No longer will we impose our will on poor countries through massive subsidised loans or tied aid payments. |
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Several members of Parliament owe the FRA millions of kwacha in unpaid fertiliser and seed loans. |
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Around 56 per cent of the loans are to buy-to-let customers, with 38 per cent self-certified and the remainder standard mortgages. |
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And now there are actual financial incentives for servicers of loans to do more modifications. |
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It also included the interest rates on the bank loans that the winner would take. |
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His unorthodox government has not helped to attract investors, and foreign banks lowered corporate credit ratings for new loans. |
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I have substantial loans, apart from my home loan, a large chunk of which is credit card debt. |
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Just as banks are working to write off mountains of bad loans, they're also moving to mark-to-market accounting techniques. |
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When mortgage rates were at rock bottom in the 1990s, many homeowners took out home equity loans and lines of credit to consolidate their debts. |
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Superior Bank, an Illinois thrift, failed this summer because of its exposure to subprime loans. |
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Not all students will be able to start repaying loans immediately, which is where Ulster Bank and AIB are more competitive. |
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Other institutions arbitrage returns on bonds or loans with relatively high yields through securitizations. |
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Speculation abounds that the bank was secretly doing their part to help pay back those student loans. |
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Almost half the time, rejection or delay of loans is due to insufficient documentation. |
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In spite of this, incidences of fraud are still emerging in all business areas, including bills, bank acceptance, deposits and loans. |
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Many of the individuals who took out loans defaulted on them or quit their projects. |
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Many service members have purchased homes or used real property to secure loans before they enlisted or came on active duty. |
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This sauce, usually made with herbs and peppercorns, isn't spicy but loans a piquant, peppery flavour to the tender morsels of chicken. |
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These awards are interest-free loans, repayable over periods that vary from five to 12 years, depending on the size of loan. |
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Members of both sexes are getting heavily into debt to pay for operations on credit cards or through bank loans. |
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In consequence many bank and finance house loans secured by land mortgages are exempt from the controls of the Act. |
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But PPR could probably get loans to buy out the remaining shareholders and then raise new cash by relisting Gucci. |
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Their results support the argument that the supply of loans to real estate is not perfectly elastic. |
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Borrowers with fixed-rate loans will see no change to their monthly repayments. |
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He has even taken advances on his salary, and loans just to make ends meet. |
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Certain debts such as back taxes, student loans, alimony, and child support cannot be discharged. |
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It sells its own credit cards, home mortgages, consumer loans, and insurance policies. |
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Day after day, my wife and I receive unsolicited offers for credit cards, home equity loans and cash advances. |
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The report only considers further advances on existing mortgages taken out to release equity and secured personal loans. |
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What is more, consolidation loans are usually secured on property while credit cards are unsecured debt. |
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He asked why students were moaning and whingeing about the loans, and said they should just forget about them. |
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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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The loans, which amount to trillions of yen, are seen as a key hurdle to economic revival. |
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Most French mortgages are capital and interest or interest-only repayment loans. |
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Next, force people to repay usurious loans to credit card companies that make gazillions off the fine print. |
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Around seven out of ten personal loans are paid off early, so watch out for loans that include hefty fines for early settlement. |
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If heavily leveraged firms can't service their loans or borrow new money, that could bring China's growth to an abrupt halt. |
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What's so attractive about diversifying from the insurance business and branching out into personal loans? |
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Those loans will often be secured against the value of the property on which the advances are being made. |
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Housing associations would be able to secure bank loans against the properties to carry out repairs. |
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Other longterm incentives are fixed incentives such as paid insurance premiums and imputed interest on reduced rate loans. |
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The fund is to be used as loans and grants to community-based organisations for reafforestation and other environmentally friendly undertakings. |
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Because each record represented a separate loan, aggregates of multiple loans were matched with individual social security numbers. |
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The aggregate amount of loans also picked up drastically, from 7.3 billion leva to 11.1 billion leva. |
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Car loans are simply personal loans provided by a bank or finance company to facilitate a car purchase. |
