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"go bust" Definitions
  1. to spend or lose all of one's money : to go broke

177 Sentences With "go bust"

How to use go bust in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "go bust" and check conjugation/comparative form for "go bust". Mastering all the usages of "go bust" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Either your business is about to go bust, or the global economy's about to go bust, or your political career's about to go bust, or whatever.
And when they go bust, the results can be deadly.
Lenders can go bust no problem; their borrowers won't mind.
Hundreds of smaller suppliers with rickety finances could go bust.
Many will go bust, so export revenues will quickly tumble.
We believe that a lot of players will go bust.
And then all the derivatives on those mortgages would go bust.
PNC Financial sees signs that January's market rally could go bust.
Insiders began to wonder if the whiskey boom might go bust.
But not as much as they will if you go bust.
Today, lenders are left with little recourse when sovereign debtors go bust.
We've seen cryptocurrency-related scams go bust before, but this is embarrassing.
An affluent democracy was simply not willing to let its financiers go bust.
"This situation could get even worse unless more airlines go bust," it added.
Letting failing firms go bust would be the most powerful reform of all.
That is partly because universities are much less likely to go bust than businesses.
Yet even if many more firms go bust, production is not expected to fall much.
This isn't the first food-and-beverage deal to go bust in recent months, either.
Which big unicorn investments will flame out and which seemingly genius technologies will go bust?
"If the situation continues for the next 12 to 18 months, airlines could go bust."
But this is a pattern that we've seen before—a boom that could eventually go bust.
At best, Italy's weak banks will throttle the country's growth; at worst, some will go bust.
Indeed, Lemkin says, he witnesses several smaller cloud software companies go bust amid the Great Recession.
When that happens, private equity companies can end up making profits from portfolio companies that go bust.
HYDB is a high-yield fund but is designed to avoid bonds most likely to go bust.
In other words, the public purse pays if private companies go bust or don't fulfill their obligations.
Walter Wriston, a former chairman of Citibank, earned ridicule for once declaring that "countries don't go bust".
"If auditors are found to be accomplices in corporate fraud cases, they should go bust," he said.
The Depression had shown that equities could collapse in price and that many companies could go bust.
Will the stock market boom go bust or at least slow — and if so, when and why?
In all insurance contracts the cost of cover exceeds the expected payout (otherwise insurers would go bust).
We've all been thinking the system got so oversaturated, it had to go bust at some point.
"If Shanxinhui doesn't go bust, I want to rely on it since it can always make money."
But even if they go bust, markets will still function, with prices adjusting to the new realities.
I'm not suggesting that they're all going to go bust, but I am saying it's "adapt or die".
When we had 225 and 225 companies, now that may not be sustainable because they all go bust.
Instead, it's losing money chasing growth — suggesting that the whole company would just go bust in a downturn.
A government that prints its own currency can never go bust, or so runs an increasingly influential mantra.
Banks are more willing to lend to (real) SOEs, knowing that they are less likely to go bust.
The failure of Monarch, the largest British airline to go bust, will affect nearly 900,000 passengers in total.
How did a 35-year-old wine store that became a favorite of the rich suddenly go bust?
The industry group representing small brewers has warned a quarter could go bust due to the coronavirus lockdown.
The industry group representing small brewers has warned a quarter could go bust due to the coronavirus lockdown.
But workers, fearing that their employer might go bust, or needing to win concessions on other matters, often do.
Just a year later, Amazon's competitors in online shopping started to go bust when the dot-com bubble burst.
But he expects many firms will go bust or see their valuations drop significantly in the next two years.
The housing crash caused Fannie and Freddie to go bust, which led to a bailout and a federal takeover.
"Everybody wants to be the biggest grow overnight, but when everybody does that, they just go bust," he said.
But at least four other pension funds that could go bust as soon or sooner will have to wait.
About a third of departures are involuntary, as companies get too small to qualify for public markets or go bust.
State-owned lenders make up around 70% of the system, and nobody thinks the government will let them go bust.
Although China will not want to see Pakistan go bust, it will not want to dictate its macroeconomic policies either.
They are safe, if by "safe" you mean the companies will not go bust, and their dividends are relatively safe.
Care homes are already struggling, thanks to cuts in government funding, and some have indicated that they will go bust.
"If those teams spend far more money than they have and go bust then we can't stop that," he added.
Japanese technology conglomerate SoftBank is under immense pressure to not repeat history from the dot-com era and go bust.
