Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Bankrupts. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Bankrupts Quotes And Sayings by 89 Authors including Najib Razak,Mokokoma Mokhonoana,Tom Allen,George Herbert,Benjamin Disraeli for you to enjoy and share.
People willy-nilly borrow for consumption. Civil servants willy-nilly borrow for consumption and then wonder why they don't have enough money at the end of the month.
When the going gets tough: the poor close their eyes, the rich open their wallets.
The Republicans in the House and the Bush administration are bankrupting this country.
Take heed of credit decaid, and people that have nothing.
Debt is a prolific mother of folly and of crime.
People may live as much retired from the world as they please; but sooner or later, before they are aware, they will find themselves debtor or creditor to somebody.
It is said that the world is in a state of bankruptcy, that the world owes the world more than the world can pay.
The No. 1 cause of bankruptcies is medical bills.
Unlimited activity, of whatever kind, must end in bankruptcy.
Anybody who has ever been in business, anybody who has ever paid bills, anybody who has ever lived in a serious adult life knows that indebtedness is a killer.
In times of crisis, cash is king.
I'm bankrupt without love.
A pauper in the midst of wealth.
Some people say that leverage is the secret of the rich, but I believe it's actually the secret of the bankrupt.
Personal finances are like people's personal health, crucial and tragic to the sufferer but tedious to the listener.
The biggest threat to the common working man is a bloated central government that is bankrupt.
The Court today holds the Congress may say that some of the poor are too poor even to go bankrupt. I cannot agree.
Medical debts are the number-one cause of bankruptcy in America.
I can tell you that when you're counting every penny, knowing that you are a single bad decision away from bankruptcy, you inevitably lose focus on what really matters for your business.
Borrowers are nearly always ill-spenders, and it is with lent money that all evil is mainly done and all unjust war protracted.
A lot of wealthy people, they don't realize they have the alternatives of spending the money for good.
The only people that a bank will loan money to is the very people who don't need it.
The perils of credit and debt, especially perilous in the computer age, have long been acknowledged in pop culture, but very infrequently by TV.
There are lots of businesses that are well in excess of $9 billion that have gone into bankruptcy, that have been mismanaged. And that has not served anyone very well.
Someone has to pick up the tab when people get out of repaying their own debts.
On one level, going bust didn't bother me. It was the 80s, and there wasn't the stigma about bankruptcy that you might think. My mates weren't bothered. My dad was in business.. he knew that it happened, too. He loaned me the money to bail me out, and I got a loan from the bank to pay him back.
For the personality, bankruptcy or failure may be a disaster. For the soul, it may be grist for its strangely joyful mill, and a condition it has been secretly engineering for years.
There are people in Europe that struggled during an entire life to save as much as possible in banks that bankrupted and left them homeless.
In the future the question will not be, "Are people credit-worthy", but rather, "Are banks people-worthy?"
To bankrupt a fool, give him information.
You seem to be bankrupt - morally as well as financially
An entrepreneur in debt is an entrepreneur in business.
The disease of debt has reached the top. And once it reaches the top it has no-where else to go.
Look round, the wrecks of play behold; Estates dismember'd, mortgaged, sold! Their owners now to jails confin'd, Show equal poverty of mind.
Lenders to trade their long-term income streams for short-term cash. Say
The years thunder by.
The dreams of youth grow dim
where they lie
caked in dust on the shelves of patience.
Before we know it, the tomb is sealed.
Where, then lies the answer?
In choice.
Which shall it be:
Bankruptcy of Purse
or Bankruptcy of Life?
A country does not go bankrupt.
What good is wealth if one is spiritually, emotionally, and mentally bankrupt?
Creditors have better memories than debtors.
Know where your money is because we're going to see bank failures, one after another.
I'll tell you something: I'll always be broke. It's a tradition in the family. My grandfather was a bankrupt. My father was a pauper. My uncle was a miser: he went crazy because he couldn't find any money to mise over.
learned paupers." "It
Bankruptcy is like losing your virginity. It doesn't hurt the next time.