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The money had gone in excessive compensation and unapproved bonuses, fees and loans. |
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In a range of institutions like credit unions or retail banks, personal loans can be arranged over the internet, by phone or in person. |
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These loans are issued by the federal government, instead of through a third-party lender. |
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Further, the stringent collateral requirements demanded as conditions for obtaining loans conspire to make this problem even worse. |
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Finally, watch out for early settlement penalties, because around seven in ten personal loans are paid off early. |
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And some schools make low interest loans or partner with banks that do it for them. |
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Soon everything from credit-card balances to auto loans was being repackaged. |
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Nowadays consumers even take out personal loans with banks and finance houses to pay for surgery. |
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The banks have done that by expanding their offerings of auto loans, life insurance, mutual funds, mortgages, and credit cards. |
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It isn't very common, and as far as I know, all of the words that contain it are loans from French. |
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These include housing loans, vehicle loans, credit card receivables, trade receivables and other assets. |
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Multiple sets of sound correspondences can be used to distinguish loans from inherited words. |
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I've had my loans called twice in my career, and I wouldn't wish the experience on anyone. |
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That rate sets the pace for many consumer loans, especially the prime rate, at most retail banks. |
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These days it is much easier to shop around and get decent rates for mortgages and personal loans. |
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Since the 19c, it has also provided loans to European languages including English and French. |
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Most of these pooling and servicing agreements give wide flexibility to servicers to modify loans. |
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The bank was ready to reschedule debts and provide soft loans to help its clients rehabilitate their business. |
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The municipality is arranging loans for the groups from the District Cooperative Bank and the loanees have very easy repayment terms. |
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Typical perks include preferential mortgages and personal loans, free banking, a pension fund, overtime, bonuses and share options. |
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They kept these sort of zombie banks alive, well enough not to die but not well enough to actually give loans. |
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On top of the legal risks, reworking loans can be costly for master servicers. |
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However, there was one clear distinction between giving and taking interest on loans and bank deposits. |
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They are used to students working their way through college and graduates starting work with big loans to repay. |
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Those the contracts that govern what a servicer can do working for the investors to service these loans. |
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And whose vast loans and political clout help such a world order to flourish? |
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Many companies, of course, got busy early this year, refinancing old obligations and taking on new loans. |
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Households also continue to refinance their mortgages or use home-equity loans to fund their shopping sprees. |
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Whatever the reason, some lenders are squirming out of deals to refinance home loans at rates below 6 percent. |
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The most reliable way to benchmark loans is to compare the TAR, or Total Amount Repayable. |
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We also now have micro lenders which are great for small loans of a few thousand dollars. |
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In place of the bank lender, the master servicer now holds the power to rework the loans. |
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Some banks are also refraining from extending loans for fear that they could harm their capital adequacy ratios. |
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The loans were supposed to be used by the banks to reimburse depositors' money. |
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The party has also stressed the need for preparing a strong case for the remission of interest on agricultural loans. |
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As the judge said, on the remortgage to the bank she undertook a liability directly to the bank for the full amount of the loans. |
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The ensuing arrangement between 1985 and 1988 saw the Prunas and other family members lodge large sums with the bank and get loans in return. |
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And mortgage brokers are now reiterating the basic premise that any loans will affect the size of a mortgage a lender will allow. |
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The company intends to reduce customer response time and sanction loans expeditiously. |
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Demand for the loans necessary to create the marketable securities simply could not be satisfied. |
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When they cannot pay their creditors, debtor nations have little choice but to seek debt restructuring or new loans. |
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Reports showed that mainland car buyers defaulted on loans of up to 100 billion yuan last year. |
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But loans have to be repaid, even to relatives, and this is a common cause of family feuding and murder. |
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These huge numbers are due to the increasing numbers of people running into difficulties because of credit card debts and other loans. |
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We were able to get low-cost loans out to tens of thousands of small businesses. |
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Today, car loans are available at the drop of a hat, and second hand cars come at throwaway prices. |
