would lead the fruits of their work to be taken by some form of eminent domain and used throughout the world with little compensation.
Patient-capital owners are like equity investors, but they are willing to “sink” money in the real sector for an extended period of time.
In theory, the stone and its magic are typically the idea that entrepreneurs, investors, and the media make so much fuss about; in fact, the stone’s true importance usually is as something that the entrepreneur can use to generate enough enthusiasm to raise money and get people to work together to build the company.
To be sure, they may be making themselves and their
investors
rich (though many of them are bought for less than what was invested).
Some “oligarchs” have undergone Damascene conversions and are trying to improve their image among
investors.
He tried to brow-beat
investors
at a board meeting in the Kremlin where – in good Soviet tradition – everyone was expected to vote unanimously to split the company into small pieces so as to sell them at low prices to cronies, political allies, and friendly oligarchs.
What do
investors
want?
Investors
suspect such phenomenal growth was achieved at Gazprom’s expense.
Private
investors
– indeed, all Russia’s citizens – are watching and waiting.
What is clear is that Chinese entrepreneurs and
investors
– who have been complaining for years about the heavy tax burden in China – are far more inclined to agree with the World Bank than more favorable comparisons and indices.
To change this state of affairs, institutional
investors
must be allowed to propose their own slate of directors.
The SEC rule was an attempt to grant institutional
investors
this right.
There is some early sign, though, that board members nominated by institutional
investors
have the courage to stand up to management when it comes to excessive executive compensation.
But when the bank announced a first-half loss of €3.6 billion ($4.7 billion), the sudden collapse of confidence was alarming, and nervous
investors
are asking whether there are similar time bombs ticking elsewhere.
Strangely, it is all but forgotten – particularly by the Chinese – that for two decades Japan has watched China’s rise quietly from the sidelines (even supportively, to the extent that Japanese
investors
have poured in billions of dollars in the three decades since Deng Xiaoping opened the economy).
And, because the government chose not to go to Congress for a law authorizing the auction,
investors
feared that the legal framework was open to challenge.
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