After all, if you go bust supporting various family members, who will have to support you in the years to come?
UNDER-CAPITALIZED COMPANIES Carillion is not the first contractor to go bust and not the first outsourcer to grab the headlines.
One is that an excessively indebted hedge fund could go bust, leading to problems at the institutions that loaned it money.
But the longer that funds stay in deficit, the more likely it is that some will go bust with a shortfall.
Among other things, China must permit banks to compete properly, stop controlling the yuan and allow insolvent firms to go bust.
As the 1980s ended, Donald Trump's big bets began to go bust — Trump Shuttle, the Plaza Hotel, the Atlantic City casinos.
Cryptocurrencies holders also have a claim on a private, rather than a public entity, which could go bust or stop functioning.
But that's completely different from saying the Liverpool council will do whatever they want, then if they go bust, London will pay.
In layman's terms, he has moved from making sure that banks don't go bust to ensuring they don't rip off their customers.
If the tariff war drags on, he warns, companies operating with thin profit margins and a weak capital base could go bust.
The failure of Monarch, the largest British airline to go bust, affected nearly 900,000 passengers in total and hit Saga's tour operations.
One is bankruptcy, a legal process that has been slow to catch on in China (hence bitter disputes when firms go bust).
For hedge funds that make their money gambling on whether companies will go bust, it was an opportunity too tempting to ignore.
They're the guys who fight the hardest to keep the lights on because it's truly shoot for the moon or go bust.
They told me if smaller US companies go bust during this time, bigger American firms like ExxonMobil will just buy their assets.
Profitable banks, after all, are unlikely to go bust, even if the profits come from the more insalubrious corners of the market.
They say that the government should stump up the cash, otherwise small suppliers, which make up most of the market, could go bust.
So if you see a 7, you assume it's a 17 and keep hitting until you're at 18 or higher (or go bust).
Why it matters: Because this is the third Chinese dockless bike-share startup to go bust in recent months, following Bluegogo and Coolqi.
So governments in Britain and America have set up insurance schemes designed to protect workers against the risk that their companies go bust.
When social networks do go bust, many tech companies now provide at least some notice so that its users can save their content.
Not to mention, the government backstop for these plans – the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC) – is itself predicted to go bust by 2025.
Startups in the US, Europe, and Asia face a global recession thanks to the pandemic, and investors have said many could go bust.
" He predicted that it could go bust within the year, and when it does, it will be "the bust heard around the world.
However, Russell Napier, co-founder of independent research provider Electronic Research Interchange (ERIC), said that some research firms could go bust before that.
Within the next five years we are likely to see half of today's legacy media businesses go bust if they cannot start making profits.
Excessive pay demands by Italian unions made Alitalia go bust last year; Air France's intransigent workforce is sending that airline in the same direction.
A company can go bust in many ways: it can close and have its assets sold off, or restructure its debt and keep operating.
But it is also because Australian producers are impressively efficient, and thus able to weather periods of low prices as their competitors go bust.
The fiscal mess he inherited is now so acute that, according to chatter on the bond markets, Illinois could go bust like Puerto Rico.
They have kept the U.S. young ... and Social Security that was supposed to go bust years ago is still working because of (Latino immigration).
But, as prices rise (perhaps by 6900 percent or more), consumers will buy less — and several retailers will probably go bust in the process.
"We think that small or medium sized operators are going to go bust or be forced to join large operators like us," he said.
As early as 1923, Hoover was warning publicly that, sooner or later, the booming economy of the nineteen-twenties was going to go bust.
If the oil price stays this low, many will close down oil rigs in the coming weeks and months, and some will go bust.
It expects many of its smaller competitors to go bust over the next few years, especially now that the subsidy programme has been stopped.
This worked for a while, but when the recession hit in the mid-1970s, rising interest rates made the booming housing economy go bust.
The European aviation sector has been struggling with overcapacity, leading some airlines to offer loss-making fares and a few smaller carriers to go bust.
Most Greek banks would go bust, but stringent capital controls could be imposed, just as they were during the banking crisis in Cyprus in 2013.
Neither AB InBev nor Kraft Heinz is likely to go bust, but in the long run they might end up being broken up yet again.
When the Trustees of Medicare and Social Security recently reported that their trust funds would go bust by 21625 and 2900, respectively, the public yawned.
Suddenly scrapping the artificial exchange rate, for example, would make 60-70% of state-owned firms go bust, destroying 2m jobs, estimates Juan Triana, an economist.