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Any lender offering loans above 23 per cent APR must apply to the regulatory authority for a moneylending licence. |
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The sale marked the first time a Chinese bank has sold assets that backed loans. |
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Over three million households are now reliant on moneylenders, many of whom routinely charge over 150 percent interest for cash loans. |
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Student loans will be like a ball and chain around the ankles of graduates, affecting their life choice for decades. |
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They had also given large loans on very favourable terms to deputies and other prominent people. |
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Mason sees the years 1946-55, reviewed in Chapter 5, as the glory years for savings and loans. |
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But unsecured loans are preferable as there is less risk of losing your home if you fall behind with payments. |
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And the specter of student loans spurred graduates to take lucrative jobs rather than pursue avocations. |
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Many students already pay their tuition fees with loans, which they pay back later after graduation. |
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Many United States and multilateral institutions promote business by lowering tariffs and offering loans and consultations. |
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On top of these figures, council continues to service loans for the library facilities and maintain the buildings. |
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A rate fall is a good opportunity for borrowers to dust down their home loans and see whether they can save money by switching elsewhere. |
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The new products are providing fresh loans after six months and also microenterprise loans. |
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Secondly, foreigners might refuse to roll over loans to a country and repatriate the repaid funds. |
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His deferred payments over the years amounted to loans to the New York Stock Exchange for which he could reasonably assume to be compensated. |
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For new clients, it was ready to provide soft loans with special terms and conditions. |
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So a lot of people at risk here with these toxic loans which are really bad deals for consumers. |
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Because there is virtually no prospect of the loans being repaid, it creates a condition of maximum financial instability. |
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Initially they were given loans though most were not doing well as they lacked management skills. |
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As prices fall further, bank loans turn sour, and one or more mercantile houses, banks, discount houses, or brokerages fail. |
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Let all those who plundered money in the name of running banks give loans to those economically backward people. |
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It will admit artisan-students of all ages, charge fees, and find needy students scholarships or loans. |
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Many students decide to take out loans before fully exploring available grants and scholarships. |
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New staff have been hired and more money is available for student loans, scholarships and bursaries. |
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Some clients were tempted to take out expensive loans to pay for private dental treatment. |
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International standards identify bad loans as those without servicing for three months. |
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Dorothy House is still looking for vehicles to add to the challenge and is appealing for loans of anything from ice cream vans to rickshaws. |
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The financial crisis has now left many of these banks on the verge of insolvency with large portfolios of insecure loans and bad debts. |
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Bankers viewed their role as conscientious scrutinizers of corporate loans, not as seekers of what amounted to kickbacks. |
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During the 1990s, the bank pushed large loans on the state so as to render it dependent on outside financial support. |
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Student loans were also vital for funding me during the copious breaks in the student term. |
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They advanced loans on very favourable terms, but the transactions ended up making huge losses the corporation could not absorb. |
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Don't be tempted into consolidation loans unless the terms are more favourable then you are currently paying. |
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There will be an increase in the loan limit for student loans and improvements to the terms of loans to part-time students. |
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Pranab Mukherjee, a minion brought in primarily to help speed up bank loans to Sanjay, is currently the president of India. |
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Additionally, only the government will disburse federal student loans, instead of using banks as middleman. |
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To date, servicers have been reluctant to amend loans, saying they could be sued by loan investors who might be disadvantaged by the modification. |
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Japan froze yen soft loans and aid grants to the two countries for new projects, except for emergency and humanitarian aid and assistance for grassroots projects. |
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Both current and new students will benefit from the program, but if students switch programmes or fail to graduate, their loans will not be eligible for remission. |
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Payment protection policies are expensive and unnecessary for many people, who can easily renegotiate their loans with their lender if they run into difficulties. |
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The minister has reduced the specified rate on loans from employers to finance the purchase, repair or improvement of the principal home, from 6 per cent to 4 per cent. |
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As recession looms, how much banks increase reserves depends on how bad they think the downturn will be and how many debtors may have trouble repaying their loans. |
