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・ Hot Shots (album)
・ Hot Shots (Canadian TV series)
・ Hot Shots (dance companies)
・ Hot Shots (The Wire)
・ Hot Metal Bridge (journal)
・ Hot metal gas forming
・ Hot metal typesetting
・ Hot Mikado
・ Hot milk cake
・ Hot Millions
・ Hot mirror
・ Hot Mix 5
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・ Hot Molasses
・ Hot Money
Hot money
・ Hot Money (film)
・ Hot Moves
・ Hot n Cold
・ Hot Natured
・ Hot Neptune
・ Hot News
・ Hot Nigga
・ Hot Noon (or 12 O'Clock for Sure)
・ Hot Number
・ Hot Numbers
・ Hot Nuts
・ Hot Off the Griddle
・ Hot on the One
・ Hot on the Tracks


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Hot money : ウィキペディア英語版
Hot money
In economics, hot money is the flow of funds (or capital) from one country to another in order to earn a short-term profit on interest rate differences and/or anticipated exchange rate shifts. These speculative capital flows are called 'hot money' because they can move very quickly in and out of markets, potentially leading to market instability.〔CRS Report for Congress, July 21, 2008: China’s “Hot Money” Problems, by Micheal F. Martin and Wayne M. Morrison〕
==Illustration of hot money flows==
The following simple example illustrates the phenomenon of hot money: In the beginning of 2011, the national average rate of one year certificate of deposit in the United States is 0.95%. In contrast, China's benchmark one year deposit rate is 3%. The Chinese currency (renminbi) is seriously undervalued against the world's major trading currencies and therefore is likely to appreciate against the US dollar in the coming years. Given this situation, if an investor in the US deposits his or her money in a Chinese bank, the investor would get a higher return than that in the situation in which he or she deposits money in a US bank. This makes China a prime target for hot money inflows. This is just an example for illustration. In reality, hot money takes many different forms of investment.

The following description may help further illustrate this phenomenon: "one country or sector in the world economy experiences a financial crisis; capital flows out in a panic; investors seek a more attractive destination for their money. In the next destination, capital inflows create a boom that is accompanied by rising indebtedness, rising asset prices and booming consumption - for a time. But all too often, these capital inflows are followed by another crisis. Some commentators describe these patterns of capital flow as “hot money” that flows from one sector or country to the next and leaves behind a trail of destruction."〔Hot Money and Serial Financial Crises, Anton Korinek, IMF Economic Review (2011)〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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