Investors
in sentence
4087 examples of Investors in a sentence
This amount, akin to a modest management fee, is simply not a dominating consideration for
investors.
Investors
also see that the US regulatory system is stronger than the SEC alone.
So
investors
know that even if a Federal agency like the SEC overlooks or ignores serious regulatory problems, another regulator might step in.
The best evidence for continuing confidence in the integrity of US securities markets comes from foreign investors, who would be among the first to flee if they feared rampant corporate fraud and inadequate regulation.
In past times of trouble, skittish
investors
and prudent central banks have all piled into dollar-denominated assets, not least US Treasury bonds.
Will global
investors
continue to put their money in a country whose leader loudly provokes the Hermit Kingdom with threats of “fire and fury,” or will they find financial refuge elsewhere?
Even after the credit-rating agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Treasury securities in response to a brief US government shutdown in mid-2011, outside
investors
continued to acquire dollars.
But will history repeat itself, and send
investors
flocking toward the dollar?
Economic growth,
investors
believed, was bound to improve.
While Trump has been tweeting nonsense,
investors
have been looking for alternative safe havens in other markets, from Switzerland to Japan.
When
investors
and central banks place their wealth in Treasury bonds and other US assets, the US government can go on spending whatever it needs to sustain its many security commitments around the world, and to finance its trade and budget deficits.
Italians are in the habit of thinking that tax increases necessarily go only to paying off rich investors, rather than to paying for government services like better roads and schools.
The US is a large and powerful country and, when danger hits,
investors
buy up federal government debt – driving down interest rates.
Investors
are flooding back everywhere.
Investors
are interested in financial returns, so there is no problem about measuring distinct values – in the end it all comes down to money.
Not only did Chinese regulators enable the bubble’s growth by allowing retail
investors
– many of them newcomers to the market – to engage in margin trading (using borrowed money); the policy response to the market correction that began in late June has also been highly problematic.
I was in Beijing in the fall of 2007, when the Shanghai Composite Index skyrocketed to almost 6,000 (the recent peak was just over 5,000), owing partly to the participation of relatively inexperienced retail
investors.
Not only did they fail to mitigate the risks, underscored in the 2007 collapse, that new retail
investors
introduce into the market; they actually exacerbated them, by allowing, and even encouraging, those
investors
to accumulate leverage through margin buying.
If Chinese regulators allow the market to correct, sophisticated institutional
investors
with a long-term value orientation will ultimately step in, enhancing the market’s stability.
In the process, markets take
investors
on a wild rollercoaster ride, with the European crisis (riddled with even more confusion and volatility) serving to aggravate their queasiness.
This is an atmosphere in which unhealthy balance sheets come under even greater pressure, and healthy
investors
refuse to engage.
Green energy
investors
and politicians lead the public-relations advance, assisted by a credulous media that likes to tell green-technology “success” stories.
With the Tea Party wing of America’s Republican Party scaring
investors
out of the dollar, interest in the Chinese renminbi’s potential as an international reserve currency can only increase.
This will help China to attract more
investors
seeking to diversify their portfolios.
Ironically, the British government, while no doubt just trying to be hospitable to foreign
investors
by laying out a red carpet, is helping to set a trap for Chinese financial institutions – and the broader Chinese economy.
Hong Kong ’s government, led by the HKMA, launched an unprecedented intervention, buying up local shares to “defeat” the speculators, but failed to stop the stampede by global investors, including conservative pension and mutual funds.
At this writing, Yam is widely criticized in Hong Kong for failing to protect small
investors
against the dishonest sales tactics of a number of banks in their selling of toxic Lehman Brothers derivatives disguised as bonds.
These are firms known across the globe, and which are often the objects of acquisitive interest from foreign competitors or great international investors, such as Piaggio and Stefanel.
Episodes of financial tightening at the center and falling stock markets scare emerging market
investors.
Stock-market
investors
continue to hold out hope that Trump can push through policies to stimulate growth and increase corporate profits.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Foreign
Would
Financial
Markets
Which
Market
Companies
Private
Assets
Capital
Rates
Other
About
Interest
Government
Institutional
Countries
Global
Economic