An uptrend in mortgage interest rates will cause some slowing of the sales pace but we forecast 2006 to be the second highest year on record. |
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It is unlikely that with inflation on an uptrend in the current year, Government would consider any lowering of interest rates. |
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And millions live on their nerves, fearing the awful consequences any rise in interest rates could have on them and their families. |
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About 65 per cent of HDB loans are at concessionary interest rates, charging 2.6 per cent. |
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Desperate American workers are forced to rely on credit card debt at usurious interest rates to pay for basic necessities. |
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The fact remains that banks are able to charge usuriously high interest rates because the government secures their monopoly. |
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Thanks to the vagaries of interest rates, our mortgages can shoot up at will. |
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The Chancellor has overseen low interest rates, high employment and financial stability for several years, a soporific success story. |
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I was there when we moved from concessional interest rates through to market rates. |
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The interest rates on most regular savings accounts will vary depending on the levels set by the Bank of England every three months. |
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The German mortgage market is quite fragmented and interest rates vary according to the type of mortgage lender. |
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Low interest rates have helped generate a housing bubble that has lifted real estate prices to ludicrous heights in major parts of the country. |
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In spite of the existing low nominal interest rates, the real interest rates in the economy are still high, and also the credit off-take is low. |
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The direction of the markets over the coming months will largely be down to American interest rates. |
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Once again, Middle Britain is mortgaged to the hilt, spurred by the lowest interest rates in 38 years. |
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Some analysts have speculated that the ECB could cut interest rates soon to ward off damage to confidence and growth from tumbling share prices. |
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Yet, inexplicably, Treasury officials decided at that time of record-high interest rates to make 30-year bonds noncallable. |
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The usual tool is to cut interest rates which usually serves as a disincentive to saving and encourages people to borrow. |
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That growth was fuelled by number of factors, not least the bullish market, a strong economy and low interest rates on deposit accounts. |
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And a sharp spike in interest rates would hurt some homeowners who have just got their foot on the housing ladder. |
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If oil prices spike upwards and inflation rises, interest rates will go up too. |
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With interest rates so low, I immediately consolidated my student loan debt. |
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The economy is vulnerable to a rise in the euro exchange rate or in interest rates. |
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Housing loans, car loans and education loans would also be sanctioned at huge concessions in interest rates and hassle-free documentation. |
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On Monday the Japanese central bank adopted a policy of zero interest rates to help revive the economy. |
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Fixed or variable interest rates are applied, with payments spread over 24 to 48 months. |
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Worries about default are also driving up interest rates on Brazil's foreign debt. |
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He was a specialist all his life in the theory of money and interest rates. |
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If he had, he might think twice about clamping down on the economy by repeatedly raising interest rates. |
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The Federal Reserve is raising interest rates and appears ready to continue to do so for some time. |
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Of course, governments can print money and cut interest rates in an attempt to avert deflation. |
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Coupled with this is the fact that falling interest rates mean lower repayments for those buying into the market. |
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This lowered interest rates and transferred capital from public to private use. |
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Central banks also manage liquidity in order to smooth out volatility in the money market interest rates. |
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Debt charities are warning consumers to think hard about how to manage their debts as interest rates rise. |
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With low interest rates, profit margins on retail deposits have been sharply squeezed. |
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That includes not only tax rebates and lower interest rates but lower energy prices as well. |
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One way to dampen flows of borrowed money is to raise interest rates, which the central bank has tried. |
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For savers who are prepared to give notice before taking out their money, interest rates payable are generally higher. |
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No change to interest rates means no major drama to concern ourselves with. |
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When costs such as bank interest rates and conacre are taken into account, many of these farmers will be left in the red with the banks. |
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Millions of Americans have also followed the example of their British cousins, remortgaging to take advantage of record low interest rates. |
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Yet rising U.S. interest rates and a still-strong dollar must be factored into that equation. |
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The firm expects interest rates to remain unchanged at least in the first half. |
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Consumer spending remains depressed, he added, thanks to Bundesbank obdurateness about interest rates. |