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It was gratifying that people in the district were appreciative of the services that Pride Zambia was providing and that they were playing their part by repaying the loans. |
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Remarkably, there is a 98 percent repayment rate on the loans. |
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Car loans have been restricted by the lack of an effective procedure for recovering delinquent loans or repossessing vehicles from borrowers that default on repayments. |
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In developing countries, a zombie bank's first line of defense against a silent run is usually to arrange loans from relatively well-informed foreign banks. |
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The way Brazil dispatches soccer players to leagues around the world, the U.S. loans out monetary experts to other countries. |
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What bank provides the best value in fixed interest personal loans? |
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They invested in trade, in government loans, in the mineral resources of their land, as well as in improved farming and in renting out farming land. |
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But instead of designer brands, what's for sale is an array of home loans, mutual funds, insurance, annuities, brokerage services, and plain old savings accounts. |
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Taken as a whole, the railways of South Africa returned a good profit in the decade before Union, even if interest payments on loans are included. |
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It is, however, necessary to review the banks' approach to loans. |
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He, however, disclosed that the association gave out soft loans early this month to some marketeers in Luanshya, Mansa and Ndola who had applied for the facility. |
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We denied them loans, closed them off in housing projects, redlined their neighborhoods, and left them to fester. |
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That means the U.S. can simply ignore Chinese data on costs on the assumption they are distorted by subsidized loans, rigged markets, and the controlled yuan. |
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Those attempting to get loans just have to show the goods to be pawned to an officer, who would spend a little time to appraise the estimated value of the items. |
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If they turn into 4's, then the program's supporters will triumphantly point to them as evidence that the loans worked. |
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What about people who had attempted to farm, but been stymied by their inability to procure government loans? |
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He and his ex-wife paid tuition, room and board, and some miscellaneous expenses out of their incomes, but the boys also worked at part-time jobs and took out student loans. |
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Millions of grads are saddled with unpayable student loans, yet colleges still say they're a sound investment. |
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They expect the board to refinance the bank loans next year. |
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The lower interest rate is expected to make bank loans cheaper so that the corporate sector can afford to borrow more money from banks to finance expansion programs. |
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New India Assurance Company and State Bank of India have joined hands to provide accident insurance cover to all loanees of the bank availing housing and car loans. |
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In the 1980s, the Conservative Party also received loans that magically resulted in the loaner getting a peerage, and it still does the same thing today. |
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And balloon payments on those loans are getting closer every day. |
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Generally, balloon payments are not acceptable for qualified plan loans. |
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Government-sponsored art loans may be arranged in order to promote a nation's image overseas, attracting investments and favourable foreign relations policies. |
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Sub-prime lenders prey on unsuspecting borrowers, providing loans that include pre-payment penalties, hidden fees, or balloon payments, which systematically strip equity. |
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Lo and behold, when the balloon goes up they cannot repay those loans. |
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This was further augmented by the gi bill, which also provided low-interest loans to returning veterans. |
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But students also need to be educated about the risks associated with excessive leverage and gimmicky loans. |
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This number will increase this year, as we are moving very cautiously at the moment, letting borrowers see how microenterprise loans can be utilized. |
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Under the system, borrowers with perfect repayment records of income-generating loans, which must be repaid in a year, become eligible for housing loans of up to 25,000 taka. |
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Student loans are being processed above the national average in Essex. |
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He is financially successful and his only debt is school loans but the thought of a household budget spreadsheet gives him hives. |
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Fortunately, the government has put a stop to it and new loans taken out 1st June can only incur early settlement charges of, at most, two months interest. |
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The bank expects to write off massive amounts of money as bad debt from its loan book value and shrink its asset base after correct recalculation of the loans. |
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Donor institutions need to be made accountable for loans made in bad faith, where official corruption was ignored or factored into the terms of the agreement. |
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Even loans from law school or med school can be partially forgiven. |
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They then took the borrowed money and invested it in Greek bonds and in loans to customers around the Mediterranean and Adriatic. |
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Parents stood up to agonize about their responsibility, as cosigners, for the loans of their now unemployed offspring. |
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Swedish banks have similarly disastrous loans to the Baltic countries, amounting to 30 percent of its gross domestic product. |
