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... 1.1 Impact of Private Sector Banks Today, they have a market share of 20 per cent in deposits and advances. This has been achieved in a growing market, indicating that private sector banks have successfully capitalized on the growth of the Indian economy. But more than acquiring market share, the re ...
... 1.1 Impact of Private Sector Banks Today, they have a market share of 20 per cent in deposits and advances. This has been achieved in a growing market, indicating that private sector banks have successfully capitalized on the growth of the Indian economy. But more than acquiring market share, the re ...
Capital Market Imperfections, Greater Volatilities, and Rising
... Bertola and Ichino (1995) have shown that rising volatilities can exert large negative employment effects in countries characterized by high firing costs and centralized wage setting. However, this result holds only if the rise in volatility occurs in a certain range and if central wage setters do n ...
... Bertola and Ichino (1995) have shown that rising volatilities can exert large negative employment effects in countries characterized by high firing costs and centralized wage setting. However, this result holds only if the rise in volatility occurs in a certain range and if central wage setters do n ...
absolute return strategy sicav
... Ireland with a bail-out of EUR67.5 billion. It is generally feared that Portugal will be the next candidate, but the real fear concerns the position of Spain: the EFSF is probably not large enough to bail it out. At the end of October, Chancellor Merkel warned that the EFSF was a temporary emergency ...
... Ireland with a bail-out of EUR67.5 billion. It is generally feared that Portugal will be the next candidate, but the real fear concerns the position of Spain: the EFSF is probably not large enough to bail it out. At the end of October, Chancellor Merkel warned that the EFSF was a temporary emergency ...
the economic role of sme`s in world economy
... Take a look at any big company. Now, look back through time and track down when the company actually began. Not too many were born the size of the National Federal Bank or Procter&Gamble. Almost every company we know of began as an SME. The all-powerful Microsoft began as a couple of guys in a small ...
... Take a look at any big company. Now, look back through time and track down when the company actually began. Not too many were born the size of the National Federal Bank or Procter&Gamble. Almost every company we know of began as an SME. The all-powerful Microsoft began as a couple of guys in a small ...
Credit History and the Performance of Prime and Nonprime Mortgages
... responsive to decreasing interest rates due to their higher cost of debt servicing, or (iii) subprime borrowers are more likely to experience financial hardship and use homeowner equity through cash out refinancing to help smooth consumption patterns. ...
... responsive to decreasing interest rates due to their higher cost of debt servicing, or (iii) subprime borrowers are more likely to experience financial hardship and use homeowner equity through cash out refinancing to help smooth consumption patterns. ...
0000897101-15-000290 - Investor Relations
... On January 27, 2014, the Company sold its remaining security and certain microphone and receiver operations;, which marked the final milestone in the global strategic restructuring plan announced in 2013. Major Events in 2013 On June 13, 2013, the Company announced a global strategic restructuring p ...
... On January 27, 2014, the Company sold its remaining security and certain microphone and receiver operations;, which marked the final milestone in the global strategic restructuring plan announced in 2013. Major Events in 2013 On June 13, 2013, the Company announced a global strategic restructuring p ...
Mondi Group - Full Year Results Announcement 2015
... Underpinned by the Group's robust business model, centred around our high-quality, low-cost asset base, clear strategic focus and culture of continuous improvement, we remain confident of continuing to deliver an industry-leading ...
... Underpinned by the Group's robust business model, centred around our high-quality, low-cost asset base, clear strategic focus and culture of continuous improvement, we remain confident of continuing to deliver an industry-leading ...
PRESS RELEASE
... Constant Annual Default Rate (“CADR”): The CADR has been reduced to 2.5x the WARFimplied default rate or approximately 5.4% for 2010 and 2.0x the WARF-implied default rate or approximately 4.3% for 2011; the CADR has been increased to 1.5x the WARF-implied default rate or approximately 3.2% for 20 ...
... Constant Annual Default Rate (“CADR”): The CADR has been reduced to 2.5x the WARFimplied default rate or approximately 5.4% for 2010 and 2.0x the WARF-implied default rate or approximately 4.3% for 2011; the CADR has been increased to 1.5x the WARF-implied default rate or approximately 3.2% for 20 ...
What Makes a Good ʽBad Bankʼ? The Irish, Spanish and German
... fiscal accounting principles. Since the creation of the AMCs provided impaired asset relief by the state to the affected banks, their establishment also had to be approved under the European Commission’s State-aid rules. These rules were critical for the valuation of the assets transferred to the AM ...
... fiscal accounting principles. Since the creation of the AMCs provided impaired asset relief by the state to the affected banks, their establishment also had to be approved under the European Commission’s State-aid rules. These rules were critical for the valuation of the assets transferred to the AM ...
Preview
... From 2005 to 2008, net tangible assets collapsed, from $11.6 billion down to -$1.5 billion, implying that in 2008, the industry was only solvent because of its intangible assets. While net tangible assets have turned positive since, they are still far from their pre-crisis levels, and actually decre ...
