
Showing posts with label Bank of England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bank of England. Show all posts
Thursday, August 18, 2011

Monday, August 1, 2011

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Friday, July 29, 2011

Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The real estate sector and the capital market
The real estate sector and the capital market have been among the worst hurt by the crisis in the last three years. However, real estate companies have been less affected than other sectors, such as industry and constructions, and have become some of the most valuable entities on the RASDAQ market.
Generalcom Bucureşti (GECM), controlled by French businessman Alain Bonte, currently has the biggest capitalisation on RASDAQ, of over 300 million RON (70 million euros), higher even than in 2007, before the crisis, when both the Stock Exchange and the real estate market were at all-time highs. Unirea Shopping Center (SCDM), the company held by Dan Adamescu which owns Unirea shopping centre in central Bucharest, is valued at nearly 200 million RON (46 million euros) at present, around 45% less than in July 2007. How can this paradox be explained?One reason is that these companies are not real estate developers, which have in fact been significantly hurt by the crisis, they are instead companies that own real estate assets and make revenues from renting them out. Second, most of them inherited high street stores in big cities, which means they have little trouble finding tenants.Unirea Shopping Center (SCDM), the company held by Dan Adamescu which owns Unirea shopping centre in central Bucharest, is valued at nearly 200 million RON (46 million euros) at present, around 45% less than in July 2007. How can this paradox be explained?One reason is that these companies are not real estate developers, which have in fact been significantly hurt by the crisis, they are instead companies that own real estate assets and make revenues from renting them out. Second, most of them inherited high street stores in big cities, which means they have little trouble finding tenants.
Friday, November 5, 2010
The Bank of England decided against any new stimulus measures

LONDON — With the economic recovery showing some resilience in Europe, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank left their main interest rates at record lows on Thursday.
The Bank of England decided against any new stimulus measures for Britain, a day after the Federal Reserve moved to buy an additional $600 billion in government bonds to strengthen the United States economy. The British bank left its bond purchasing program at £200 billion, or $322 billion, and its main interest rate at 0.5 percent.
And the president of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, indicated at a news conference Thursday in Frankfurt that the Fed’s move would not force the bank to change its monetary strategy, adding that the current rate at 1 percent was “appropriate.”
The Bank of England decided against any new stimulus measures for Britain, a day after the Federal Reserve moved to buy an additional $600 billion in government bonds to strengthen the United States economy. The British bank left its bond purchasing program at £200 billion, or $322 billion, and its main interest rate at 0.5 percent.
And the president of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, indicated at a news conference Thursday in Frankfurt that the Fed’s move would not force the bank to change its monetary strategy, adding that the current rate at 1 percent was “appropriate.”
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