Sentences with phrase «higher debt capacity»

As my previous 0.125 Fair Value P / S Ratio was reasonably generous, I won't increase it, but my resulting Fair Value of EUR 355.5 mio reflects a marginally higher Debt Capacity.

Not exact matches

The combination of very high levels of debt and excess manufacturing capacity can lock an economy into a self - reinforcing deflationary process in which growth stagnates and debt rises faster than debt servicing capacity.
But if investment is being misallocated, if investment levels are higher than China's ability to absorb and exploit capital stock, then it should not be surprising at all that debt capacity is becoming a problem.
The Canadian consumer, meanwhile, might be benefiting from somewhat cheaper gasoline, but their spending capacity is stretched thanks to a record high level of household debt.
Jason Taylor, vice president for advisory services at The Scion Group LLC, says «having the backing of the state university system could tip the balance among debt capacity, student demand, and operational control to make it work, but whether the arrangement successfully delivers on its ambitious goals will be heavily scrutinized by the higher education, real estate development and investment communities in the coming years.»
Lenders assign the highest scores to consumers who pose the lowest risks — that is, consumers who consistently pay their bills on time and carry small amounts of debt compared to their overall borrowing capacities.
In Chapter 7 we look at the difference between credit score and credit capacity and explain why you may want to opt for a debt relief alternative, rather than risking a high cost debt consolidation loan.
We have higher approval rates than our competitors because we value performance over credit, collateral and your debt capacity.
«To serve distressed homeowners in the highest capacity, by providing them with the utmost support, professional counseling, and financial advice, so that they may avoid foreclosure and settle their debts, in the most advantageous way possible.»
Which reflects a similar two - tier attitude to risk: In the real world, investors remain risk - averse towards the majority of companies / stocks in the developed world, which face a world beset by surplus capacity & high costs, fragile & uncertain economic growth, an intractable welfare class & an over-stretched and disillusioned middle class, and governments over-burdened by massive debt & future entitlements.
On the other hand, operating free cashflows have consistently exceeded operating profit in the past few years, so I was happy to utilize a higher 3.25 P / S ratio (plus an upwards debt adjustment to reflect inherent debt capacity — perhaps to pursue other acquisitions like Sportsbet in Australia).
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.
High debt among consumers limits growth in another way — they have less borrowing capacity and many feel less comfortable borrowing anyway.
A higher GDP offers a country additional Eurozone debt capacity, while a GDP decline places some restriction on future issuance.
As such, we build up productive capacity using debt, assuming that high compound growth will make it work, and fall into another bout of debt deflation.
You write that studies that show a higher extinction risk tend to include more complexities, like «realistic assumptions about extinction debt and dispersal capacity».
When this did not come to fruition, the industry was left with excess capacity and prices of PV products such as panels, modules and cells declined and manufacturers with high - levels of debt quickly found themselves in a struggle to survive.
However, the challenges of tight credit, limited inventory, eroding affordability, and high debt loads have limited the capacity of young people to own.»
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