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Similarly, to reduce inflationary pressures, the Bank of Canada also increased short-term interest rates. |
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Just as interest rates change from time to time so, too, does the benchmark rate against which we stress test. |
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It remains likely that US interest rates will rise again later in the year since the risks lie firmly on the side of higher inflation. |
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In his essay, he demonstrated the ineffectiveness of interest rates in controlling business cycles. |
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A fall in capital expenditure in the aftermath of an investment boom is generally not averted by cuts in interest rates. |
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All this upward pressure in demand offsets to a large degree the downward pull of rising interest rates in the national real estate market. |
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So 2004 and 2005 are much better years as global recovery eventually transpires and the impact of lower interest rates feeds through. |
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With interest rates at a 50-year low, even sticker shock is not enough to deter buyers from snapping up homes. |
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This isn't surprising as low interest rates are proving an inadequate stimulant to get European economies moving again. |
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Normally a central bank will lower interest rates to increase liquidity and to stimulate economic activity. |
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Moves in interest rates are always stimulated by the cost of housing in the south east. |
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Instead, the Fed pursued its own stimulative policy, pushing interest rates to the lowest level in a generation. |
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In the current climate we have low interest rates and budgets that have been broadly stimulative. |
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As interest rates move higher, I would prefer to be in stocks rather than bonds. |
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Everyone is on pins and needles, waiting for the Federal Reserve to announce its decision on interest rates within the hour. |
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He says because of the interest rates, he is no longer committed to the Stokvel group he belongs to. |
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As the Fed has moved to boost short-term interest rates, long-term interest rates have stayed unexpectedly low. |
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The commonplace pessimistic argument points out that since low interest rates have been good for the economy, higher interest rates will be bad. |
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So that makes Costello's seeming change of heart on interest rates all the more damning. |
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Yet at the same time, domestic demand is coming off the boil, after being heated up by steep tax cuts and super-low interest rates. |
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Indeed, a strong case could be made that interest rates are categorically destabilizing. |
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The main regulatory constraint in the post-war period was the ceiling on interest rates. |
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Higher interest rates may be on the horizon, but are not expected to arrive speedily in the wake of the Budget. |
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Conversely, in times of rising interest rates, cyclical stocks fare poorly. |
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If the economy improves, inflation accelerates and interest rates rise, your Savings Bond rates will go up, too. |
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The money market earns higher interest rates than their savings bank and credit union accounts. |
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Third, lowering interest rates will help desynchronize the local economy from the US business cycle. |
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Higher interest rates, and the threat of further rises, have had a depressing effect on the market. |
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While it might be tempting to leave money on deposit in the hope that interest rates will pick up there is a real problem with that strategy. |
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However, in lean years, when interest rates are high, their profits can quickly collapse as provisions for bad debts hurt their bottom lines. |
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He said that intervention would include measures to raise the interest rates of central bank SBI promissory notes. |
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If the economy improves towards the end of this year, as expected, interest rates will start to rise. |
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In an economy with a deflationary bias, interest rates may stay low for years to come. |
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Perhaps what is more important is the effect that any change in interest rates might have. |
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As the government borrows more to pay for its deficit spending, interest rates rise, and that hurts our entrepreneurial cause. |
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The Bank of England has raised interest rates four times since last November. |
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The European Union controls budget deficits, exchange rates and interest rates. |
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The increase comes amidst reports that all banks are set to raise interest rates after years of offering cheap credit. |
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Last week, both the United States Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank raised interest rates. |
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Of course, the market is not immune to the domestic economy and its recent rally is partly explained by a brighter outlook for interest rates. |
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A hike in interest rates could have an adverse effect on house prices and in terms of consumer wealth. |
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You are able to receive special interest rates that have consistently ranked among the highest in the nation. |
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The combination of a steep drop in interest rates and the rapid rise in household debt has fuelled a surge in lending. |
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Therefore, even with low interest rates, a rapid recovery is hard to imagine. |
