Markets
in sentence
9395 examples of Markets in a sentence
Like Princess Anna in Frozen, it will take time for
markets
to recognize that their relationship with the Fed is changing (and should change); and, similar to the movie, some sort of shock may be involved in socializing the new understanding.
Having said that, the outcome will certainly not be as dramatic as in the movie – if only because, unlike Hans, the Fed is not out to take over the
markets.
The best and most sustainable love story for
markets
is one based on a healthy and dynamic real economy that creates jobs and opportunities for many more people.
Markets
can be effective at disciplining companies, but they operate best where there is competition, an expectation of repeat encounters, and a free flow of information.
The risk here is that providing too much information in real time about the securities that the Fed is buying and the institutions that it is helping could destabilize
markets.
We saw an example of it the last time there were massive government interventions in US financial
markets
– namely, during the Great Depression.
It must also avoid destabilizing financial
markets
and institutions.
As investors sought the higher yields on land, property, equities, bonds, and bank deposits that were attainable in emerging
markets
after 2008, capital inflows to Latin America tripled, boosting asset prices, credit, and aggregate demand.
European banks are far more thinly capitalized, and account for a much larger share of credit extended, than banks in the US, where much more lending originates in capital
markets.
The IMF is making strides in the right direction, but emerging
markets
will have to remain in the lead.
Steam power, factories, markets, and industry quickly spread throughout northwest Europe and its settler colonies.
The black market’s premium (relative to the official exchange rate) in most European countries (and in Japan) skyrocketed through the early 1950s, reaching levels that we now tend to associate with “unstable” emerging
markets.
Parallel currency markets, mostly for dollars, are back.
A search of news articles from 2000 to 2016 in which the terms “dollar shortage,” “black market,” or “parallel markets” for foreign exchange appeared (shown in the chart, along with an all-commodity price index), indicates that dollar shortage concerns escalated in 2008, amid the global financial crisis.
Labor
markets
have tightened significantly, with the overall unemployment rate down to 5.4%.
If inflation does rise faster than the Fed expects, it may be forced to increase interest rates rapidly, with adverse effects on financial
markets
and potentially on the broader economy.
Not really, because greed and amorality in financial
markets
have been common throughout the ages.
Third, financial
markets
and financial firms have become a nexus of conflicts of interest that must be unwound.
As my talk concluded, I got into an animated debate with my audience on developing global standards for labor
markets.
The impact of business process outsourcing (BPO) on many developing nations’ labor
markets
is a case in point.
Though there are export
markets
for services beyond the EU, past global efforts to open them up have generally failed.
Thus, the UK’s trade strategy should focus on what it will take to win a greater share of those
markets.
The US-China trade war may lead to a slight opening up of China’s services markets, implying new opportunities for service exporters.
But it could also close off existing
markets.
After all, such action rarely works:
markets
anticipate it and raise interest rates to compensate lenders for expected inflation.
Asset
markets
performed reasonably well in 2010.
But continued high growth in emerging
markets
depends on avoiding a second major downturn in the advanced economies, which continue to absorb a large (though declining) share of their exports.
At first blush, it might seem that
markets
are registering a massive vote of confidence in the president-elect, believing that his policies will be good for the US economy and, by extension, for the dollar.
No other currency can yet challenge the dollar as an investment medium or reserve asset, nor can other countries match America’s extraordinarily efficient financial markets, which provide unparalleled liquidity.
And capital
markets
are a resource-mobilization system that provides money to those companies and projects that are expected to be profitable – that is, the ones that respond adequately to market prices.
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