Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
The challenge for
investors
– and for governments – is to lower the cost of connecting to solar energy.
Financing Renewable EnergyNEW YORK – There is plenty of money in the private sector to build up the world’s renewable infrastructure as long as the numbers add up, and profit-seeking private
investors
will figure out how to do it without any financing help from government.
Investors
require above-market rates for renewable power or similar compensation that reflects the social benefits of emissions free energy.
First,
investors
who could not use the tax deductions had to go to considerable expense to “monetize” the credits.
If
investors
sense that new projects may obtain special treatment, everyone will decide to wait.
But
investors
do not seem to think so.
What does this actually mean for its
investors
and debtors?
While these countries did accumulate a huge volume of debt during the credit boom that went bust in 2008, the cost of debt service is now too low to have the impact – reducing incomes, preventing a return to growth, and generating uncertainty among
investors
– that one would normally expect.
Increased oil revenues improve the fiscal positions of most producing economies, and some have taken advantage of global investors’ hardier appetite to issue sovereign debt.
The case of Mannesmann in its fight to avoid takeover by Vodaphone is only the most recent example; a few months ago the French government openly discouraged any idea of a takeover of Société Générale by non-French
investors.
Companies and
investors
are hedging their bets by taking a few resource-efficiency measures and investing in some low-carbon assets, but leaving their high-carbon portfolios and activities largely intact.
Few governments or
investors
start from the standpoint of climate change.
But the RCB’s track record since 1992 has done little to stabilize inflation expectations and to persuade businessmen, investors, government officials and ordinary Russians that it is genuinely focused on reining in price growth.
American
investors
who sell bonds to the Fed will want to diversify the dollars that they receive from it.
The Fed’s policy of increasing the supply of dollars also increases investors’ concern about the future rate of inflation in the US.
That provides a further reason for American
investors
to shift part of their portfolios from dollars to other currencies that are not likely to experience rising inflation.
In particular, since the European Central Bank has clearly rejected quantitative easing,
investors
will want to buy euro bonds issued by Germany and other European countries that are not in danger of default.
Investors
in the US and other countries cannot buy either renminbi or renminbi-denominated bonds in the way that they can buy other currencies.
The companies then sold the assets to major international
investors
for huge profits, depriving the DRC’s citizens of many hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.
Regardless of Trump’s approval,
investors
are likely to reject a pipeline that would probably go bankrupt well before the planned horizon for its use.
US officials dispute this, arguing that American companies are among the region’s largest foreign direct investors, while 11 of the US’s 20 free-trade agreements (FTAs) are with Latin American countries.
As a result, whenever the Fed cuts interest rates, it puts pressure on the whole “dollar bloc” to follow suit, lest their currencies appreciate as
investors
seek higher yields.
Until now, most
investors
have thought that they would rather risk high inflation for a couple of years than accept even a short and shallow recession.
Freed from exchange-rate risk, international
investors
no longer demanded a risk premium from these countries and were willing to provide funds to all of them under the same favorable conditions that previously had been reserved for Germany.
The weak fiscal position has in turn undermined investors’ confidence, with obvious implications for economic growth.
If willing buyers and willing sellers were trading claims happily, then, as long as they were “professional” investors, there was no legitimate reason to interfere in their markets.
The prolonged recession and economic malaise have dented the individual savings rate, while banks no longer have the resources to provide peace of mind to many retail investors, whose trust has been severely eroded.
In order to restore confidence among savers and investors, it will have to find a solution to clear banks’ balance sheets of NPLs, which are undermining credit, making capital more expensive, and thus acting as a drag on the economy.
Even legendary
investors
like Warren Buffett, it is argued, are not really outperforming the market.
If that were true,
investors
would abandon, en masse, their efforts to ferret out mispricing in the market, because there wouldn’t be any.
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