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With the rapid fall in interest rates the desire to purchase an annuity diminished. |
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And as the price climbed, it has had two key effects, not dissimilar to a rapid rise in interest rates. |
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The Fed's Open Market Committee expected to once again ratchet up interest rates by a quarter point when it meets on Tuesday. |
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Interest rates on credit cards tend to respond to moves in short-term interest rates, which means they are rising. |
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And, in fact, since the early 1990s interest rates have fallen and loan maturities have lengthened on average. |
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But today's low interest rates have prevented some policies from earning enough to automatically pay those premiums. |
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An annuity guarantees a fixed income for life but is dependent on interest rates at the time of retirement. |
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Poole isn't the only Fed official who sees a link between productivity and interest rates. |
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Just how will bond markets and stock markets react to the anticipated rise in US interest rates? |
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The behaviour of consumer spending over the coming months now holds the key to interest rates. |
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If there is another agency which is lending money at better interest rates and with better conditions, I am ready to shift. |
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Although these models imply the possibility of negative interest rates, the chance is very low with well chosen parameters. |
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And it was the economic rebound that attracted them, not just lower interest rates, she added. |
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The negative relationship in the models they review arises from procyclical movements in real interest rates and in inflation. |
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Mr Ellis said that with little prospect of a substantial rise in interest rates, house prices were expected to continue increasing. |
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There have been too many false dawns so a cut in interest rates would be a timely and wise move. |
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But within that period, the price of a gilt may move up and down depending on what else is happening to interest rates. |
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There will be no knee-jerk cut in interest rates when the Bank's monetary policy committee meets next month. |
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Higher interest rates could cool the red-hot housing market in some parts of the world, Rajan said. |
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As the federal red ink runs and interest rates rise, debt is squeezing average Americans harder than ever. |
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Already we are seeing downward pressure on both the US dollar and local currency interest rates across the Middle East. |
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One thing to note, however, is that it is a good idea for companies to refinance their debt to lower their interest rates. |
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And financial markets remain calm, confounding worrywarts who prophesied turmoil once the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates. |
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Governments have saved billions by refinancing the national debt at lower interest rates. |
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There was also a benefit for many banks from fees which arose when borrowers refinanced their mortgages because of lower interest rates. |
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Institutions are rejecting warnings that house prices could collapse because low interest rates are likely to be held far into next year. |
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A common myth about wraparound mortgages is that you have to pay high interest rates to the financier. |
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The second is that borrowers have geared up on the expectation that interest rates will stay low for long. |
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Usual Inland Revenue practice is to refund overpaid tax, plus a repayment supplement at simple interest rates for the last six tax years. |
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The past five years have been a perfect storm of low interest rates, easy credit, and rising household costs. |
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The Japanese, having borrowed the yen at zero interest rates, will then convert the yen into dollars, deutschemarks, and so forth. |
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Since the start of 2005 most banks have started offering preferential interest rates. |
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Have your investments languished because of low interest rates and a lethargic stock market? |
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At the same time, banks are continuing to strive to attract clients through lower interest rates and other preferential offers. |
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Customers are also often attracted to such accounts by the promise of preferential interest rates. |
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The markets are poor predictors of either interest rates or exchange policy. |
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In the short run, it is made to appear sustainable in some degree by inflation, which causes a country to amortize its debts via interest rates. |
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Even with market interest rates at zero, few in Japan want to borrow or invest. |
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The Federal Reserve can cut short-term interest rates down to zero, but that won't make consumers feel safer about flying. |
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The threat of rising interest rates in the coming months may put a damper on further consumer spending. |
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The new vehicle leasing market is heating up as leasers offer more options and new car sales decline due to rising interest rates. |
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Monetary expansion also undermines the pool of funding as a result of the consequent decline in interest rates. |
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Companies invest when interest rates are low and capital is easy to raise, and then retrench savagely as rates rise. |
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He adopted the Lib Dem policy of an independent Bank of England to set interest rates. |
