Liquidity, Liquid, Liquidate, Liquidation, Liquidator
liquidity (noun) -
a. cash or assets quickly convertable into cash possessed by a company
b. when assets can be quickly bought and sold in a market
liquid (adj) -
a. having lots of assets that can be quickly converted into cash
b. when an asset market has a lot of buyers and sellers so an asset can be quickly sold converted into cash
liquidate assets (verb) - sell to get cash
liquidation (noun) - selling to get cash
liquidator (noun) - person appointed to sell off the assets of a company
liquidity shortage
liquidity squeeze
liquidity crunch
lack of liquidity
market liquidity
restore market liquidity
draw liquidity out of the market
withdrawal of liquidity
liquidity injections
measures to reverse the withdrawal of liquidity
liquidity problems
a liquidity crisis
liquidity conditions
domestic liquidity conditions
improved domestic liquidity conditions
improve liquidity in the economy
need for liquidity
reduced need for liquidity
increased need for liquidity
conflicting bank goals of liquidity and profitability
plenty of liquidity
liquidity in the market
greater liquidity
improve liquidity in the economy
maintain high levels of liquidity
a measure of liquidity
liquidity risk
a liquidity trap
liquid assets
highly liquid
degree of liquidity of an asset
assets with different degrees of liquidity
freeze liquid assets
liquidate assets
liquidate company
company liquidations
went into liquidation
liquidity position
liquidity ratios
overall liquidity
liquidity of banks
a measure to improve liquidity
a temporary measure to improve liquidity
providing liquidity
Example sentences:
* "Will liquidity injections by the central banks will be enough to restore banks’ faith in each other?" (Source: Economist)
* Central bank actions may not be enough to restore market liquidity.
* The central bank is taking measures to reverse the current withdrawal of liquidity.
* Many smaller companies saw their credit lines cut which squeezed their working capital and prompted a liquidity crisis.
* In the early stages of the crisis there was a massive shift away from corporate lending and trade finance to low risk and highly liquid government bonds.
* Another service of banks is providing liquidity.
* Improved domestic liquidity and economic conditions prompted the bank to use local funding sources to raise capital.
* The rate cuts were only a temporary measure to improve liquidity over the Christmas holiday season rather than a new trend in interest rates.
* Analysts say that the central bank could end up drawing liquidity out of the market and raising interest rates.
* The need for liquidity and profitability are inherently conflicting needs in most banks.
* Under freely floating exchange rates there is supposedly a reduced need for liquidity in foreign exchange markets used in government foreign exchange interventions.
* They called for an increase of the money supply above the expected level of inflation to improve liquidity in the economy.
* A humped yield curve is explained by the combination of a descending yield curve plus an upward-sloping liquidity preference curve (Source: British National Corpus)
* High liquidity ratios indicate short-term financial strength but do not measure efficiency of utilization of resources. (Source: British National Corpus)
* The aims of profitability and liquidity tend to conflict.
* Banks hold a range of assets with different degrees of profitability and liquidity.
* The overall liquidity of banks has fallen.






