Đặt câu với từ "foreign exchange reserves"

1. China is the world 's largest holder of foreign exchange reserves .

2. They can use their often substantial foreign exchange reserves to stabilize the market.

3. GDP growth, Foreign exchange reserves, stock market valuations, and investor confidence have all increased.

4. At the other extreme lies China foreign - exchange reserves, and a current - account and budget surplus.

5. But she said China will continue to invest some of its foreign exchange reserves in Europe .

6. The government appears to be moving rapidly toward financing more of current expenditure using foreign exchange reserves.

7. It already holds substantial foreign exchange reserves in euros , and is the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt .

8. Steady industrial growth, rising exports and sound foreign exchange reserves are all signs of growing economic strength and resilience.

9. Having been left outside the club, these countries have no option but to self-insure by accumulating foreign-exchange reserves.

10. Many countries have built up large official foreign-exchange reserves, in part as greater self-insurance against adverse external developments.

11. Foreign-exchange reserves have been maintained at their current low level only by failing to pay back some foreign debt.

12. With the above trends and the continued high level of overseas remittances there is no pressure on Vietnam 's foreign exchange reserves .

13. Taiwan is now a creditor economy, holding one of the world's largest foreign exchange reserves of over US$403 billion as of December 2012.

14. A nation with a trade deficit will experience a reduction in its foreign exchange reserves, which ultimately lowers (depreciates) the value of its currency.

15. VinaCapital recently estimated that the State Bank had this year purchased $ 6 billion in foreign currency from the market to increase the foreign exchange reserves .

16. America absorbs Chinese imports, pays China in dollars, and China holds dollars, amassing $2.5 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves, much of it held in US Treasury securities.

17. The rapid growth of China's foreign exchange reserves(FER) becomes a dramatic event, and triggered extensive discussions and debates of domestic and international political and economic circles.

18. The European nations had all but exhausted their foreign exchange reserves during the war, and the Marshall Plan aid represented almost their sole means of importing goods from abroad.

19. Though the region has allowed startling imbalances to develop, foreign - exchange reserves are generally stronger than in Asia ten years ago; and there is less light-footed "hot money".

20. Investments are currently abysmally low: China, which boasts of over $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, has invested less than a billion dollars into the emerging market of India.

21. Among his accomplishments was accelerating the process of economic modernization to give Taiwan a 13% growth rate, $4,600 per capita income, and the world's second largest foreign exchange reserves.

22. Britain remained on the gold standard until 1931, when the gold and foreign exchange reserves were transferred to the Treasury; however, they continued to be managed by the Bank.

23. A currency crisis is a situation in which serious doubt exists as to whether a country's central bank has sufficient foreign exchange reserves to maintain the country's fixed exchange rate.

24. This financing gap can broadly be attributed to three factors: a relatively large current account deficit, the need to build up foreign exchange reserves, and the large debt amortization requirements expected.

25. Over the years, with rapid economic growth and large trade surplus with the rest of the world, Asia has accumulated over US$4 trillion of foreign exchange reserves – more than half of the world's total, and adding tertiary and quaternary sectors to expand in the share of Asia's economy.

26. So, while post-crisis Asia focused in the 2000’s on repairing the financial vulnerabilities that had wreaked such havoc – namely, by amassing huge foreign-exchange reserves, turning current-account deficits into surpluses, and reducing its outsize exposure to short-term capital inflows – it failed to rebalance its economy’s macro structure.