Word: solvently
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Publications built on advertising revenue have launched fundraising campaigns, cut back on circulation, traded ads for food or gifts to use in promotional events, and even gone online only—all in an effort to stay solvent in the worst economic climate in decades. And though its been trying, nearly all of Harvard’s student publications have managed to stay afloat...
...stress tests, which concluded that 10 of the 19 top U.S. banks need an additional $75 billion in capital, is how the banks will get de-stressed. Originally, when Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner announced the tests, he said they would determine how much additional capital banks needed to remain solvent, and the government would then provide that amount to the banks. Now the Treasury is giving the banks that are believed to need additional money, including Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, until June 8 to come up with their own plan to fix their financial problems. (See pictures...
...market bubble that burst in 1929, as the world was going into a nice recession. Then the government started making mistakes. They passed the Smoot-Hawley tariff, they raised taxes, they became very protectionist, and the next thing you know we had the Great Depression. In Europe they made solvent banks take over insolvent banks with the result that both [kinds of] banks failed. This has all been done before. History is - I don't like saying it, but it's repeating itself. Governments are making the same old mistakes...
...insure a disaster that in turn causes other disasters. It would be like providing health insurance when one heart attack induces a chain of other heart attacks in the population. Therefore, the government must regulate CDSs to guarantee that insurance firms have the capital to remain solvent...
...After years of poor management or bad luck, GM and Chrysler have reached the point where they are not viable as independent companies. They need U.S. aid whether they remain "solvent" or have to get court protection. Almost every American has seen that news on TV or read about it in the paper. It will be hard to imagine what consumers will think when they find out that a company which was the largest corporation in the U.S. for years is bankrupt. It is like finding out that the telephone company has gone out of business. (Perhaps people actually...