Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Flight-to-liquidity> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 49 of
49
with 100 triples per page.
- Flight-to-liquidity abstract "A flight-to-liquidity is a financial market phenomenon occurring when investors sell what they perceive to be less liquid or higher risk investments, and purchase more liquid investments instead, such as US Treasuries. Usually, flight-to-liquidity quickly results in panic leading to a crisis.For example, after the Russian government defaulted on its government bonds (GKOs) in 1998 many investors sold European and Japanese government bonds and purchased on-the-run US Treasuries instead. (The most recently issued treasuries, known as “on-the-run”, have larger trading volumes, that is more liquidity, than treasury issues that have been superseded, known as “off-the run”.)This widened the spread between off-the-run and on-the-run US Treasuries, which ultimately led to the 1998 collapse of the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund.".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageExternalLink 9312.html.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageExternalLink papers.cfm?abstract_id=676100.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageID "6811256".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageLength "1646".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageOutDegree "16".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageRevisionID "629303680".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Behavioral_and_social_facets_of_systemic_risk.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economic_problems.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Financial_markets.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Default_(finance).
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Financial_contagion.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Financial_crisis.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Flight-to-quality.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink GKO.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink GKO-OFZ.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Government_bond.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Liquidity.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Long-Term_Capital_Management.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Market_liquidity.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Risk.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Russia.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Stock_market_crash.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink Treasury_security.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Treasury_security.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Flight-to-liquidity".
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageWikiLinkText "flight-to-liquidity".
- Flight-to-liquidity hasPhotoCollection Flight-to-liquidity.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Econ-problem-stub.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Investment-stub.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Flight-to-liquidity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Stock_market.
- Flight-to-liquidity subject Category:Behavioral_and_social_facets_of_systemic_risk.
- Flight-to-liquidity subject Category:Economic_problems.
- Flight-to-liquidity subject Category:Financial_markets.
- Flight-to-liquidity hypernym Phenomenon.
- Flight-to-liquidity type Disease.
- Flight-to-liquidity type Hazard.
- Flight-to-liquidity type Market.
- Flight-to-liquidity type Socioeconomic.
- Flight-to-liquidity type Theory.
- Flight-to-liquidity comment "A flight-to-liquidity is a financial market phenomenon occurring when investors sell what they perceive to be less liquid or higher risk investments, and purchase more liquid investments instead, such as US Treasuries. Usually, flight-to-liquidity quickly results in panic leading to a crisis.For example, after the Russian government defaulted on its government bonds (GKOs) in 1998 many investors sold European and Japanese government bonds and purchased on-the-run US Treasuries instead.".
- Flight-to-liquidity label "Flight-to-liquidity".
- Flight-to-liquidity sameAs Course_à_la_liquidité.
- Flight-to-liquidity sameAs m.0gq3t6.
- Flight-to-liquidity sameAs Q3001468.
- Flight-to-liquidity sameAs Q3001468.
- Flight-to-liquidity wasDerivedFrom Flight-to-liquidity?oldid=629303680.
- Flight-to-liquidity isPrimaryTopicOf Flight-to-liquidity.