Bailout
a bailout (noun) - help someone out of difficult situation by giving them money, "a bankrupt or nearly bankrupt entity, such as a corporation or a bank, is given a fresh injection of liquidity, in order to meet its short term obligations. Often bail outs are by governments, or by consortia of investors who demand control over the entity as the price for injecting funds" (See Wikipedia)
bail out (verb)
the bailout cost
estimates of the bailout cost
estimates of the bailout cost continued to rise throughout the year
costly bailouts
bail out financial services companies
atrocious to expect taxpayers to bail out financial service companies
bail out the ailing bank
a bailout plan
the government bailout plan
thinking the bailout plan through
agree to the bailout plan
demand changes before agreeing to the bailout plan
a bailout proposal
the Treasury bailout proposal
the subprime bailout
bailout of the savings and loan industry
looking to private business to help bail out the museum
move to bail out airlines
refuse to bail out
tapping international capital markets to help bail out financially strapped companies
emergency cash aid to bail out areas devastated by last week's storm
help bail out those affected
it isn't right that the government should bail out a competitor
the state will not be there to bail out loss-making enterprises
bail out the company's relatively small debt
bail out the company
bail out the ailing company
bail out the ailing company with disguised subsidies
bail out water from the sinking boat
authorities may no longer bail out any old bank that gets into trouble
the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), responsible for overseeing the savings & loans bailout
Example sentences:
* We should be looking to private business to help bail out the museum.
* The German commercial and central banks refused to bail out Herstatt and many depositors lost money.
* As the economy slipped into recession and the value of real estate declined, however, estimates of the bailout cost continued to rise throughout the year.
* US may move to bail out airlines.
* The FDIC was already weak from helping to bail out a large number of savings and loan institutions (the so-called" thrifts"), some of which had lost large sums through misguided speculation or outright corruption.
* The proposal was for Taiwan to bail out Costa Rica's relatively small debt of $US 1,500 million.
* Their chief executive, Andy Barton, feels, with some reason one would have to say, that it isn't right that the government should bail out a competitor.
* It is hoped that the managers, spurred on by the profit motive, will have an incentive to improve efficiency, as will the workforce, aware that the state will not be there to bail out loss-making enterprises.
* Nonetheless, the first sign that the Japanese government is buying exclusively from domestic PC makers will be seen as confirming its intention to bail out NEC and others with disguised subsidies.
* Companies were invited to invest in the market it is considering a modest contribution to help bail out those affected.
* The Italian authorities may no longer bail out any old bank that gets into trouble, the likelihood of government support for big banks has not changed enough to affect its ratings.
* The party has had to bail out its merchandising section, Ecotrade, from party funds, whilst running at a loss.
* A government minister yesterday promised emergency cash aid to bail out areas of North Wales devastated by last week's storm of the century.
* It is atrocious to expect businesses and parents to bail out schools.
* I was delighted that Newcastle City Council leader Jeremy Beecham will not bail out the ailing Newcastle United FC.
* A report in the London Evening Standard stated that the chairman, David Rowland, and the chief executive, Peter Middleton, are actively considering tapping international capital markets to help bail out financially strapped names, the individuals whose capital supports the market.
* Mr Yeltsin wants the Group of Seven leading industrial nations (G7) to meet before its scheduled July summit in Tokyo to help to bail out the 15-month-old reform plan.
* The largest of these, some $US6,800 million, came from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which insured deposits with savings institutions, and the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), responsible for overseeing the thrift bailout.






