Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
By contrast, foreign
investors
in Chile and China bring in valuable knowhow; hence the gross capital that flows in yields more than the gross savings abroad.
So long as foreign
investors
and central banks are content to continue piling up holdings of US debt, America can go on spending whatever is needed to sustain its many security commitments around the world, as well as finance its trade and budget deficits.
Investors
can count on an exceptionally high degree of exchange convenience and capital certainty.
In the world of finance, where crises are not uncommon,
investors
need a secure place to park their money.
Nevertheless, financial
investors
are increasingly worried that inflation will eventually begin to rise, owing to the large expansion of commercial bank reserves engineered by the United States Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB).
Some investors, at least, remember that rising inflation typically follows monetary expansion, and they fear that this time will be no different.
Investors
have responded to these fears by buying gold, agricultural land, and other traditional inflation hedges.
But, unlike private investors, Fed officials insist that this time really will be different.
Nothing changes the grim reality that America’s current-account deficit is headed to more than 3% of nominal GDP, implying increased reliance on foreign
investors.
Similarly,
investors
flock to stocks that have appreciated, because they have “momentum.”
Why would business leaders invest in an uncertain world, rather than paying dividends to demanding (but generally risk-averse) investors, or buying back some of their companies’ own shares (thereby improving the price/earnings ratio and, better yet, increasing their own remuneration)?
At the end of the day, the CEOs and the most aggressive
investors
are all happy with this approach.
More
investors
should be demanding that the incentives change to reflect true measures of long-term performance.
Other large institutional
investors
and policymakers should follow suit, to give the corporate world a nudge.
China’s End of ExuberanceMILAN – China’s growth has slowed considerably since 2010, and it may slow even more – a prospect that is rattling
investors
and markets well beyond China’s borders.
As a result,
investors
are worried that China could slip into the excess-leverage growth model that has served many developed economies so poorly.
Analysts and
investors
have at least two related concerns.
In short, many
investors
are nervous because China’s future growth story is unclear to them.
The Insider Brain GainNEW YORK – Unfortunately, many new technologies and business models make money for
investors
without creating jobs for workers.
Although the Fed traditionally controlled only the short-term federal funds rate, investors’ response to a change in that rate depended on their expectation of how long the rate change would last.
Growing confidence in economic expansion and falling unemployment has raised investors’ expectation of future inflation, pulling up the nominal interest rate on ten-year bonds.
But with an unemployment rate of just 4.1% and a weakening dollar, investors’ expected rate of inflation is increasing.
That revelation has undermined much of the good Putin has achieved in office, for it has made foreign
investors
wary once again of doing business in Russia.
Foreign
investors
aren't alone in worrying.
Business
investors
hate uncertainty and the Brexit vote has created a dramatically more uncertain world in Europe and beyond.
This could take the air out of incipient assets bubbles that might be forming and ease pressures on institutional
investors
who are struggling to find the yield they need to meet their insurance and pension commitments.
That way, shareholders and
investors
could properly judge whether the advice given and the investments made were in fact sound in the long run rather than just reflecting the enthusiasm of the moment.
Second, we thought that the depositors prone to panic would always be small depositors – households and small firms – rather than corporations or professional
investors.
If bank failures typically reflect real underlying problems, sensitive professional
investors
can be expected to react quickly when any whiff of panic is in the air.
This is particularly true of the repo markets, which provide the equivalent services for professional
investors
– banks and large corporations – that ordinary bank deposits provide for individuals and small firms.
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