|
Bailout - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A bailout is an act of giving capital to a company in danger of failing in an attempt to save it from bankruptcy, insolvency, or total liquidation and ruin; or to allow a failing company to fail gra...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailout |
|
Stop the housing bailout and Stop the mortgage bailout. This site is dedicated to stopping the government's planned bailout of the housing market. ... Whether you are a Democrat, a Republican, or an Independent, odds are that you oppose the recent $750 billion bailout of the banking industry.
|
||
|
To counteract the devastating ripple effects to the money market, the Federal Reserve Board told commercial banks it would provide the reserves needed to allow them to meet the credit needs of their customers. (What happened after the bailout?)
|
||
|
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
The synopses revealed twenty-one fatal accidents during which it appears no attempt was made to bailout. No one on board these aircraft survived--thirty-three fatalities in all.
|
||
|
Some borrowers may have been victims of predatory lenders (whose stocks have already surged on talk of a bailout). But many more borrowers simply gambled on risky loans in hopes of flipping property for big profits, or knowingly lied about their income just to get a bigger house.
|
||
|
bailout ( ) n. A rescue from financial difficulties: corporate bailouts. ... Word Tutor: bailout ... Tutor's tip: A "bailout" is an emergency rescue, while to "bail out" is to provide emergency relief.
|
||
|
On Oct. 13, after Congress had passed the $700 billion financial bailout program earlier that month, Treasury provided capital injections for nine institutions that together held over $11 trillion in assets: Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch,
|