As the yields of many fixed - income securities
declined after the financial crisis, the interest rates paid by corporate bonds made them more appealing.
Not exact matches
At various points in the Clinton, Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations, new stock market records and historically low unemployment rates were used as a synonym for a booming economy, or
after the
financial crisis, to signal that the economy was recovering — even though many workers and households experienced stagnating or steadily
declining incomes for years or even decades.
After peaking in the mid-1990s, public debt steadily
declined, but jumped up again during the
financial crisis.
Part of that
decline has been due to difficult economic conditions
after the
financial crisis of 2008, but part of it is also due to simple demographics: The baby boomers are hitting retirement age, and young people are more likely to go to college or graduate school, meaning that fewer people will want to work.
«Some younger investors... are extremely risk averse because they have seen their parents lose their jobs, lose equity in their homes and experience stock market
declines after 9/11, Enron and the global
financial crisis,» the certified
financial planner said.
Looking back over the last 10 years, we can see that volume
declined in the first few years
after the
financial crisis, then bounced up and down until 2015.
A sharp drop and recovery marked the bottom of the stock market's
decline after the 2007 - 8
financial crisis.
Manufacturing was particularly hard hit by the 2008
financial crisis, but there was also an ongoing
decline in the 2000s, Bonvillian said in an interview
after the presentation.
But that gain came
after a steep
decline tied to the
financial crisis of 2007 - 2009 and, even as stocks recovered, included several headline - grabbing drops along the way.
To put that in perspective, global emissions
declined by just 1 percent for a single year
after the 2008
financial crisis, during a brutal recession when factories and buildings around the world were idling.
After a rare
decline in 2009 due to the
financial crisis, global emissions surged by a whopping 5.9 percent in 2010 — the largest absolute increase since the Industrial Revolution.24
The
decline began in 2005 and accelerated
after the
financial crisis.
RISMEDIA, January 19, 2010 —
After declining throughout much of 2009, American consumer confidence improved sharply in January 2010, returning to levels not seen since the
financial crisis began in September 2008, according to the most recent results of the RBC CASH (Consumer Attitudes and Spending by Household) Index.