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A decade ago, thrifts got themselves into trouble because they made residential and commercial real estate loans for inflated amounts to borrowers who could not pay. |
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The association provides micro loans for looms and other equipment. |
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How has the UK moved from being a nation that held up thrift as a virtue and considered debt a vice, to owing a trillion pounds on mortgages, credit cards and other loans? |
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Although borrowers may be comfortable taking out loans and mortgages at current interest rates, what is the likelihood of a rise in rates, over the medium to long term? |
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It invests your money in many different forms of credit-bonds, commercial paper, mortgages and many other kinds of loans. |
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Capital One is just one of many credit card issuers that securitize loans. |
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The administration's attempt to use personal relationships, loans and rhetorical rah-rah to nudge the country toward domestic reform simply has not worked. |
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Secondly, under the Housing Act 1985 the Secretary of State may advance money to recognized lending institutions to enable them to grant loans to first-home purchasers. |
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The locally-managed Urban Co-operative Bank advances loans in millions to the needy sections which predominantly include non-Navayaths and the Hindus. |
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He directed Mr Staume to record all money advanced to him as loans. |
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Disbursal of advances, particularly house and car loans, appears to have become a priority for bankers, who are now willing to reach out to public more aggressively. |
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For smaller loans, credit unions may be happy to make advances, but only after you have built up an acceptable level of savings with the organisation. |
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A cosigner of her loans, her father had also been using home equity loans to pay some of her college bills. |
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A group of large investors in mortgage bonds holding countrywide loans are already threatening such action. |
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The mortgage loans for individuals have a maturity period of 15 years. |
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Another worry is that while retail investors often lack ready cash of their own, many lenders seem all too willing to bankroll them through both personal and margin loans. |
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The figures are wide open to abuse and manipulation through the use of financial engineering techniques including reinsurance, future profits and contingent loans. |
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These lending associations provide loans and financial services to agricultural producers, agribusinesses, country homeowners and other rural landowners. |
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Ah yes, it must be Labour's student loans policy that is doing the trick. |
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The builder's costs had been funded by his mother under loans motivated by maternal affection and made in the belief that her son's claim was bona fide. |
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They lifted millions of people from poverty with micro loans. |
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Incentives involve taxpayer dollars and take many forms, including tax rebates, training services, loans, grants, land and sometimes direct cash payments. |
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The demand for government loans has also been criticized by some later commentators for starving industry of funds, and so holding down the rate of economic growth. |
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Unless insolvent institutions are recapitalized with sufficient real capital and banks end their ruinous lending practices, the stock of bad loans will continue to rise. |
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Banks, for example, sell assets such as loans and credit-card receivables. |
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As with the subprime racket, SLABS are often bundled with other kinds of loans and traded on secondary markets. |
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The most crushing debt people are worried about, like subprime mortgage loans, has been securitized. |
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While debt relief has been extremely effective, it is not sufficient to allow poor countries escape the treadmill of borrowing to repay old loans. |
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With each passing quarter, more of the old loans are paid off, refinanced, or defaulted on. |
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The delinquency rate is separate from loans that have actually started foreclosure. |
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The central bank of Singapore has said that debt-ridden customers in the nation would be given more time to repay bank loans. |
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I found a way to pay for college without taking out any loans. |
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Somebody never pays his loans, yet he has the audacity to ask the bank for money. |
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Students are generally entitled to student loans to cover the cost of tuition fees and living costs. |
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The quarterly survey... said banks were holding the line on lending standards for commercial loans and were more willing to lend to individuals. |
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Further laws attempted to relieve the burden of debt from plebeians by banning interest on loans. |
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Roman financiers called in their loans, which must have placed an increased burden of taxation on the Iceni. |
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The League had this hold over the royalty because of the loans the Hansa had made to the royalty and the large debt the kings were carrying. |
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The king had a steady income from crown lands, and could also take up substantial loans from Italian and domestic financiers. |
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The government is offering interest-free loans for the purchase of energy-efficient appliances. |
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This act also forbade ship money without Parliament's consent, fines in destraint of knighthood and forced loans. |