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The other dampener would be an increase in interest rates, but the Bank of England has shown no signs it wants to raise them. |
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If it weren't for scant inflation and low interest rates, corporate America would have steered right into the middle of a perfect storm. |
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But higher interest rates and the abolition of mortgage interest tax relief in April could dampen demand and reduce house price inflation. |
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A positive appraisal would confirm the view that interest rates have indeed finally turned and that the deflation threat is over. |
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They feel that though interest rates should ease, banks may not be in a position to slash their lending rates. |
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Any potential rockiness ahead may dissuade the Reserve Bank from raising interest rates again, at least before the end of the year. |
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In the long term we should never again have currency crisis interest rates, nor liquidity shortages of any manifest kind. |
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The report came amid improving macroeconomic indicators as inflation has eased, interest rates are down and the rupiah has strengthened. |
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The bully pulpit can be grabbed if he combines cutting tax rates with lowering interest rates and easing up on Fed monetary policy. |
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As interest rates have begun to rise, the real estate market nears the top of the roller coaster ride. |
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Managed financial systems allowed capital accumulation to be financed by bank loans at low interest rates, regulated by the monetary authorities. |
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For example, some provide tighter limits on interest rate adjustments, cushioning the impact of a spike in interest rates. |
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This week, the Reserve Bank increased interest rates a quarter of a percentage point, to five per cent. |
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If a depositor misses just one payment they can suffer severe penalties especially in an environment where interest rates are falling. |
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The world is awash with money as everyone looks to make a decent return at a time of low interest rates and low inflation. |
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Such a return, given low interest rates, contributed to a sharp increase in his deferred savings in recent years. |
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So when the 1980s came along, there is a sharp decline in commodity prices and a sharp increase in real interest rates. |
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Ten years ago, interest rates ruled very high and therefore it did not require any great financial acumen for investing. |
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The rise in interest rates in the first week of March was the second in four months and brought loud protests from politicians. |
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Banks have been given the freedom of formulating their own policy for charging penal interest rates with the approval of their boards. |
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Alternatively, during the 1980s the Japanese authorities kept interest rates artificially low to help bolster a sluggish world economy. |
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These changes have led to a gradual appreciation of the rupiah and allowed Bank Indonesia to begin lowering interest rates. |
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When countries like Korea moved to lower their interest rates their currencies appreciated. |
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Under flexible rates, central banks need not use interest rates to preserve an exchange-rate peg. |
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Losses came in derivatives, which are the complex financial instruments that Freddie Mac uses to hedge against swings in interest rates. |
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Second, despite past Fed tightening, corporate interest rates are still attractive enough so as not to crimp borrowing. |
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Even after the recent rate hikes, real interest rates remain below average compared with consumer price inflation. |
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Given today's exceptionally low long-term interest rates, the annual cost would be, well, peanuts. |
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We are also seeing interest rates creeping up in an effort to stem the flow of borrowing that puts an extra burden on the shoulders of us all. |
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There is no way we want to see interest rates creeping up before the end of the year. |
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In recent weeks, interest rates offered on fixed-rate mortgages have started to creep up. |
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Tighter money and higher interest rates will not be needed for much longer, they tattled. |
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Tokyo hopes that its low interest rates make it less attractive to save money, and easier to borrow money for spending. |
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With interest rates as low as they are, we're having a hard time trying to make any money on our savings at present. |
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These savings accounts lock up money for a few weeks to several years and pay interest rates based on maturity dates and market demand. |
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The interest rates on these forms of credit are lower than the average credit card and they're tax-deductible. |
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Economists now believe interest rates could peak at 5.5 per cent or rise even sharper if the housing market and borrowing fail to slow. |
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If interest rates were to creep up a few percentage points half the country would be facing financial ruin. |
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As in the US, there is a sense that the central bank's room for manoeuvre on interest rates is narrowing. |
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In such circumstances, there would be some room for manoeuvre on interest rates. |
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It could reduce interest rates to the rate of inflation, and stop trying to screw a profit out of borrowers. |
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The interest rates are sky-high, and if you lose control just a couple of times you're pretty much screwed. |
