Credit Worthiness Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Credit Worthiness with everyone.
Top Credit Worthiness Quotes

On the contrary, a trust in the staying power and travel-worthiness of such good should encourage us to credit the possibility of a world where respect for the validity of every tradition
will issue in the creation and maintenance of a salubrious political space. — Seamus Heaney

I have long considered it one of God's greatest mercies that the future is hidden from us. If it were not, life would surely be unbearable. — Eugene Forsey

If you're 20 years old, you've grown up without buying albums. — Andy Summers

I love, love, love apricot baby food. My closet in the kitchen is filled with jars of it. I love Lucky Charms and Cocoa Pebbles cereal. I love my purple couch, and I love dancing. I used to have the best stuffed animals, but Samson [her dog] ate them. — Alicia Silverstone

Credit worthiness is like virginity, it can be preserved but not restored very easily, so it is crazy to play around with it. — Warren Buffett

So what is the role that credit default swaps can play in an economy? Well my feeling is that if these things actually will now be traded on either exchanges or some kind of central clearing, they are going to be a very good measure of the credit worthiness of different companies. — Robert F. Engle

It is better to be rich, happy and healthy, rather than poor, miserable and sick! — Samson Soledad

Cruelty links all three primitives [pleasure, pain, and desire]: Spinoza defines it as the desire to inflict pain on someone we love or pity. Financial speaking, cruelty is analogous to a convertible bond whose debt and equity depend on three economic underliers: the stock price, the level of interest rates, and the credit worthiness of the company's debt. — Emanuel Derman

It's not uncommon for people to overvalue the importance of demonstrating their competence and power, often at the expense of demonstrating their warmth. — Amy Cuddy

Acting responsibly is not a matter of strengthening our reason but of deepening our feelings for the welfare of others. — Jostein Gaarder