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The City of London, preoccupied with its own grievances, refused to make any loans to the king, as did foreign powers. |
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More loans required deep spending cuts and the Labour cabinet was split nearly in half. |
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Maintenance loans are available for living costs, and these are means tested. |
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Many banking firms loaned money to royalty, at great risk, as some were bankrupted when kings defaulted on their loans. |
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Due to fears that borrowed money was to be called in and that foreign banks would demand their loans or raise interest, prices surged at first. |
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These rates directly affect the rates in the money market, the market for short term loans. |
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In 2005, the bankruptcy laws were changed so that private educational loans also could not be readily discharged. |
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Most college students in the United States qualify for federal student loans. |
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Lenders had no power over the King and could not force him to repay his loans. |
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Undergraduates are eligible for subsidized loans, with no interest while the student is in school. |
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Students only borrow from private lenders when they exhaust the maximum borrowing limits under federal loans. |
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Increasing student loans have also been blamed for driving tuition costs up. |
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Chelsea are additionally funded by Abramovich via interest free soft loans channelled through his holding company Fordstam Limited. |
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Working with bankers in the City, the government raised large loans during wartime and paid them off in peacetime. |
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President Wilson was on the verge of cutting off the loans in late 1916, but allowed a great increase in US government lending to the Allies. |
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The repayments were, in part, funded by German reparations which, in turn, were supported by American loans to Germany. |
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With the rise of Adolf Hitler, all bonds and loans that had been issued and taken out during the 1920s and early 1930s were cancelled. |
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The companies were obligated to repay the loans to the government, and the money would then be lent out to another group of businesses. |
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The Marshall Plan, just as GARIOA, consisted of aid both in the form of grants and in the form of loans. |
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The UK received 385 million USD of its Marshall Plan aid in the form of loans. |
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As banks began to give out more loans to potential home owners, housing prices began to rise. |
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Others have pointed out that there were not enough of these loans made to cause a crisis of this magnitude. |
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In other words, the borrowers did not cause the loans to go bad, it was the economy. |
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Such loans were covered by very detailed contracts, and swapped for more expensive loan products on the day of closing. |
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Loeb and Angelo Mozilo as a means of collateralizing Countrywide Financial loans too big to be sold to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. |
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Ultimately, loans were made to many borrowers who simply could not afford to make their payments. |
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The thrift remained profitable only as long as it was able to sell those loans in the secondary mortgage market. |
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To date, various US government agencies have committed or spent trillions of dollars in loans, asset purchases, guarantees, and direct spending. |
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Governments, like any other legal entity, can take out loans, issue bonds and make financial investments. |
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During the Early Modern era, European monarchs would often default on their loans or arbitrarily refuse to pay them back. |
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Further, local government loans are sometimes guaranteed by the national government, and this reduces the risk. |
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Some bank loans may receive ratings to assist in wider syndication and attract institutional investors. |
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Higher interest rates reduce the amount of money because fewer people seek loans, and loans are usually made with new money. |
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Part of its long term capital expenditure is funded by long term loans from the Scottish Government. |
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Comparatively, the impact of Portuguese has been greater on coastal languages and their loans tend to be closer to the Portuguese originals. |
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Early medieval legal documents include a body of Gaelic legal and administrative loans. |
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Contemporary Gaelic loans are mainly for geographical and cultural features, such as ceilidh, loch and clan. |
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Based on an assessment of individual circumstances they offer grants or access to student loans through the Student Loans Company. |
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The repayments were, in part, funded by German reparations that, in turn, were supported by American loans to Germany. |
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The Egyptian government of Viceroy Isma'il took out substantial loans from European bankers and stock exchanges. |
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To pay these notes, the Bank of Scotland was forced to call in its loans and, in March 1728, to suspend payments. |
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Of course, the nonmodified parts of these loans still have the original covenants. |
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He also took out many loans, first through the Frescobaldi family, and then through his banker Antonio Pessagno. |
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The recession had a severe effect on financial institutions such as savings and loans and banks. |
