Lenders
in sentence
412 examples of Lenders in a sentence
Now, we've seen this before in the savings and loan debacle, and we know that this kind of fraud can only originate from the lenders, and that no honest lender would ever inflate the appraisal, because it's the great protection against loss.
This came from the
lenders
because of the fraud recipe.
By 2007, when a survey of appraisers was done, 90 percent of appraisers reported that they had been subject to coercion from the
lenders
trying to get them to inflate an appraisal.
And no one has come clean from the troika of
lenders
that have been imposing this policy to say, "This was a colossal mistake."
Too poor to pay their way through college, they now owe
lenders
more than one trillion US dollars.
Smaller
lenders
can in turn lower their interest rates, effectively making debt “cheaper” to boost spending.
“Home” regulators and
lenders
of last resort are increasingly worried about their potential exposure to losses in banks’ overseas operations.
And without structural reform, there is little chance that the Greek economy will see sustained stability and growth – not least because official
lenders
are unwilling to continue extending an unreformed Greece significantly more money than it is asked to pay.
Left-wing ideologues have long viewed structural-reform programs with deep suspicion, accusing international
lenders
like the IMF and the World Bank of being captured by neoliberal market fundamentalists.
But, if that is a real fear for the ECB – if it is not merely acting on behalf of private
lenders
– surely it should have demanded that the banks have more capital.
If Citi was facing bigger losses than those already known, could it make good on new obligations to trading partners and
lenders?
Which countries would be willing to participate, either as borrowers or
lenders?
As a next step, the report proposes a pilot program and consultations with borrowers, lenders, and funders to resolve enduring questions about their application.
Lenders
(the bankers) are suspicious, worried about creditworthiness, and demand high risk premia.
They need the eurozone core and the International Monetary Fund as temporary
lenders
of last resort until they restore policy credibility and regain investors’ confidence.
For a start, it means debt forgiveness: international
lenders
may not be able to compensate fully the damage caused when their money helps maintain odious autocrats in power, but at least the victims should not be burdened by a disastrous financial legacy.
James Madison, who would become the Constitution’s principal author, couldn’t borrow to buy land in frontier Virginia, because
lenders
lacked confidence that Virginia courts could enforce repayment.
Alternatively – and more likely – the data may not include some projects, lenders, or borrowers, meaning that the debts could be much higher.
The IMF can cut off not only its own credit, but also most loans from the larger World Bank, other multilateral lenders, rich country governments, and even much of the private sector.
But foreign official financing will always be subject to lenders’ conditions – and
lenders
see no reason to finance ongoing spending at levels that previously led a country into trouble.
In East Asia, for example, IMF bailouts helped international lenders, but hit workers and domestic firms hard.
Different policies might have imposed more risk on international lenders, and less on workers and domestic firms.
In the case of Greece, the interest payments apply to government debt held by Greek individuals and institutions, as well as to government debt held by the IMF, the European Central Bank, and other foreign
lenders.
The difference reflects a combination of the lower rate on short-term debt and the highly favorable terms on which Greece is now able to borrow from official
lenders
at the IMF and the ECB.
After all, such action rarely works: markets anticipate it and raise interest rates to compensate
lenders
for expected inflation.
The underlying idea is simple: every year, countries around the world set aside reserves as insurance against contingencies such as an abrupt downturn in foreign
lenders'
sentiment or a collapse of export prices.
In the UK, the Bank of England has announced that in February it will end its mortgage Funding for Lending Scheme, which allowed
lenders
to borrow at ultra-low rates in exchange for providing loans.
Prudent
lenders
therefore try to limit both how much a business can borrow and the other risks it can take.
Poor countries are typically at a huge disadvantage in bargaining with big multinational lenders, which are usually backed by powerful home-country governments.
Indeed,
lenders
are supposed to be experts on risk management and assessment, and in that sense, the onus should be on them.
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