With over a dozen airline failures in Europe since the beginning of 2018, WOW is unlikely to be the last airline to go bust this year.
In fact, it's worse, because if your Volant earphones or cable go bust, the only option to replace them will be to go back to Volant.
The Irish airline warned that elevated oil prices — and consequently fuel costs — would probably cause some of its regional peers to go bust in early 2019.
But CEO Michael O'Leary also issued an industry warning: He expects more airlines to go bust in the near future, opening more business opportunities for Ryanair.
If they cannot pass them on in higher freight rates, "we're all going to go bust," Junichiro Ikeda, boss of Mitsui OSK Lines of Japan, has warned.
" "They're not going to do it, because if China ever did that, and if we ever cut off relationships with China, China would go bust so fast.
That is likely to boost the EU's powers of supervision over systemic clearing houses, but not its ability to limit damage in the event they go bust.
The fund has promised to pick up the bill of any projects that go bust in the early stages, acting as a so-called first-loss guarantor.
The internet in those years was dominated by a ton of consumer-facing dot-coms, many of which would go bust in the next year or two.
Occasionally, state revenues go bust, and it is valuable to know which programs have disproportionately benefited from the boom years so they can take their haircut first.
One explanation is the risk that Sprint, which is heavily indebted and has been struggling for a while, might go bust if it remains a stand-alone entity.
That's how venture investors make outsized profits and justify the billions of dollars they pour annually into start-ups that ultimately go bust or fail to generate returns.
If you invest a big part of your savings in a single stock, however, you are not being compensated for the risk that the company will go bust.
Clubs in Berlin were already under threat from rising rents caused by gentrification, he said, and many would go bust if they closed, even for a few days.
That, plus strict collateralisation rules and safeguards for bondholders if banks go bust, makes covered bonds safer bets than American mortgage-backed securities, according to the bonds' boosters.
And U.S. exporters need to entice buyers other than China back into the mix because if South America's crop goes boom, the U.S. export campaign could go bust.
Either I could go bust his dad for being a drug runner or I can get into some of that drug-running action and be a corrupt cop.
If the currency were suddenly unified and allowed to float, more than half of state-owned firms could go bust, putting hundreds of thousands of Cubans out of work.
In Europe, when airlines go bust, their take-off and landing slots are usually returned to a pool and redistributed unless a buyer is found for the airline business.
Lufax is unlikely to go bust due to the crackdowns, but the impact is likely to be far worse for smaller players whose entire businesses are built around P2P.
High and rising prices for gas have become a political hot potato for the Liberal National government as businesses warned they could go bust if action was not taken.
As its economy has slowed recently and commodity prices have plunged, China has sharply reduced some of its imports, causing a few boom areas, like Western Australia, to go bust.
Smaller companies can deliver outsize returns but their shares are less liquid, and thus more difficult to sell when you need to; the firms are also more likely to go bust.
So in the early 1990s when the collapse of the junk bond market led many companies to go bust and renegotiate their debts, clever tax attorneys came up with a workaround.
If millions of pensions go bust and retirees have no other savings to fall back on, it will be nigh impossible to cut benefits or reduce the drag on this program.
The Times The UK's Financial Conduct Authority on Thursday warned that they are prepared to see some rent-to-own firms go bust after they launched a crackdown on the industry.
Mr Zhu argues that China has to make an example of spendthrift companies and local governments, letting them default or even go bust to get investors to take market forces seriously.
"President Moon has to really deliver in terms of making President Trump feel like this summit isn't going to go bust," said Sue Mi Terry, a former CIA analyst and Korea expert.
Nordic budget airline Primera Air, which began in 2003, this month became the latest European carrier to go bust, telling staff that all flights were being halted and leaving thousands of passengers stranded.
That would be the right thing to do for the future but would release pent-up perils now; defaults would climb, banks would rack up losses and many shadow lenders would go bust.
Banks and insurers have been set tough rules aimed at making them less likely to go bust if markets collapse, and regulators are now looking at the multi-trillion-pound asset management industry.
The commercial real estate sector was the cause of a financial crash in Sweden in the early 1990s which caused two banks to go bust and sent the economy into a deep recession.
Drescher and Steven Weber play Debbie and Stew Klein, a boomer couple who go bust and decide to move in with their adult son (played by Adam Pally) and his wife (Abby Elliott).
He then tried to join the 1960s stock market boom, but only became a stockbroker as it started to go bust – and ultimately devoted his all to creating a thriving financial services business.
