Like bailing out a bank, doing so would require liquidity, capital and more accountable management.
Not exact matches
The problem isn't Deutsche
Bank in his mind, though — it's other
banks in a similar position that don't have countries
like Germany to
bail them
out.
As Paulson, Geithner and the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, raced to
bail out banks and companies
like A.I.G., Bair resisted, fearing that they were being overly generous by putting the interests of bondholders over those of taxpayers.
«The consortium of 40 +
banks (known as R3cev) which aims to do just that will inevitably develop something which: is permissioned (for users and developers
like the apple app store), privatized, has fees, will not be entirely transparent to everyone, will not be open - source, it will definitely be inflationary to accommodate monetary policy of debasement and fractional reserve schemes, it will facilitate negative interest rates, central control of accounts for suspension / freezing of funds,
bail - ins,
bail outs, capital controls and transactions will include the identity of both sender and receiver and store that information in a centralized location for the convenience of hackers.»
Since a bankrupt central
bank sounds
like a stupid idea, the government has to
bail it
out to the tune of $ 100m, which is the net loss to the fiscal authority.
And the governments don't want to have to
bail those guys
out like they had to bailout the
banks back in the first financial crisis.
Instead, it looks
like the government will
bail out the
banks.
Meanwhile, the US has seen all its investment
banks go bust, sold off or hastily turned into traditional holding
banks so they can be
bailed out by Federal Reserve, while ginormous players in the mortgage space
like Washington Mutual, Wachovia, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have effectively bitten the dust as independent companies.
sorry this is a bit of the subject does anyone know what the situation with our overall debt is at the moment and what our repayments are i was under the impression that we are at about the # 245 million mark gross debt and about # 97 net debt are the stadium repayments lower now or something is the bonds interest dropped lower inprice we were paying something
like # 20 - # 30 million in repayments but heard its down to about # 15 million per yr now i know we will have broken throught the # 300 million mark in revenue now i am guessing that contributes more to the transfer funds or if not what makes up the transfer funds in the club i.e deals or match day revenue plus cash in the
bank which stands at a high level but must be just in case we might default on a payment we need heavy cash in hand to
bail us
out this side of the club really intrigues me as it is not a much talked about subject unless you are into that type of area of work or care about the general fianacial outcome of the club does anyone have more insight into our finances would be great to hear from anyone about this matter cheers gonerwineverything (because we are)
If the
banks are being
bailed out I don't see why the government couldn't insist on something
like this.
But if the European Central
Bank significantly loosens the currency to
bail out these countries, it will create serious inflation problems in countries
like Germany and others with more skilled labor forces and reasonable deficits.
Another taxpayer
bail -
out like we had with the
banks?
What if, as James Patterson has campaigned for, they succeed in convincing the government that Amazon is being predatory, that traditional publishing is necessary, and the government starts protecting and
bailing out big publishing
like they did with the auto and
banking industry and putting sanctions on Amazon?
When Germany capitulates on how far it is willing to go to
bail out its neighbors — when there's a credible TARP -
like plan for European
banks as well as a stabilization of LIBOR rates — equities will rocket skyward.
This is not a
bail out,
like the
Banks.
Now, the Blade reports, «members of
like - minded organizations» are camped
out in Sadler's yard carrying signs saying things
like, «
Bail out people not
banks.»