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It also included the interest rates on the bank loans that the winner would take. |
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The price depends on several factors including prevailing interest rates and credit ratings. |
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Instead of selling loans with fixed interest rates, they offer tailored rates based on your credit rating. |
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There are so many variables, for example interest rates have an effect on demand. |
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Banks recognize that in a recession, lower interest rates may be necessary to spur growth and prevent bankruptcies. |
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British interest rates are likely to peak at 5.25 per cent in 2005, up from the current 4.25 per cent. |
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If managers anticipate rising interest rates, they generally shorten the average maturity of the bonds in their funds. |
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But with interest rates low and rents on the rise, it seems nearly everyone in town is hustling to buy a home. |
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Higher interest rates can hurt stocks because they raise the cost of borrowing to expand businesses and cut into corporate profits. |
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Any tick up in interest rates spells relief for income-starved investors who have their nest eggs locked up in certificates of deposit. |
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Deficit budgeting has led to higher interest rates, hurting homebuyers and small businesses. |
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The spectre of higher mainland interest rates was the key reason for the selldown, said Merrill Lynch strategist Spencer White in a report. |
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Of course, there's always a risk the markets will overdo it and push long-term interest rates too high, hurting the economy in the process. |
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Would he allow the Fed to be told how to adjust interest rates by a bumbling Dutchman? |
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In turn, the organization will negotiate on your behalf for lower interest rates and a more convenient payment option. |
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It is a boom fuelled by constraints on planning consents for housebuilders plus relatively low interest rates for mortgage borrowers. |
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The price they fetch varies depending on how attractive their coupon looks compared with prevailing interest rates. |
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Yet, irrespective of who is at the helm, in my opinion, we need another cut in interest rates. |
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Low inflation, low interest rates and sustainable economic growth are the main ingredients that allow banks to make heaps of money. |
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For those with debts they can no longer afford, the long run of low interest rates may yet prove a poisoned chalice. |
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Governments that think low interest rates are always electorally rewarding are riding for a fall. |
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The market for convertible bonds in particular has picked up steam as companies rush to raise funds while global interest rates remain low. |
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And lower interest rates and fears of a bond market bubble have made fixed-income securities less attractive to some investors. |
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The Fed must be careful in raising interest rates for the very simple reason that by moving too quickly, it can choke off growth. |
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That, in turn, could mean still-higher interest rates, which could choke off growth. |
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I was simply transferring all the available funds to Beirut to take advantage of the interest rates there. |
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One way to access higher interest rates is to tie up money in a fixed-rate account for between one and five years. |
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West Germany was running a huge current account surplus, interest rates were low and the economy was booming. |
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The fixed-income markets, interest rates and monetary policy are touched on lightly, if at all. |
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The rates are tied to interest rates for short-term Treasury bills at the last auction in May, which was held Monday. |
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Federal student loan rates are tied to interest rates for short-term Treasury bills set at the last auction in May. |
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As a developing nation, Brazil has adopted punitive interest rates to stay afloat in the midst of economic shocks. |
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Watch for government spending to rise rapidly while the surplus disappears and interest rates fall. |
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In the early 1980s, interest rates were still very high by current day standards and contangos were simply too large to forgo. |
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The Halifax suggests that low interest rates and strong consumer confidence is behind the latest surge in prices. |
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Everyone is hoping interest rates remain low and that the young hopefuls still come to the city with their outsize hopes. |
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As the economy slows to very modest levels of growth, cutting interest rates is a prime mechanism for boosting economic output. |
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The fall in interest rates has masked evidence that lenders are continuing to surcharge borrowers in the Republic. |
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What if interest rates were to suddenly rise sharply or prices in the capital were to take a tumble? |
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It is probably best described as the exercising of monetary policy, but not via low interest rates. |
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The rise in interest rates would worsen the economic slowdown requiring more potent measures to halt it. |
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Families are also paying very high interest rates to legal moneylenders who are operating outside of the mainstream financial system. |
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Private moneylenders charge exorbitant interest rates of 30 to 50 percent for a 5-6 month growing season. |
