Word: invest
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...lyrical Richard Strauss. Angel has a superb new Rosenkavalier (on 4 LPs). Strauss's swirling, silvery tunes never sounded better. Herbert von Karajan, conducting London's Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus, is pliant and powerful; Singers Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Teresa Stich-Randall and Christa Ludwig are uniformly excellent. They invest their climactic closing trio with even more than its usual aching grandeur, while Otto Edelmann's Baron Ochs combines authority with the required asininity...
...highest levels since the Depression days of the 1930s, and consequently closer to stock yields. (Last week the average yield on high-grade corporate bonds was 4.8% v. 5.9% for the Dow-Jones industrials.) Since stocks are inherently more risky, many investors switched to bonds or did not invest at all. But bond dealers now think that the Fed's action has established a firm bottom for the bond market, and that bond prices will edge up, widening the spread between stock and bond yields...
...ROUND the world, the chances for investment abound (see Capital Opportunities). But too often there is no capital to invest. As President Marcus Wallenberg of Stockholm's Enskilda Bank pointed out to the conference delegates, the demands for investment funds have far outrun the savings from which the capital must come...
Guatemala & Suez. The need for such protection was plainly spelled out by Banker Abs. Said he: "The statistics show that private investors in capital-exporting countries preferably invest in areas where they find preconditions legally and psychologically favorable . . . Examples of violations of private foreign rights, both in highly developed and less developed countries, are known to us all. Among the more recent are the methods applied in nationalizing properties of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., in expropriating the United Fruit Co. properties by Guatemala, and finally in expropriating the Suez Canal." Abs also cited instances of indirect interferences with...
...Suez Canal Co., which has been a hen without a nest since Egypt nationalized its big ditch, last week voted itself another career. In Paris, founder stockholders formally launched, the company into new business worlds as a French investment trust corporation. The Suez Canal Co. will invest $2,800,000 in French companies digging for oil in Algerian Sahara, and already owns a 30% chunk of the planned English Channel tunnel project. Other projects under consideration: oil ventures in Canada, iron deposits in North Africa...