Then there is the euro
area debt crisis, slower growth in the economy, lawsuits over foreclosure practices, and impending adjustments to capital - reserve requirements.
Not exact matches
The economy has registered one of the strongest performances in the euro
area in the last few years — after the troubles seen during the sovereign
debt crisis.
The EURO
area, and by extension the European Union, is confronting a political
crisis, a banking
crisis, a sovereign
debt crisis, and an economic growth
crisis.
During this two - year
crisis investors have continually called on the ECB and euro
area leaders to «fix» the
debt issue: by wiping out half of Greece's
debt, by protecting Italy's access to
debt markets through bond purchases, or by suggesting a levered EFSF, the euro
area's rescue vehicle.
But even if the ECB does bend to the will of the bond markets this year, and begins to buy sovereign
debt directly, the single currency is left with all of the same weaknesses that existed prior to the
crisis: the inability to tailor interest rate policy for each individual economy, the lack of foreign currency adjustment needed to offset differences in competitiveness, and growth - limiting trade dynamics throughout the
area.
Given the credit
crisis and the fragile nature of the recovery, specific opportunity, particularly in the
areas of real estate and corporate
debt, await the keen investor.
In development cooperation, an
area of «shared» competences between the EU institutions and the member states, it has remained unexplored how economic recession, the sovereign
debt crisis, austerity, the struggle in the eurozone and increasing Euroscepticism have affected the relationship between the EU and its member states.
One of the reasons this program was implemented is because the student loan
debt crisis continues to stricken
areas and many students are left with a lot of
debt and no way to really pay it off.
Despite their role in the financial
crisis, collateralized
debt obligations are still an active
area of structured finance.
Low interest rates, low growth if any in non-protected sectors, soggy
debt - laden protected sectors, excess capacity in
areas not salable to the rest of the world, high government
debt, and a demographic
crisis.
Given the credit
crisis and the fragile nature of the recovery, specific opportunity, particularly in the
areas of real estate and corporate
debt, await the keen investor.