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Here we have masses of lower income people transferring their meager wealth via outrageous interest rates to unscrupulous moneylenders. |
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The record inflation sparked off speculation on a possible spike in interest rates. |
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Higher taxes and surging interest rates in the 1990s limited the growth of the industry and drove some galleries out of business. |
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Rates on bank CDs and money market mutual funds, which follow short-term interest rates, fell, too. |
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At the same time, higher interest rates are casting a shadow over the housing market. |
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They raise interest rates and tighten the money supply to combat inflation. |
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He blamed the situation on a downturn in retailing nationally, rising interest rates and the town's new traffic system. |
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What is it that the fourth increase in interest rates is likely to achieve where the previous three have so signally failed? |
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So other than the lower interest rates, why are we clamouring to buy what we shunned just a few moons ago? |
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The explosive growth in the volatility of interest rates and prices is finally over. |
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Inflation can be contained in the short run by high interest rates or an appreciating exchange rate. |
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Now she is worried about her mortgage, which will soon have to be renewed, as doubts grow over the direction of interest rates. |
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He recognises interest rates and their effect on the mortgage belt as the lynchpin to his political survival. |
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It is not just Sydney mortgage belts that would suffer if interest rates were to rise under a spend-to-please Labor administration. |
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The danger is that long-term US interest rates will not simply rise, but spike uncontrollably higher. |
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Without these emergency-level interest rates, servicing this additional boatload of debt is no longer possible for ordinary consumers. |
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Men usually contact other men, who then contract someone engaged in other underground activities and who may lend money at weekly interest rates. |
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In finance news, interest rates aren't likely to rise before the end of the year, according to ANZ bank's chief economist. |
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Both are key inflation readings which bode well for interest rates and the economy. |
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Nor have lower interest rates spurred corporations to invest in new projects. |
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It is hoped that the bank will cut its interest rates to spur growth when its council next meets on Thursday. |
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The corporation also referred to high interest rates and gas prices, as well as an oversupply of used trucks, as sources of declining sales. |
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Lending will expand at a faster rate because the lower interest rates are eating into banks' revenues from government bonds. |
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The fear was that higher interest rates will eat into corporate earnings, slash investment spending and lead to job losses. |
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The government might issue new bonds to encourage a rise in interest rates in the bond market. |
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Your money could be tied up in low-yielding, long-term bonds when interest rates rise. |
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Laborers are bonded to the owners through a system of advanced payments whose interest rates are so high that workers can never repay them fully. |
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Loans raised to assist in the cleanup operations are expected to incur low interest rates with repayment deferred by perhaps 30 years. |
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The report said interest rates on currency assets remained uninvitingly low while domestic wage growth was strong. |
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Usury was at first unlawful, although later specific controls were placed on interest rates. |
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The three-year recession and the constant lowering of interest rates to fight it are raising hob with pension funds. |
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If as expected interest rates stay stable over the next couple of years there will be an inevitable slowdown in the housing market. |
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It was only a few weeks ago that there was a broad consensus that UK interest rates were on the way up. |
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They do not foresee the triggers for a crash, namely a sharp rise in interest rates or a dive into recession. |
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The recovery in the Nasdaq is more a reaction to the market being oversold and cuts in US short-term interest rates. |
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Another reason for the disparity of interest rates is a lack of corporate borrowing. |
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In Britain, interest rates this summer hit their lowest level for 50 years. |
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Labor is set to intensify attacks on housing affordability if interest rates go up on Wednesday. |
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We continue to believe that interest rates will head higher as a desperately overheated economy fuels unprecedented borrowing demands. |
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The huge savings on the national debt are a result of the sharp fall in interest rates in Europe and worldwide. |
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Card companies have been cutting interest rates to attract new business as competition intensifies. |
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Are interest rates in financial markets and the real economy distinct phenomena? |
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Or it may be that lower interest rates could make it sensible for you to unshackle yourself from the terms of your current mortgage. |
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So what is the cause of the low interest rates responsible for the current unsustainable situation? |
