Sentences with phrase «very specific asset»

Not exact matches

«We were looking for very specific types of assets and drilling deals to make the risk - return work for us,» David Albert, co-head of Carlyle's Energy Mezzanine Opportunities funds, said in an interview.
My point was and is that the equity risk premium is bundled up closely with the nature of the security itself (i.e., being a publicly traded, relatively liquid investment asset called an equity, that has a very specific bundle of rights and risks attached to it), which has very different characteristics than the many other financial assets available in the economy (many of which have bundles of risk that are perceived as «riskier», and many of which are perceived as «less risky»).
With a modern history of domestic scientific achievement dating back to the end of World War II, France has capitalized on its scientific assets with the adoption, in 2009, of a National Research and Innovation Strategy with a very specific and worthwhile goal: «To put back research and innovation at the heart of French society and economy.»
I'm going to have at least five years of fixed income sources or maybe seven years or 10 years,» really depending on the person, and what their overall asset base looks like and so on and so forth it's very specific to that individual.
To ensure that your personal assets are protected from your business debt, consult an attorney about this very specific issues.
If you want to be headed in the right direction, you'll be very specific about what you're going to do to grow your assets and shrink your debt.
Asset classes can be defined on a very general level, such as stocks or on a more specific level, such as American silver producing companies.
But they are confined to some very specific products: namely leveraged ETFs, which magnify the possibility of gains and losses, and synthetic ETFs, which use derivatives rather than holding assets directly.
Asset classes can be defined on a very general level, such as stocks or on a more specific level, such as oil companies.
For narrow ETF categories, or even country - specific products that have relatively small amounts of assets and are thinly traded, ETF liquidity could dry up in severe market conditions, so you may wish to steer clear of ETFs that track thinly traded markets or have very few underlying securities or small market caps in the respective index.
The investment focus of a mutual fund can be very narrow (a specific sector or country focus) or quite broad (diversified across the major asset classes).
There are alternative assets, reverse ETFs, etc which can fulfill a specific short term defensive role in your portfolio, but which can be very dangerous and are especially poor as a long term solution; while some people claim to use them for effective results, I haven't seen anything verifiable.
In other words, your experience will be very consistent with that of any other diversified investor with the same asset allocation, no matter which specific investments they choose.
The ideal reference will be able to speak in a very specific way about your assets and back up her assertions with examples from your work.
This could be very general, and could just be an explanation of simple community property concepts, or it could be more specific depending on the type of asset or debt involved.
I would get with a broker because each wholesale lender has very specific guidelines regarding seasoning, cash out, first time investor ltv, prepayment penalties, asset verification and rate buy downs.
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