Word: creditably
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...dealership. There he found a 2007 Impala with 13,000 miles that cost $5,000 less than new one. At that price, he could pay cash. "Now's a good time to buy, but it's a bad time to borrow," Groening, 75, said on Tuesday as the continuing credit crisis dominated the news...
...consumers, retailers, lenders and anyone else who depends on credit, these are worrisome times. Even the $700 billion bailout that President Bush signed last week to buy Wall Street's bad mortgage-backed debt was not enough to calm credit jitters. Consumer borrowing fell at an annual rate of 3.7% in August, the first decline in over a decade, the Federal Reserve reported yesterday. In a surprise coordinated move with central banks around the world, the Fed sliced interest by half a point on Wednesday morning before the markets opened...
...considered middle class. Those who got rich off the real estate boom haven't had to share any of the blame. So what if they made millions? So what if speculators were flipping houses without ever intending to move into them? So what if people took out numerous credit cards and bought homes they couldn't afford? I had nothing to do with these securitizations, yet my children, my grandchildren and I will be paying for all of it over the next 30 years, thanks to the Fed's bailout. And if excessive lending and borrowing got us into this...
...That's because credit markets, which affect the ability of businesses and governments to borrow to fund day-to-day operations, continue to tighten in Asia as banks become more nervous about lending. In Hong Kong, the one-month interbank lending rate has doubled in the past month to 4%. Central banks are trying to pump liquidity into financial markets to avert a credit crunch. India on Monday cut the amount of cash that banks must deposit with the central bank in an attempt to loosen credit. "Credit markets are quite global," says Kirby Daley, senior strategist at financial services...
...future risks for China, most analysts believe, are tied more to the second-order effects - the global macroeconomic fallout from the crisis - than to the subprime credit crunch itself. "China's exposure comes from its concentrated bet on the dollar and the risk that the U.S. policy response to a slowing economy and investors' aversion to U.S. debt will combine to put pressure on the dollar going forward," says Brad Setser, a former U.S. Treasury Department official now at the Council on Foreign Relations. That would mean further upward pressure on China's currency, the renminbi, at a time when...