"Companies which take such steps at the cost of competitiveness would probably go bust even before the next disaster occurs," said Fujimoto, a professor and executive director at Tokyo University's Manufacturing Management Research Center.
There's no shortage of Americans playing in Japan, but the overwhelming majority wind up there when their big league careers go bust; a small handful of those eventually boomerang back across the Pacific Ocean.
LONDON (Reuters) - Businesses that fail to adapt to climate change will go bust, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said on Wednesday, but others will be able to profit handsomely from funding green investment.
The move raises an obvious question — why didn't SoftBank just walk away, letting WeWork go bust or putting the onus on JPMorgan, which was putting together a rival rescue plan, to bail it out?
"No bank in Europe or the UK will go bust because of a lack of liquidity as the central banks are behind them, providing unlimited liquidity," said Mark Holman, CEO at TwentyFour Asset Management.
The fund for civil servants is projected to go bust by 2031; the one for teachers by 1003; the one for private-sector workers in 2027; and the one for the armed forces in 2020.
Even if the company doesn't go bust, it will have to divert resources to funding the pension shortfall; money that might have been used to increase current pay, or invest in new plant and equipment.
They worry that, as the country ages and its population shrinks, health bills will soar, the pension system will go bust, villages will empty and there will be too few youngsters to care for the elderly.
Despite the tensions between the airlines, all have ultimately been able to thus far navigate the treacherous European airline market, which has seen the likes of Alitalia, Air Berlin and Monarch need rescues or go bust.
LONDON (Reuters) - Banks headquartered in Britain must find a net 4 billion pounds ($5.3 billion) to comply by 2022 with rules aimed at shielding taxpayers when lenders go bust, the Bank of England said on Monday.
LONDON, March 17 (Reuters) - Britain's truckers have warned the government they will go bust and damage the supply of supermarkets and industry if they are not given financial support, as the spread of coronavirus constricts trade.
The brief he received from his biggest investor, SoftBank, which led a $1 billion funding round in September, is to reach a valuation of $100 billion or go bust, but not to settle for the status quo.
He remains sanguine about the prospect that people will lose jobs, and companies will go bust, and says Italians may ultimately forgive the government for such severe economic consequences if the worst-case scenario can be avoided.
"I think the opportunities are going to come, after many businesses go bust in the weeks and months that follow the real exit, which will be on the first of January 2021," she said above the noise.
Few see the current system as sustainable, amid gloomy statistics about falling birth rates and the shaky finances of the main urban pension fund: the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences predicts it will go bust by 2035.
By doing so, it may make the economy more risky at the margin: in a recession, highly-indebted companies are likely to go bust more quickly, whereas companies with lots of equity capital can ride out the storm.
"(One) side of the market is doing projections that the whole Italian (banking) system will go bust because they will be forced to sell loans on a far-sell price, which is quite unrealistic," Castelli told CNBC Tuesday.
LONDON, Oct 2 (Reuters) - Banks headquartered in Britain must find a net 4 billion pounds ($5.3 billion) to comply by 2022 with rules aimed at shielding taxpayers when lenders go bust, the Bank of England said on Monday.
Related: America's Dark History in Philippines Casts Shadow Over Defense Pact But all these assumptions go bust if the world's largest military is operating out of the Philippines, like the US did for most of the Cold War.
The Nets—who saw their early experiment in Brooklyn with aging, former Celtics champions go bust—rank No. 7 on Forbes' list, worth an estimated $1.8 billion despite finishing 11 games back of that desultory Knicks team last season.
Earlier this year, larger rival Hammerson made and eventually dropped an offer of 205.9 pence per share for Intu, which has been hit by the downturn in British bricks-and-mortar retailing seen many high street stalwarts go bust.
They're often bankrolled by nothing more than corporate sponsorship and high-risk debt, and, to no great surprise, they go bust in a few years, only to be replaced by the same thing with a different name after a brief hiatus.
Why "Bernie or bust" will probably go bust in November According to two Gallup polls earlier this year, 51 percent of Americans have something negative to say about Hillary Clinton, and 60 percent have a negative opinion of Donald Trump.
Banks follow global rules set by the Basel Committee, while European insurers are guided by the Solvency II regime that requires financial institutions to set aside a certain amount of capital to protect themselves from losses if clients go bust.
Apple Music, after all, didn't exactly light the world on fire at launch, and Apple's got no shortage or revenue streams at the moment, so it certainly won't go bust if its billion-dollar investment fails to pay off overnight.