... From 2005 to 2008, net tangible assets collapsed, from $11.6 billion down to -$1.5 billion, implying that in 2008, the industry was only solvent because of its intangible assets. While net tangible assets have turned positive since, they are still far from their pre-crisis levels, and actually decre ...
Credit Supply and the Housing Boom
... several channels.1 First, tranching creates highly rated assets out of pools of risky mortgages. These assets can then be purchased by those institutional investors that are restricted by regulation to only hold fixed-income securities with high ratings. As a result, the boom in securitization contr ...
... several channels.1 First, tranching creates highly rated assets out of pools of risky mortgages. These assets can then be purchased by those institutional investors that are restricted by regulation to only hold fixed-income securities with high ratings. As a result, the boom in securitization contr ...
Behind the Crash: Analysis of the Roles of Macroeconomic
... trillion and later appreciated to N12.395 trillion as at March 2008, suffered its highest fall in the 48-year history of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, depreciating by N3.223tn or 32 per cent to N6.957tn by the year end. The all-share index (indexed in 1984 at 100) which had risen to 66,371 as at Mar ...
... trillion and later appreciated to N12.395 trillion as at March 2008, suffered its highest fall in the 48-year history of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, depreciating by N3.223tn or 32 per cent to N6.957tn by the year end. The all-share index (indexed in 1984 at 100) which had risen to 66,371 as at Mar ...
Stock Price Predictability
... DeBondt and Thaler (1985) find that past high-return stocks perform poorly over the next five years, and vise versa, a form of relative predictability. They interpret reversals in long-horizon relative returns as indicating that the market over reacts to news about stock values, and then eventually ...
... DeBondt and Thaler (1985) find that past high-return stocks perform poorly over the next five years, and vise versa, a form of relative predictability. They interpret reversals in long-horizon relative returns as indicating that the market over reacts to news about stock values, and then eventually ...
Financing Growth without Banks: Korean Housing Repo Contract
... seen recently during the global financial crisis. For a developing economy, the challenges are even more serious and often results in a distorted banking sector that shuts out all but the best borrowers, and any financing provided by the banking sector comes with a hefty spread. A snapshot of the co ...
... seen recently during the global financial crisis. For a developing economy, the challenges are even more serious and often results in a distorted banking sector that shuts out all but the best borrowers, and any financing provided by the banking sector comes with a hefty spread. A snapshot of the co ...
GERMAN AMERICAN BANCORP, INC. (Form: 10-K
... merger or consolidation, purchase or otherwise) of the stock, business or properties of other banks or other companies. The earnings of commercial banks and their holding companies are affected not only by general economic conditions but also by the policies of various governmental regulatory author ...
... merger or consolidation, purchase or otherwise) of the stock, business or properties of other banks or other companies. The earnings of commercial banks and their holding companies are affected not only by general economic conditions but also by the policies of various governmental regulatory author ...
Disclaimer
... offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy the securities referred to herein. Investors should note that values of such securities, if any, may fluctuate and that each security’s price or value may rise or fall. Opinions or recommendations contained herein are in form of technical ratings an ...
... offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy the securities referred to herein. Investors should note that values of such securities, if any, may fluctuate and that each security’s price or value may rise or fall. Opinions or recommendations contained herein are in form of technical ratings an ...
PDF
... inflation adjusted amount of compensation at $18.4 billion. Current projections suggest that employee compensation will be slightly less in 2005, totaling $19.8 billion in nominal and $18.0 after adjustment for changes in price level. With farm debt expected to reach a record $213 billion by the end ...
... inflation adjusted amount of compensation at $18.4 billion. Current projections suggest that employee compensation will be slightly less in 2005, totaling $19.8 billion in nominal and $18.0 after adjustment for changes in price level. With farm debt expected to reach a record $213 billion by the end ...
Precursors of Convergence in Interwar Japan
... politics and social movements swept Japanese society, a phenomenon some Japanese historians call “Taish ô demokurashii.”1 The Taishô era was also a time when the Japanese state withdrew from its heavy-handed intervention in the economy. In part, Japanese businesses had matured to the extent that the ...
... politics and social movements swept Japanese society, a phenomenon some Japanese historians call “Taish ô demokurashii.”1 The Taishô era was also a time when the Japanese state withdrew from its heavy-handed intervention in the economy. In part, Japanese businesses had matured to the extent that the ...
Financialization
Financialization is a term sometimes used in discussions of the financial capitalism that has developed over the decades between 1980 and 2010, in which financial leverage tended to override capital (equity), and financial markets tended to dominate over the traditional industrial economy and agricultural economics.Financialization describes an economic system or process that attempts to reduce all value that is exchanged (whether tangible or intangible, future or present promises, etc.) into a financial instrument. The intent of financialization is to be able to reduce any work product or service to an exchangeable financial instrument, like currency, and thus make it easier for people to trade these financial instruments.Workers, through a financial instrument such as a mortgage, may trade their promise of future work or wages for a home. The financialization of risk sharing is what makes possible all insurance. The financialization of a government's promises (e.g., US government bonds) is what makes possible all government deficit spending. Financialization also makes economic rents possible.