Sentences with phrase «bonds out of default»

A second debt restructuring in 2010 brought the percentage of bonds out of default to 93 %, but some creditors have still not been paid.

Not exact matches

Of course, if you hold individual bonds to maturity, you may be able to ride out price fluctuations, knowing that as long as the bond issuer doesn't default, you will get your principal back at maturity and interest payments along the way.
If there's not a single buyer that will take on both the assets and liabilities without the government assuming private default risk, Bear's assets should be put out for bid, Bear's bonds should go into default, and by the unfortunate reality of how equities work, Bear's shareholders shouldn't get $ 2 - they should get nothing.
12-10-2010 Resignation of Chairman 11-10-2010 Caledonia Mining Announces Third Quarter 2010 Results 10-21-2010 Caledonia Mining Announces the Commissioning of the No. 4 Shaft Project 08-26-2010 Caledonia Mining Announces the Completion of the Underground Installations on the No. 4 Shaft Project 08-18-2010 Caledonia Option Exercise Prices Reduction Becomes Effective 08-12-2010 Caledonia Mining 2010 Second Quarter and Half Year Results and Management Conference Call 06-14-2010 Caledonia Commissions the First Standby Generator at Blanket Gold Mine in Zimbabwe 05-14-2010 Caledonia Mining First Quarter 2010 Results 05-06-2010 Caledonia Installing a Standby Generator at Blanket Gold Mine in Zimbabwe 03-31-2010 Caledonia Mining 2009 Fourth Quarter and Annual Results and Management Conference Call 02-12-2010 Government of Zimbabwe sets out Regulations for Indigenisation 01-29-2010 Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Defaults on Bond Repayment to Caledonia Mining and update on timeline for completion of No. 4 Shaft Expansion
The surreal scene, playing out in a squat concrete building at the park on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, is the latest twist in the long - running battle between Fernandez's administration and investors that refused to settle after the country's 2001 bond default.
«The cherry on top is that China itself is now trapped: it simply can't afford to let anyone default, as one bankruptcy would cascade across the entire bond market and wipe out countless corporations leaving millions of angry Chinese workers unemployed, and is therefore forced to keep bailing out insolvent companies over and over.
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)
Although government bonds are supposed to be guaranteed because they can use tax revenue to pay out the money, there have been instances of countries like Russia defaulting on its domestic currency debt.
Instead, you start with the local currency government bond rate and subtract out the portion of that rate that you believe is due to perceived default risk:
However, as a percent of the total portfolio, okay, as you move towards retirement and you come more out of equities and maybe become more conservative and have more bonds, by default, you own less international on an absolute basis.
Bond funds have many of the same risks as individual bonds — you can lose money from interest rate changes, early redemptions, and defaults — but the risk is spread out among many different bonds and investors which is a key advantage of mutual funds.
If you sell out of high - yield bonds now because you're worried about defaults, you could miss out on potential gains if the economic growth improves or if rates stay the same.
The bubble was a combination of (a) teaser rates on option ARMs which were like financial time bombs, (b) liar loans in which the rules of good mortgage underwriting (20 % down, 28/36 ratios) went out the window, (C) people at rating agencies who decided that if one pools enough junk loans into one bond, it's magically AAA, and (D) Credit default swaps which encouraged these bad loans, and when they collapsed a number of people walked away with billions of dollars.
While MBS funds were at the heart of the subprime crisis, this product invests in liquid, stable bonds that are unlikely to default, pay out solid rates of interest, and provide valuable diversification benefits to a portfolio.
Of course, if you hold individual bonds to maturity, you may be able to ride out price fluctuations, knowing that as long as the bond issuer doesn't default, you will get your principal back at maturity and interest payments along the way.
In any event, we expect Executive Life to stay out of conservatorship and that these bonds will continue to pay interest and principal without a money default.
For example, if you purchase a bond, there is some probability that the bond issuer will default, leaving you out of luck and out of money.
And you said over and over and over again and one of the things that you know there's a study done of credit default swaps after the after the financial crisis because that was what people were you know keying in on as to how risky were bonds because well what were the credit default swaps selling out.
I am essentially lending out my $ 5000 and receiving interest payments for the term of the bond and am fully aware of default risks.
Thus being short any sort of fixed income, whether through shorting or CDS involves paying money out regularly to support the position, with the possibility of incredible payoffs if default happens within the lifetime of the bond or CDS.
If there's not a single buyer that will take on both the assets and liabilities without the government assuming private default risk, Bear's assets should be put out for bid, Bear's bonds should go into default, and by the unfortunate reality of how equities work, Bear's shareholders shouldn't get $ 2 - they should get nothing.
You could end up with a lot of nations in default, and shut out of the bond markets (the PIIGS), while the rest do seemingly fine, as they quietly bail out their banks.
Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench finds CRA entitled to priority to «earned but unpaid» contract funds held by obligee (over the surety who had paid out labour and material payment bond claims after principal's default)
The SDI works when the insurance company provides additional coverage to the general contractor against losses arising out of the default of subcontractors, replacing the performance bonds of the subcontractors.
Freddie Mac and rival Fannie Mae have been stuck with a bevy of soured mortgages, bought out of bonds they guaranteed, after a surge in defaults amid the U.S. housing crisis.
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