Its strategy means it avoids the youngest and riskiest startups, so fewer of its investments go bust, but because Lead Edge invests when companies are more valuable, its returns can be lower than other venture capital firms, the partners said.
Broadly, this can merely mean economic mismanagement, such as allowing inflation to accelerate too rapidly (thereby damaging the real value of fixed-income investments like bonds) or precipitating a recession (which would cause companies to go bust and hurt equities and corporate bonds).
Lately, there has been a growing concern that global capital markets are being split up by national regulators forcing foreign banks to hold large amounts of capital and liquidity locally, and not just at the parent level, in case they go bust.
Those developments — and Detroit's bankruptcy — have shown that Washington will not bail out government pension funds that go bust; officials had to patch together money from other sources, and even then, the retirees of Prichard, Central Falls and Detroit had their benefits cut.
In fact, quite the opposite: As a teenager, her family was saddled with thousands of dollars in credit card debts and ever-increasing rents on their apartment in Singapore after the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis caused her parents' textiles business to go bust.
LONDON, March 22 (Reuters) - Several European banks are being closely monitored by the agency responsible for closing lenders which go bust in the euro zone, but none are failing or about to fail, the head of the Single Resolution Board (SRB) said on Wednesday.
"Eventually, Micron's end markets will go bust as they get flooded with new supply and pricing comes down, ... but for the moment, it's still very much in boom mode and that could last quite a while before this move runs out of juice," Cramer said.
"It is impossible to stop a recession because people are staying at home and are not spending, but this minimizes the collateral damage where lots of companies go bust and the recession ends up being a lot deeper," AMP Chief Economist Shane Oliver told Reuters.
"It is impossible to stop a recession because people are staying at home and are not spending, but this minimizes the collateral damage where lots of companies go bust and the recession ends up being a lot deeper," AMP Chief Economist Shane Oliver told Reuters.
Presidential candidates have yet to present a plan for what happens if these companies—which meet a significant portion of the world's oil demand and produce a sizable chunk of its emissions—go bust, leaving the workers and communities who depend on them stranded.
"It has been a bumpy road since mid April but Greece can make it and not go bust until the end of May or early June by also using pension funds cash reserves and piling up state arrears if needed," a senior government official told Reuters.
" According to Warren's agenda, the industry's practices would be curtailed by new rules and regulations -- like a requirement to put the firms on the hook for workers' pension obligations and tightening bankruptcy laws "so that when companies go bust, workers have a better shot at getting pay and benefits and executives can't pocket special bonuses.
"After the financial crisis there was an intense debate about the issue of 'too big to fail', and whether banks should be allowed to grow so big that they can't be allowed to go bust," Roeseler told Handelsblatt, adding that if two big banks were to merge now, the same problem would be created again.
The goals of the law were twofold, on the one hand hoping to tighten the regulatory screws to make future bailouts less likely and on the other hand trying to bring some order to the question of what to do with large banks that do go bust in a way that risks a crisis.
It's something that is, as [Bank of England Governor] Mark Carney said [Wednesday], ... not a financial crisis, it's not a business cycle that had boomed and has to go bust, so, we could take a very sharp hit here across the world economy in the first half of the year and, in fact, rebound from it.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE in an early morning tweet on Wednesday launched another attack on the press, predicting that media organizations will "all go bust" when he leaves office.
Rather than raise taxes on an already overtaxed middle class, GOP leaders are leading the fight to allow new government employees to choose their own investment strategies through a defined-contribution plan, which acts like a 401K that the taxpayers cannot be held responsible for bailing out when sweetheart deals go bust and the problems caused by mismanagement come home to roost.
"When I was eight I used a muzzle loader to kill my first doe / These days I go down to Walmart and they set 'em in the back / Some people wanna take 'em away / Why don't you go bust some boys that's sellin' crack," the first verse goes, with a chorus that extols the listener that they'll have to kill him to take his guns.
Private equity firms are particularly prone to risk making since they raise "use it or lose it" funds; get 2000% of the profits but bear almost none of the losses; have engine rooms filled with young partners and others desperate to join their ranks, under pressure to "do deals"; and don't care if some companies they invest in go bust provided their portfolio is profitable as a whole.
At institutional investors, such as insurance companies and beleaguered pension funds that must earn an average return of 7% a year for all times or go bust, the people who made the decision to buy these things have one hope: Collect the fat yield for a while, personally pocket the bonuses over the period, and then change firms or retire and let someone else deal with the fallout.

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