So we expect this 1300 number to balloon in the coming days.
2
There was a new balloon of light growing quickly to the north.
3
But there are fears that could balloon and overwhelm shaky health services.
4
Ullii had said something similar before they'd gone up in the balloon.
5
The balloon of his hopes lay pricked and flat in the dust.
1
It was also the lowest level for that month since 1993, after Japan's economicbubble popped.
2
But are we simply creating another economicbubble?
3
There is a new economicbubble forming, and it appears to be morphing into Alan Kelly's head.
4
They never witnessed the Celtic Tiger; their parents were in financial difficulty long before the economicbubble burst.
5
Galleries were falling over themselves to produce ultra-expensive limited editions for a growing collectors' market buoyed by the economicbubble.
1
But, where some experts see recovery, others see just a speculativebubble.
2
Analysts at Goldman Sachs have dismissed the speculativebubble argument.
3
For now, market authorities appear more worried about falling share prices than a new speculativebubble.
4
For now, the risk is mitigated by a big commodity price retreat from 2011's speculativebubble.
5
Fellow value investor Howard Marks thinks it's a speculativebubble, as does hedge fund icon Ray Dalio.
1
Speculation is rife and some economists and businessmen see a property marketbubble.
2
This option explains the growing stock- marketbubble -money has to go somewhere.
3
Is this that rare thing -a bond marketbubble?
4
But policymakers have rolled out new restrictions in recent months on concerns of a potential marketbubble.
5
The end of a property marketbubble in Ireland saw commercial real estates prices fall two thirds.
1
Economists, however, are not worried about an asset pricebubble just yet.
2
There has been a lot of talk recently about a house pricebubble.
3
They don't believe there is evidence of a house pricebubble.
4
But the bank does not believe there is a pricebubble.
5
Japan's asset pricebubble collapsed in 1991, but banks kept refinancing struggling borrowers.
1
Meanwhile, it has started a speculativemania that almost rivals the tulip excitement in Holland.
2
Critics call cryptocurrencies a speculativemania that will end in tears for thousands of retail investors.
3
As a necessary consequence prices are nominally increased and the speculativemania very soon seizes upon the public mind.
4
Mr Nyberg said "irrational forces" were also at play during the boom years and highlighted a "national speculativemania .
5
As the South Sea and Tulip bubbles demonstrated, speculativemanias predate central banks.
Ús de financial bubble en anglès
1
Also read: Balloon payments: A vehicle scheme that could burst your financialbubble
2
GDP had been artificially inflated by the housing and financialbubble.
3
I experienced the financialbubble and subsequent crash in Iceland.
4
A financialbubble, the billionaire businessman said in an interview with The Washington Post published on Saturday.
5
A financialbubble, he said.
6
Warsh has criticized the Fed's aggressive monetary easing, and has said he was worried about the risk of a financialbubble.
7
This is the case right up to the financialbubble that ended in the 2008 crisis, which Greenspan's Fed helped to fuel.
8
Japan already has endured nearly two decades of lost economic growth and weak political leadership after its financialbubble collapsed in the early 1990s.
9
For most it was a time of plenty, optimism, and indolence unparalleled since second-century Rome or the financialbubble at the end of twentieth-century America.
10
Their real advantages could not be obscured by the bursting of financialbubbles.
11
But the question that was delicately sidestepped was: WHO is responsible for financialbubbles?
12
Official INACTION is as conducive to the inflation of financialbubbles as is official ACTION.
13
Professor Shiller is known for his works on financialbubbles, as outlined in his book Irrational Exuberance.
14
Financialbubbles get a bum rap.
15
The study also bears out the Fed's regrettable tendency to clean up after financialbubbles but not stop them.