释义 |
Definition of hot money in English: hot moneynoun mass nounCapital which is frequently transferred between financial institutions in an attempt to maximize interest or capital gain. 热钱,游资(经常在金融机构之间流动以图获得最大利息或资本收益的资金) hot money left US banks as interest rates fell Example sentencesExamples - Brokerages benefit when hot money fuels the stock markets.
- Another approach is to look for fund families that close funds to new investors when performance surges, lest a wave of hot money overwhelms the fund's manager and dilutes returns.
- Dunn avoids discussing capital controls but does urge nations to reduce their dependence on short-term debt, so-called hot money.
- However, in practice, as you have said, the money tends to be hot money, to move in and out quite rapidly.
- Such ghost companies, with no secretary, no phone line, no fax, just a brass plate on the front door, have until now been largely sufficient to hide hot money from the Irish tax investigator.
- At the same time, the spread of financial liberalization has exposed developing nations to the promise and perils of export strategies financed by hot money.
- Investors purchase shares on foreign stock markets or hold currency deposits at foreign banks, transferring large sums of hot money across frontiers as investor confidence or interest rates rise and fall.
- Perhaps a better remedy is for emerging markets to just avoid hot money if their financial systems can't handle it.
- This editor firmly believes that exchange controls of some kind are often if not always useful for preventing hot money from destabilizing international financial markets.
- This money, however, is hot money and can leave the country at any time.
Definition of hot money in US English: hot moneynounhät ˈmənē Capital which is frequently transferred between financial institutions in an attempt to maximize interest or capital gain. 热钱,游资(经常在金融机构之间流动以图获得最大利息或资本收益的资金) hot money left US banks as interest rates fell Example sentencesExamples - Brokerages benefit when hot money fuels the stock markets.
- Dunn avoids discussing capital controls but does urge nations to reduce their dependence on short-term debt, so-called hot money.
- Investors purchase shares on foreign stock markets or hold currency deposits at foreign banks, transferring large sums of hot money across frontiers as investor confidence or interest rates rise and fall.
- Perhaps a better remedy is for emerging markets to just avoid hot money if their financial systems can't handle it.
- Such ghost companies, with no secretary, no phone line, no fax, just a brass plate on the front door, have until now been largely sufficient to hide hot money from the Irish tax investigator.
- At the same time, the spread of financial liberalization has exposed developing nations to the promise and perils of export strategies financed by hot money.
- Another approach is to look for fund families that close funds to new investors when performance surges, lest a wave of hot money overwhelms the fund's manager and dilutes returns.
- This editor firmly believes that exchange controls of some kind are often if not always useful for preventing hot money from destabilizing international financial markets.
- However, in practice, as you have said, the money tends to be hot money, to move in and out quite rapidly.
- This money, however, is hot money and can leave the country at any time.
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