Lenders
in sentence
412 examples of Lenders in a sentence
It might sound extreme, but it certainly would be more efficient than a slow hemorrhage of EU funds, which would lead to an official and multilateral debt hangover that could only deter junior private
lenders.
But overnight
lenders
could command even higher interest rates if they took as collateral a less-safe mortgage pool, so many did just that.
One key objective is to ensure that mortgage-pool
lenders
will be repaid, thereby discouraging them from running off at the first sign of trouble.
In the face of a housing crisis, it is plausible that
lenders
would again panic, deciding that they cannot depend on untested processes to stabilize the banks and withdrawing their overnight loans.
The grim irony here is that, prior to such a shock, preparing for restructuring encourages
lenders
to provide more overnight loans.
That change convinced mortgage
lenders
that their activities were ultra-safe: they no longer even had to worry about the quality of the borrower.
If the US Treasury sold more short-term – rather than longer-term – obligations, fewer
lenders
would turn to mortgage pools.
To really cure Europe’s ills, policies must attack the source of infection: the dominance that
lenders
now hold over borrowers in financial markets.
This put
lenders
in the driver’s seat.
So successful were they at this gambit that some firm’s find themselves, for the first time since WWII, able to act as
lenders
in their own right.
The sheer scale of public borrowing precludes interest rates from falling despite the presence of new
lenders
on the scene.
Beleaguered by pressures to finance their deficits, governments try to create conditions favorable to
lenders
by keeping inflation rates low and debt to income ratios stable.
In determining the precise policy mix to follow and whether or not structural reforms will be introduced, policymakers must first decide whether the haughty dominance of
lenders
over wage earners is to be perpetuated.
Credit rating agencies rebalance information asymmetries, by providing information about companies’ creditworthiness to
lenders
and investors.
Multilateral
lenders
like the International Monetary Fund were fixated on fiscal reforms such as reducing costly subsidies rather than shoring up a beleaguered economy.
Finally, it plans to renegotiate Greece’s debt with lenders, in the hope of writing off the bulk of its liabilities.
Jared Kushner’s eagerness to secure the large sums needed to stay afloat has led him to seek foreign lenders, including a Russian banker close to Vladimir Putin.
Many more economic agents face serious credit and solvency problems, including millions of households in the US, UK, and the Eurozone with excessive mortgages, hundreds of bankrupt sub-prime mortgage lenders, a growing number of distressed homebuilders, many highly leveraged and distressed financial institutions, and, increasingly, corporate-sector firms.
Today’s financial markets are dominated by non-bank institutions – investment banks, money market funds, hedge funds, mortgage
lenders
that do not accept deposits, so-called “structured investment vehicles,” and even states and local government investment funds – that have no direct or indirect access to the liquidity support of central banks.
Big multinational banks and mortgage
lenders
have moved into markets across Latin America, providing financial services that allow
lenders
to better manage risk.
This protects both borrowers and
lenders.
Even the International Monetary Fund – which, along with other European lenders, has provided Greece with emergency financing – recently joined that call.
Lenders
to a repressive regime will no longer expect these debts to be repaid by its successors, immediately making
lenders
worldwide careful about lending to them.
An Egyptian precedent would bring awareness and sobriety to an entire generation of
lenders
that is not accustomed to considering this type of risk, and that may even be unfamiliar with the doctrine of odious debt.
Foreign lenders’ resulting caution would prevent future Egyptian governments from irresponsibly saddling their populace with debt.
You never know how deep the puddle is - Few
lenders
and policy makers look at the size and maturity of external debts.
So
lenders
and bank supervisors deserve part of the blame.
In the interwar Great Depression, the economist Irving Fisher accurately described the process of debt deflation, in which lenders, worried by the deterioration of their asset quality, called in their loans, pushing borrowers to liquidate assets.
During this time, India weaned itself from dependence on aid, preferring to borrow from multilateral
lenders
and, increasingly, from commercial banks.
Moreover, Islamic finance is more equitable:
lenders
and borrowers share risks and rewards, which increases the focus on long-term goals and discourages excessive short-term risk-taking.
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