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With still negative real short-term interest rates in the US and parts of the eurozone, there will be a lot of money around for a while yet. |
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Many financial institutions are now insulated against higher interest rates. |
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Obviously this cannot work, for no one would lend in return for negative interest rates. |
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Japan needs a deliberate inflation and negative real interest rates in order to reduce its excessive total debt and allow for recovery. |
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A donkey can avoid bad debts in a climate of strong economic growth, and negative real interest rates. |
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Sometimes there is enough accompanying inflation to create negative real interest rates and erode the real value of debt. |
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The target federal funds rate has now been below two percent, and real interest rates have been negative for nearly two years. |
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She also wants a 90-day freeze on subprime foreclosures and a five-year freeze on subprime interest rates. |
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Revenue officials have confirmed that they take no part whatsoever in the setting of interest rates offered by financial institutions. |
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These types of mortgages give the borrower the security of knowing their repayment will not change, but there is also a gamble because you are taking a punt on interest rates. |
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The decision to keep interest rates unchanged looks like a good call. |
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The biggest concern for voters was the future of interest rates. |
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The stock market has been buoyant, and interest rates have been rising in part because of expectations of higher economic growth. |
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Easy money and lower interest rates won't provide a quick fix. |
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As long as our economic cycle is wedded to that of the US, EMU will mean that our interest rates will be low when they should be high and high when they should be low. |
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Low long-term interest rates keep the recovery jogging along. |
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While the cut in interest rates should alleviate some of the most acute pressures facing the economy, the UK economic climate has worsened and we are facing new dangers. |
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Any cut in interest rates next month, which is looking increasingly likely, will be too late to stimulate an end-of-year lift in consumer spending. |
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In fact, they often bear lower interest rates than comparable non-green bonds, meaning they are a better credit risk. |
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Bond traders have been the new rainmakers on Wall Street, thanks to low interest rates, few defaults, and a rise in the number of aggressive fixed-income hedge funds. |
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It is the fourth time the Bank has raised interest rates since November. |
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Some private economists believe the central bank should become more aggressive in raising interest rates, which haven't kept up with the recent acceleration in prices. |
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However, there's no reason to suspect that long-term interest rates will continue to fall, meaning that bond investors will no longer get that extra kicker in their returns. |
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The country was gripped by recession and interest rates were soaring. |
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As for now there is no knowing for sure which way our high interest rates, hurtful as they are, will go especially if Government does reduce its borrowing. |
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The Japanese government has repeatedly tried to reflate the economy, with special packages and cuts in interest rates, but so far to little effect. |
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On the one hand, lower interest rates at all maturities along the yield curve would increase the present value of future cash flows, increasing the incentive to invest. |
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These reforms were intended to free the common man to pursue business opportunities without the oppressive yoke of high interest rates or excessive rents. |
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In return, certain other mortgages were renegotiated with more favourable terms for the defendants by reducing interest rates, adjusting maturity dates and the like. |
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Smith said the rise in interest rates is likely to increase the popularity of residential investment properties which offer guaranteed rents to landlords. |
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Over the last two years the bank rates have been cut sizeably, as the inflation rates were low and the bank rates were pruned to match with the real interest rates. |
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Despite stock market woes, people are still buying housing lickety-split, fueled by piles of equity in their current properties and rock-bottom mortgage interest rates. |
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But today, lenders can adjust the interest rates they charge borrowers according to the riskiness of the loan, so that they can make a profit by lending in the inner city. |
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One of the few opportunities provided by the current down economy has been rock-bottom interest rates, a factor that influenced Loomis' console investment. |
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An increase in Chinese interest rates will attract more hot money in search of arbitrage profits, and that would increase the domestic money supply. |
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It's a worldwide market, and in a sense it's a market in which interest rates in various different localities and for various different instruments are all arbitraged. |
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If you are constantly in overdraft territory, you should re-package it into a personal loan and obtain interest rates that can be up to almost three times cheaper. |
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Because of the rocketing cost of buying a house, many people are saddled with mortgages they can barely afford even at the record low interest rates of recent years. |
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