Reserves
in sentence
1741 examples of Reserves in a sentence
East Asia's countries followed that advice, and for a good reason: they had seen the consequences of a lack of
reserves.
Its huge foreign currency
reserves
give it the freedom to ignore the IMF and the US Treasury.
With 90 trillion renminbi in banking assets and $3.2 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves, China is now playing a significant role in global finance.
Furthermore, output from Russia’s existing oil fields is projected to decline by as much as half over the next decade; as it does, access to the technologies needed to exploit harder-to-extract
reserves
will become increasingly important.
Many countries have built up substantial reserves, and are now issuing far more debt in domestic currency.
Does a regime have the financial
reserves
with which to cushion the shock and buy time to adjust?
That is not the case today for many emerging economies, which have built ample foreign
reserves
and kept external debt low.
Beyond retail savers, banks that are holding cash in excess of required
reserves
have no choice but to accept the negative interest rates that central banks impose; indeed, they could not hold, manage, and transfer those excess
reserves
if they were held as cash, rather than in a negative-yielding account with the central bank.
Central banks still hold more than 50% of their foreign exchange
reserves
in dollars.
Will Morales renegotiate the laws and contracts governing Bolivia’s vast natural gas reserves, as his government is rightly committed to do, in a way that does not scare away urgently needed foreign investment?
Although inflation is now low in the United States, Europe, and Japan, households and institutional investors have reason to worry that the low interest rates and the extensive creation of bank
reserves
could lead to inflation when economic recovery takes hold.
By the same token, it would become legitimate for countries to practice what they might call “quantitative external easing” (QEE), with central banks intervening to hold down their exchange rates, while building huge
reserves.
Quantitative easing and its cousins are implemented primarily in situations in which banks are willing to hold enormous quantities of
reserves
unquestioningly – typically when credit channels are blocked and other sources of interest-sensitive demand are weak.
As a result, emerging economies are increasingly wary of running large deficits, and are placing a higher priority on maintaining a competitive exchange rate and accumulating large
reserves
to serve as insurance against shocks.
And the G-20 recently asked the Financial Stability Board to consider the risks that a possible “carbon bubble” – caused by markets’ overvaluation of fossil-fuel companies’ oil, coal, and gas reserves, owing to a failure to account for future limits on extraction and use – pose to the global financial system.
Scandalously, they still have to surrender 50% of their foreign-exchange
reserves
to the French Treasury as a guarantee of the CFA franc’s limited convertibility and free transfer to France.
France has always drawn on its& African reserves, especially during economic downturns.&
Moreover, the franc-zone countries that are small and produce no oil prefer to pool their
reserves
in order to reduce their vulnerability to external shocks.
The Dr. Pangloss school dismissed them as benign – a mere reflection of emerging economies’ demand for dollar reserves, which only the US could provide, and American consumers’ insatiable appetite for cheap merchandise imports.
Nor do large international
reserves
guarantee financial stability.
All of this suggests that the accumulation of foreign
reserves
by emerging and developing countries – another phenomenon over which much ink has been spilled – may be about to peak.
We have rich
reserves
of gas and coal.
When they became lending institutions, their earliest rule was to keep almost 100% of cash
reserves
against their loans, so that they would not be caught short if most of their depositors decided to withdraw their money at the same time.
This will lessen the need felt by emerging economies for self-insurance against financial instability, by building up large
reserves.
This task will have to be shared by emerging countries with large
reserves.
These
reserves
are put to better use by assisting the IMF in maintaining an open and stable financial system and prevent crises like these from recurringMitt and the MoochersWASHINGTON, DC – The Republican Party has some potentially winning themes for America’s presidential and congressional elections in November.
No central bank held its foreign
reserves
in dollars.
In the second half of the 1920’s they held more of their
reserves
in dollars than sterling.
Partly by design and partly by chance, about a decade ago China found itself consistently accumulating large amounts of foreign
reserves
by running a trade surplus and intervening to buy up the dollars that this generated.
This gives China the unprecedented – for a large trading country – ability to accumulate foreign-exchange
reserves
(now approaching $3 trillion).
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