Sentences with phrase «nonfinancial corporate»

About half of the assets of nonfinancial corporate businesses are financial assets (stocks, bonds, etc).
Nonfinancial corporate debt as a percentage of GDP had climbed to 45.3 % ($ 731B) by the end of 2017, a return to the peak levels of 2009 - the height of the financial crisis.
«Nonfinancial corporate credit is at the nexus of the excesses in this cycle, unlike 2007 2008, which centered on the US housing sector and banking system,» writes Matthew Mish, senior credit analyst for UBS Investment Bank, in his 2016 forecast.
The chart below shows the ratio of market capitalization to national nonfinancial corporate gross value added (which includes estimated foreign revenue of U.S. companies).

Not exact matches

«Many nonfinancial firms do have the balance sheet capacity to expand investment, and reductions in corporate tax burdens could have a positive impact on their cash flow,» the IMF writes.
The chart below shows the ratio of nonfinancial market capitalization to corporate gross value added, including estimated foreign revenues (MarketCap / GVA).
These measures include the S&P 500 price / revenue ratio, the Margin - Adjusted CAPE (our more reliable variant of Robert Shiller's cyclically - adjusted P / E), and MarketCap / GVA — the ratio of nonfinancial market capitalization to corporate gross value - added, including estimated foreign revenues — which is easily the most reliable valuation measure we've ever created or tested, among scores of alternatives.
Among these, the ratio of nonfinancial market capitalization to corporate gross value - added has the strongest correlation (about -93 %) with subsequent 12 - year S&P 500 total returns.
As a reminder of where the market stands at the moment, the chart below shows the ratio of nonfinancial market capitalization to corporate gross value added.
The $ 1.8 trillion in liquid assets — the line item most people are referring to when they talk about «corporate cash» — accounted for 5.4 % of all assets held by nonfinancial corporations in the second quarter, down from 6 % in 2009 and pretty much flat for the past two years.
Given the introduction of several new ECB policies yesterday (expanded QE; purchases of nonfinancial, investment grade corporate debt; new refinancing programs; incentives to reduce the impact of negative interest rates on banks and spur lending) we think the outlook for European credit and equities is quite constructive.
The chart below shows the ratio of nonfinancial market capitalization to corporate gross value - added, including estimated foreign revenues.
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