Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
Nominal, real, and inflation-break-even Treasury rates are lower than the cyclical position of the economy warrants, owing to investors’ perception of acyclical and atypical risk.
Although inflation is now low in the United States, Europe, and Japan, households and institutional
investors
have reason to worry that the low interest rates and the extensive creation of bank reserves could lead to inflation when economic recovery takes hold.
And the declining value of the dollar – down more than 10% against the euro in the past 12 months – is a legitimate cause of concern for non-US
investors
who now hold dollars.
Of course,
investors
who don’t want to tie up their funds in low-yielding government bonds can buy explicit inflation hedges as an overlay to their other investments.
Yes, the chances of an immediate repeat of the acute financial meltdown of 2008 are much reduced by the fact that most investors, regulators, consumers, and even politicians will remember their financial near-death experience for quite some time.
But such figures, though large, pale in comparison with the $305 trillion worth of financial assets held by commercial banks, institutional investors, and other private financial institutions and individuals.
“Grexit,” in turn, could be the beginning of the end of the monetary union, as
investors
would wonder which member – possibly even a core country (for example, Finland) – will be the next to leave.
Currently, there are few clear opportunities for investors, especially in terms of transaction size and scale.
Yet governments can attack speculative excesses and thus reduce job instability by doing for capital markets what they have long done for product and labour markets: set up systems to monitor markets for the safety of investors, ensure transparency, and promote good corporate governance.
Once
investors
began to move their assets into more stable currencies, the local currency would depreciate and bond prices would collapse.
Broad support for a robust accord is reflected in the more than 10,000 commitments to combat climate change made by cities, regions, companies, and
investors.
This emerging consensus was also reflected in May at the Business & Climate Summit and Climate Finance Day, where
investors
and business leaders pledged to lead the global transition to a low-carbon economy.
Meanwhile, institutional
investors
have been snapping up a series of climate bonds focusing on water, affordable housing, smart cities, and an array of other mitigation and adaption projects.
On the contrary, the dollar was one of the few clear beneficiaries of the crisis, as foreign investors, desperate for liquidity, piled into US Treasury bonds.
The technical expertise required for IT start-ups will only be transferred by
investors
if they are compensated.
As long as
investors
believe that Italy and Spain will eventually be rescued by the OMT, these countries’ borrowing costs will be low, and the rescue will not be needed.
With Europe staggering under the blows of
investors
intent on profiting from a catastrophe largely of their own making, it is time to reflect on the public purpose of global capital markets.
British economist Nicholas Stern has argued for policy intervention to prevent
investors
from earning higher short-term profits by pricing carbon at zero (which implies a collective long-term bet on unsustainable increases in global temperatures).
Similarly, for Greece (and Europe more widely), it defies logic to allow private
investors
to profit today from the destruction of the political economies required to generate tomorrow’s wealth.
All of these initiatives are aimed at reducing dependence on the dollar both at home and abroad by encouraging importers, exporters, and
investors
to make more use of China’s currency.
As a result of this official support, private
investors
gained confidence in the new instrument.
At this point, the Fed could curtail its intervention and give the market over to private
investors.
And where private
investors
led, central banks followed.
But, because the Chinese financial system remains tightly controlled and the options for
investors
are very limited, the usual inflationary consequences have not followed.
Investors
in Brazil are being offered yields around 11%, while similar credit risks in the US are paying no more than 2-3%.
From the perspective of international investors, banks that are “too big to fail” are the perfect places to park their reserves – as long as the sovereign in question remains solvent.
I lean slightly toward the optimistic scenario, but
investors
and policymakers alike need to understand the ramifications of a return to more normal volatility levels.
Investors, especially, need to recognize that even if broader positive trends in globalization and technological progress continue, a rise in macroeconomic volatility could still produce a massive fall in asset prices.
As output and consumption become more stable,
investors
do not demand as large a risk premium.
They asked how
investors
would price stocks if they expected historical average returns to continue, while also deciding that the risk was essentially zero.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Foreign
Would
Financial
Markets
Which
Market
Companies
Private
Assets
Capital
Rates
Other
About
Interest
Government
Institutional
Countries
Global
Economic