Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
For both retail and institutional
investors
who distinguish between individual countries’ and sectors’ prospects, emerging markets will remain attractive long-term investment opportunities.
The interest-rate premium that the market would inevitably demand from a young sovereign like Scotland could be minimized by issuing debt in sterling, thereby protecting
investors
from additional devaluation risk.
Though the sanctions are not backed by China, they are already having a powerful effect, and the expectation that they will be tightened further is a huge concern for
investors
and the Russian government.
But the fact that Sberbank is on the list has created enormous anxiety for all foreign
investors
in Russia.
With MSCI now set to offer
investors
emerging-markets indices that exclude Russia, a massive sell-off of Russian stocks by index funds will drive down prices further.
That has now ended, because bond
investors
no longer treat all eurozone sovereign debt as equal.
First, the good news: The fear that Europe’s banks could collapse, with panicked investors’ flight to safety producing a European Great Depression, now seems to have passed.
With quantitative easing having driven interest rates to record lows, one explanation is that this is just another, more obscure manifestation of investors’ search for yield.
With slowing world economic growth, US financing needs could cause a drop in investors’ confidence in the future of US-based assets, precipitating a sharp dollar depreciation.
In search of higher yields,
investors
took that liquidity – largely in the form of short-term speculative capital (“hot” money) – to emerging markets, putting upward pressure on their exchange rates and fueling the risk of asset bubbles.
The Obama administration is promising to pick up losses to persuade hedge funds and other private
investors
to buy out banks’ bad assets.
America’s Labor Market by the NumbersNEWPORT BEACH – Politicians and economists now join
investors
in a ritual that typically takes place on the first Friday of each month and has important consequences for global markets: anticipating, internalizing, and reacting to the monthly employment report released by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
When the central bank raised interest rates to calm inflation, foreign
investors
flocked to the country.
Investors, policy analysts, and even officials are quietly beginning to suggest that this might be the case.
As of October, the continent has an operational European Stability Mechanism to purchase new Italian and Spanish government bonds if
investors
go on strike.
In focusing on summit declarations and promises of far-reaching reforms of EU institutions,
investors
are missing the real risk: the collapse of public support for, or at least public acquiescence to, the austerity policies required to work down heavy debt burdens – and for the governments pursuing these policies.
As for Europe, many
investors
still assume that a moment will arrive when we can definitively conclude that European Monetary Union is finished or saved.
Later, domestic
investors
were added to the list of suspects, and the Chinese authorities announced a rigorous investigation into the source of short selling.
With retail
investors
borrowing large amounts to finance share purchases, participation in the stock market surged, effectively turning a sound bull market into a “mad cow.”
This convinced practically everyone that a “big bull” market, possibly lasting a decade, had begun and spurred
investors
to buy stocks at already-high prices.
But, instead of working incrementally to create strong, targeted regulations, they performed an abrupt about-face, warning
investors
about risky bubbles and declaring war on margin finance.
Beyond issuing a flurry of administrative orders, it did little to interact with
investors
and the market, lacking the means to solicit public opinion and advice.
In order to protect the interests of
investors
better, China now must find ways to ensure such cooperation among its existing financial regulators, including by revamping the relevant institutions.
Unwisely, Chen went out of his way to shut out mainland Chinese capital and to retain barriers to other foreign
investors
in order to protect the domestic businesses of his political allies.
Rather, investors’ undivided confidence in all eurozone borrowers reflected something else – a general belief in the capacity of rich countries’ governments.
According to that view,
investors
punish profligate states by demanding higher interest rates to hedge against the likelihood of inflation; so the best way to ensure low borrowing costs is to give central banks as much independence from politicians as possible, and then make price stability their primary mandate.
A moment may come when foreign
investors
do not believe that their sterling or dollar assets are protected against inflation, and at that point their willingness to hold low-yield sterling and dollar assets will end.
Of course, this possibility still cannot be dismissed, which is why international
investors
remain cautious about Europe.
But if the populist victories that worry
investors
do not in fact happen, a surge of business and consumer confidence will send waves of investment flowing into the eurozone.
Unless growth is restored, France’s already large public debt will expand unsustainably, heightening the risk that
investors
will shun French government bonds.
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