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From 1980 to 1982, there were 493 voluntary mergers and 259 forced mergers of savings and loans overseen by the agency. |
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Amadeo Giannini's Bank of Italy, later to become Bank of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated. |
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When the market fell, brokers called in these loans, which could not be paid back. |
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Bank failures snowballed as desperate bankers called in loans which the borrowers did not have time or money to repay. |
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In the face of bad loans and worsening future prospects, the surviving banks became even more conservative in their lending. |
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Banks built up their capital reserves and made fewer loans, which intensified deflationary pressures. |
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Germany's Weimar Republic was hit hard by the depression, as American loans to help rebuild the German economy now stopped. |
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It provided for a system of reopening sound banks under Treasury supervision, with federal loans available if needed. |
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Throughout this period Danish was in contact with Low German, and many Low German loans were introduced in this period. |
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Out of the 500 most frequently used Words in Danish, 100 are Medieval loans from Middle Low German. |
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Dutch vocabulary is mostly Germanic and incorporates slightly more Romance loans than German but far fewer than English. |
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In 1489, out of gratitude for services and loans, Maximilian I awarded Amsterdam the right to adorn its coat of arms with the king's crown. |
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Student grants these days are paltry, and many students have to take out loans. |
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Examples included the changing of boundaries, raising of loans or the taking on of additional powers. |
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Most loans from Celtic appear to have been made before or during the Germanic Sound Shift. |
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Despite the general decline in stock and loans, most of the Nordic countries have had an increase in the lending of other media than books. |
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Foreign aid arrived in the form of loans, land, credit, and tools to speed up development, but were only allocated to men. |
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Women are excluded from certain state benefits, such as housing loans, and are refused equal rights under the personal status law. |
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In the third quarter of 2009, there were 278,189 delinquent loans, 80,327 foreclosures. |
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Some of these loans are restricted to Mexican or Central American Spanish, but others have entered all the varieties of Spanish in the world. |
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In Zambia, it often offers loans for seed and expenses to the 180,000 small farmers who grow cotton for it, as well as advice on farming methods. |
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The Italian government will be responsible for losses from any uncollectible loans from the now closed banks. |
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The aristocracy allowed prices to remain high, while inflation alleviated the burden of loans, which became a substantial part of their income. |
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In general, ASEAN does not have the financial resources to extend substantial grants or loans to the new members. |
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However, because Kwadi is poorly attested, it is difficult to tell which common words are cognate and which might be loans. |
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Starting in 1776, the Congress sought to raise money by loans from wealthy individuals, promising to redeem the bonds after the war. |
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Following his father's example, Charles raised loans without Parliament's sanction and imprisoned without trial those who would not pay. |
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Parties must regularly report donations, loans and spending on national elections. |
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Banks may refuse to issue loans to felons, and a felony conviction may prevent employment in banking or finance. |
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Their owners spawned equally ornate bank and office buildings providing loans for the production of cotton and associated industries. |
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They were also able to mortgage future tolls to raise loans for new structures and for more substantial improvements to the existing highway. |
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From the late 17th century, states learned how to finance wars through long term low interest loans from national banking institutions. |
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Its services expanded to include assistance with savings and loans, emigration and education. |
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As the traditional uses of greens and loans declined, they were often absorbed by the neighbouring landowners. |
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Stopanska Bank-Skopje offers favorable loans for non-identified purposes that are without a deposit, warrantors and administrative ban. |
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For example, in the second quarter of this yean the network focused on mortgage solutions, business banking and home equity loans. |
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Temple-Inland has been accused of violating the law by failing to reconvey deeds of trust on paid loans. |
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It is asking for easy to repay loans to be made available for redevelopers and householders. |
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It excludes loans for business purposes, rediscounted loans, loans secured by real estate, and wholesale and lease financing. |
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The average age of home loans being refinanced shortened in the first quarter compared with the fourth quarter. |
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When the exempt loan regulations under IRC section 4975 were made final in 1977, there was little question that exempt loans could be refinanced. |
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The refinancing of mortgage loans is often an important component of total origination volume. |
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