Word: loan
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...refi'ed because you couldn't muster closing costs, your tax refund could be the ticket. Cutting the interest rate on a $200,000 mortgage from, say, 7% to 5.8% saves some $150 a month. (Simply applying a $2,000 tax refund against the principal on that 7% loan would slice about a year off its term...
...Airways acquisition, which included a $500 million loan to help the airline through bankruptcy reorganization, has pension-fund experts wondering about the risks of Bronner's approach. The deal makes RSA the carrier's largest equity investor (RSA already held $340 million in US Airways debt and owned nine of the airline's jets.) RSA's stake should create jobs in Alabama, where the carrier is expected to build new regional facilities. But whether that sort of spending will benefit the airline and its shareholders--including RSA--is another question...
...Sahhaf and the slogan "We even control fashion"; and low - cost airline Ryanair produced an advertisement suggesting that the "lowest fares" claims of its rival easyJet may be as valid as al - Sahhaf's pronouncements. Under other circumstances, al - Sahhaf might have had a career in advertising. Loan Rangers Five of Germany's banking giants are planning a joint venture to sell on some of their loans to bond investors. Because the government - backed program could help the banks free up sorely needed capital, German politicians hope the plan will spur lending to small - and medium - sized German businesses, which...
...described his recent dreams of a university plagued by commercialization, beginning with the acceptance of a $2 billion loan from an alum and listing a series of schemes—including placement of corporate logos on syllabi and an auction giving 100 spots in Harvard College to the highest bidders...
Both of the works in the current exhibition are good examples of this titanic struggle sublated into violent unity. A four-panel ensemble commissioned for the vestibule of a private New York City apartment and on loan from New York’s Museum of Modern Art is particularly show-stopping: fugue-like, these paintings alternate between massive, roiling darkness and bursts of lapidary brilliance. At their most thrilling and their most dangerous, they reveal a world in explosive disarray, on the cusp of beatific reconstruction...