Not exact matches
So Europeans and Asians see U.S. companies pumping more and more dollars into their economies, not only to
buy their exports in excess of providing them with goods and services in return, and not only to
buy their companies and commanding heights of privatized
public enterprises without giving them reciprocal rights to
buy important U.S. companies (remember the U.S. turn - down of Chinas attempt to
buy into the U.S. oil distribution business), and not only to
buy foreign stocks,
bonds and real estate.
Students in every mainstream macroeconomics class, and that means almost all students, would have predicted, based on the nonsense they were learning, that the high deficits and high
public debt ratios in Japan at the time, should have driven interest rates sky high, that
bond markets should have stopped
buying government
bonds, that the government should have run out of money, and all the time that these disasters were unfolding, that inflation should have been be galloping towards hyperinflation.
It will
buy $ 600 billion worth of US long - term
bonds in the open market, close to 7 % of all Treasury securities in
public hands, or about the amount the debt that the federal government will issue over that time period.
We have government debt, corporate debt, and a much larger Fed balance sheet (which, some people argue, drove
bond buying by the
public), but those are offset by a significant deleveraging in household and financial sector debt.
European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi announced the launch of an open - ended, expanded monthly 60 billion euro ($ 70 billion) private and
public bond -
buying program on Thursday.
Such
bonds function as an alternative to direct
public financing of housing projects: Since interest income on PABs is tax exempt, investors are willing to
buy them at very low interest rates, and this makes it relatively affordable for states, municipalities, and nonprofits to finance housing (and hospitals, infrastructure, and other
public works) through the private capital market.
There are some retail
public bond issuance by certain NBFC's which are other options to
buy bonds.
You can
buy corporate
bonds through a
public offer (the primary market) or through a securities exchange (the secondary market).
A company that makes a
public offer will issue a prospectus and investors apply directly to
buy bonds.
Most retail investors
buy corporate
bonds through a
public offer.
Leveraged buyouts (LBOs) create a special type of company that typically uses high - yield
bonds to
buy a
public corporation from its shareholders, often for the benefit of a private investment group that may include senior managers.
-- CREDO calls State Dept's EIS on Keystone XL «coward's logic» in statement: «The State Department's environmental assessment is a vehicle for the White House to test the waters to see if the
public will
buy its false and cynical argument that the Canadian Tar Sands are going to get burned anyway, and so the government's chief climate scientist's assertion that Keystone XL will spell «game over» for the climate may be true but is essentially irrelevant,» said Becky
Bond, political director at CREDO.
Usually, after an initial
public offering, stock brokers and traders
buy and sell shares of stock,
bonds and other securities listed on stock exchanges which have a centralized data system — mostly a central location for record keeping though trading is not restricted to a physical place.