Securities
in sentence
720 examples of Securities in a sentence
There's 100 trillion dollars of capital currently invested in fixed-income
securities.
They bought fixed income securities, bonds.
They are rating even financial products like the infamous mortgage-backed
securities.
Once it starts out a fraudulent loan, it can only be sold to the secondary market through more frauds, lying about the reps and warrantees, and then those people are going to produce mortgage-backed
securities
and exotic derivatives which are also going to be supposedly backed by those fraudulent loans.
Now, filming
securities
go beyond using hidden cameras.
You call them stock, or stock options, derivatives, mortgage-backed
securities.
Into her world comes Seo- hoon (Kim Ju-hyeok) a decent-fella
securities
trader who clearly wants to pursue a relationship despite her reservations.
The boys get in trouble when they mistake a satchel of
securities
for their supply of lipsticks and are hunted down by a pair of detectives, while Ms. Frisby's manager is planning to ruin the boys by turning over the
securities
as well as Ms. Frisby by sabotaging her entry in the transcontinental race.
I am trying to figure out how someone who invests so much money into publicly traded
securities
can make a movie that is directly in conflict with his behavior.
Winkler plays Chuck Lumley, a
securities
broker who may have had a nervous breakdown - anyway, he has taken a job at the morgue so he can be in a quiet place.
There is, however, a lively debate about whether there was a fourth big mistake: Alan Greenspan’s decision in 2001-2004 to push and keep nominal interest rates on US Treasury
securities
very low in order to try to keep the economy near full employment.
For example, households and investment managers, reluctant to keep money in safe money-market funds, instead seek to invest in
securities
with longer maturities and higher credit risk, so long as they offer extra yield.
Since the world will not continue to provide the US with goods in exchange for dubious financial securities, Americans will have to leave their dream world.
The best evidence for continuing confidence in the integrity of US
securities
markets comes from foreign investors, who would be among the first to flee if they feared rampant corporate fraud and inadequate regulation.
Even after the credit-rating agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Treasury
securities
in response to a brief US government shutdown in mid-2011, outside investors continued to acquire dollars.
The PBOC has since resumed its reverse repo operations – purchasing
securities
from commercial banks with an agreement to resell them in the future – thereby injecting liquidity into the banking system.
Defending his creation, Volcker harks back to a simpler time for the financial system, and refers to “overly liquid, speculation-prone
securities
markets.”
First, investors, recognizing that the dollar is overvalued and that they are likely to suffer large losses when it returns to its fundamental value, could start selling their Treasury bonds, corporate bonds, and mortgage-backed
securities.
Anticipating the prospect of such future fire sales (of loans, financial assets, or institutions), it is understandable that even strong banks will restrict their lending to very short maturities, and their investments to extremely liquid
securities.
Some distressed banks clearly possess large quantities of mortgage-backed securities, and are holding onto them in the hope that their prices will rise in the future, saving them from failure.
The Fed’s chairman at the time, Ben Bernanke, reasoned that unconventional monetary policy would drive down long-term rates, inducing investors to shift from high-quality bonds to equities and other risky
securities.
Investing fund surpluses in foreign
securities
would counteract the tendency for the exchange rate to rise.
The PBOC already has called for banks to securitize their high-quality assets and sell the
securities
to interbank-market investors; that could be a prelude to troubled-asset securitization.
In the US, the low risk assigned to senior tranches of mortgage-backed
securities
made them attractive instruments for banks to hold, given the relatively high return they offered.
And, because the loans were rarely issued as
securities
in international capital markets, it is not included in, say, World Bank databases, either.
After a multi-year bull market in equities and fixed-income securities, stimulated by the very monetary policies the Fed is trying to leave behind, there is no valuation support to dampen the reaction.
Despite the trials and tribulations of the American economy, dollar
securities
remain the dominant form of reserves because of the unparalleled depth and liquidity of US markets.
Central banks can buy and sell dollar
securities
without moving those markets.
Foreign experts helped draft model legal codes and revised draft laws throughout the Yeltsin era in Russia; outsiders helped craft Ukraine’s postcommunist constitution, the charters for the central bank of Estonia, Poland’s secured transaction regime, and Bulgaria’s
securities
regulations.
The IMF endorsed legal standards and codes of best practice developed by other institutions, but also promotes the development of new standards, including accounting and auditing standards,
securities
market regulations, bankruptcy law, codes for corporate governance, insurance and banking regulations.
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