Loans
in sentence
1648 examples of Loans in a sentence
For the same reason, IMF
loans
can be a burdensome legacy from a market perspective.
One day you get bankruptcy, another day
loans
with few strings attached.
Specifically, the region would benefit from grants to local entrepreneurs, concessional financing and
loans
to foreign investors, and budgetary support from the government.
America’s credit excesses were in residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, credit cards, auto loans, and student
loans.
Simply put, more liquidity will not lead to more active bank lending until there is more transparency regarding the extent of non-performing
loans
and the relevant economies have become more flexible.
But even these massive
loans
were insufficient.
By the end of December, a substantial proportion of the
loans
were in default in Korea and Indonesia.
In fact, the panicked selling of Asian currencies only began to subside when the Asian debtors (mainly private banks and corporations) actually suspended debt payments, and began to negotiate a formal roll over of these
loans.
The implication is that they need grants, not
loans.
Not surprisingly, America, which benefits by getting trillions of dollars of
loans
from developing countries – now at almost no interest – was not enthusiastic about the discussion.
Most international
loans
and almost all global commodity exports are priced in dollars.
This decentralized delivery of goods relies on employees working for two weeks before receiving a paycheck, companies offering each other lines of credit, and banks offering bridge
loans.
Bad
loans
account for only 2% of Indian banks’ credit portfolios, versus 20% in China.
With the rise of financialization, commercial banks have become increasingly reliant on one another for short-term loans, mostly backed by government bonds, to finance their daily operations.
They gave up the pretense that Greece is solvent; admitted that excessive interest rates could only make the problem worse; agreed to extend more and longer-term loans; called for private lenders to bear some of the burden; guaranteed that even if Greek government bonds are rated in selected default, Greek banks would not be cut off from access to liquidity; recognized the need to support economic growth; and agreed to broaden the scope of the European Financial Stability Facility, making it a more flexible tool for intervention.
By deciding to provide cheaper
loans
and agreeing to a debt reduction, they have started reducing the burden.
How do you decide which countries should get low-cost
loans
or cheaper vaccines, and which can afford to fund their own development programs?
The Chinese surplus, on the other hand, being heavily skewed towards US government bonds, primarily boosts personal consumption – a process whose apotheosis came in the early 2000’s, as the Bush administration’s tax cuts, together with cash-out home refinancing and home-equity loans, turned US sovereign debt into consumer credit.
Foreign lenders who underestimated the risk of short-term
loans
to Indonesia and Korea would have charged higher risk premiums in a floating-rate world.
Such
loans
would have been unacceptable in a floating rate regime, because they threatened to move the exchange rate too far for the health of the economies.
Fortunately, they did: Interest rates for different categories of Argentine corporate
loans
have not reacted to the event.
Indeed, there is a compelling case to be made for Indonesian debt relief in any case, given that much of the debt was incurred in
loans
to the corrupt Suharto government.
With banks reluctant to make new loans, institutions such as pension funds are well placed to meet the desperate demand for capital.
There is no reason why
loans
in Bozen (Bolzano) should cost twice as much as those in nearby Innsbruck; in fact, such arbitrary divergences merely undermine competition and cause economic stagnation.
The conclusion that Greece needed official
loans
to repay its private creditors ensured that Greek debt remained large, compelling eurozone leaders to demand economically debilitating fiscal austerity.
Greece has so far repaid almost none of the €282 billion ($372 billion) in
loans
that it has received since 2010.
If the IMF were to ease the terms on its Greek loans, it would likely face fierce protests from its less wealthy debtors and risk compromising its status as senior creditor – an outcome that even the Fund’s largely quiescent Board of Governors is unlikely to accept.
The European Court of Justice ruled that
loans
to protect financial stability would not violate the Lisbon Treaty’s “no bailout” clause, provided that their terms were “reasonable.”
While it may be too late to avoid forgiving Greece’s existing debt, Germany’s next government will not have a mandate to provide more
loans.
The complexity of securitized pools of
loans
that were sold worldwide – bilaterally over the counter – as pieces of various tranches, meant that nobody was certain about who owned what or what it was worth.
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