I'm a hard-nosed businessman, that if a company is paying its way, increasing profits for thirty-odd consecutive years, you don't put it into receivership.
Trapped in the bureaucracy nightmare, real families suffer when the big banks and their servicers force foreclosures. The emotional toll on children packing up their rooms and on parents struggling to find a temporary roof is a deep one.
The banks are not lending, at least from what I see. They were so wild and reckless back in the good times that they got burned terribly.
We tend to focus on assets and forget about debts. Financial security requires facing up to the big picture: assets minus debts.
dipping into savings.
When a man could no longer pay his debts, the soldiers would seize the tabletop he would be using to display his wares (banco) and break it (rotta). Hence, bankruptcy.
Who takes out a home loan and doesn't make the first payment?" asked Danny Moses, putting the matter one way. "Who the fuck lends money to people who can't make the first payment?" asked Eisman, putting it another. When
We do not project power from bankruptcy court. We're borrowing a million dollars a minute. It's got to stop somewhere.
the Icelandic banks are the only financial institutions in the world that have gone bankrupt with an A rating.
People clinging to job security, savings, retirement plans, and other relics will be the ones financially-ravaged from 2010-2020, the most volatile world-changing decade in history.
What can you do in order to save your own banks?
Most people become bankrupt through having invested too heavily in the prose of life.
How does the richest country in the history of the world fail to pay its bills?
Those have a short Lent who owe money to be paid at Easter.
When you - when you - and this is still going on today - are making your money by pushing paper around, when you should be making your money by investing venture capital in various job-creating things, that makes it much harder to recover.
Broke is temporary, poor is eternal.
We need to ensure the poorest in the planet - who will be hardest hit by the financial crisis - are not forgotten.
There's a rumour going around that states cannot go bankrupt. This rumour is not true.
Irrational lenders come and go - mostly they go!
The creditors are proving impossible to deal with and short of a sudden appearance on the scene of wealthy art patrons, we are going to be turned out of this dear little house where I led a simple life and was able to work so well. I do not know what will become of us ...
We are in the midst of a once-in-a-century credit tsunami. Central banks and governments are being required to take unprecedented measures. Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders' equity are in a state of shocked disbelief.
Let honesty and industry be thy constant companions, and spend one penny less than thy clear gains; then shall thy pocket begin to thrive; creditors will not insult, nor want oppress, nor hungerness bite, nor nakedness freeze thee
If you owe $50, you're a delinquent account. If you owe $50,000, you're a small businessmen. If you owe $50 million, you're a corporation. If you owe $50 billion, your the government.
You are pitiful isolated individuals; you are bankrupts; your role is played out. Go where you belong from now on - into the dustbin of history!
Our checks are pale. Our wallets are invalids.
Past due, past due, is what our bills are saying
and yet we kiss in every corner, scuffing the dust
and the cat. Love rises like bread as we go bust.
The people who did the collateralized mortgage obligations, sold them to pension funds, then sold them short, then bought credit default swap insurance on them, are just amazing. They are a law unto themselves.
Bankruptcies of governments have, on the whole, done less harm to mankind than their ability to raise loans.
The greatest genius is the most indebted person.
People think when you have a, quote, 'bank failure,' that that is the end of the bank. And it isn't necessarily.
In the midst of life we are in debt.
As an entrepreneur, I knew that if my company failed, I could always try again. So I often felt that the only real risk of true financial ruin came from the possibility of a serious illness that either exceeded my insurance plans lifetime limits, or was not covered due to rescission.
Not everyone is a debtor who wishes to be; not everyone who wishes makes creditors.
Within a few months in 2008, household finances were crushed as asset values fell, millions of jobs were lost, countless credit cards were canceled, and thousands of homes were foreclosed on.
Great spenders are bad lenders.
The entitlement state has driven us into insolvency.
There are lots of families who - who make irresponsible purchases. There are also a lot of families who have debt on credit cards because they use those credit cards to pay for medical bills.
The secret of the difficulties of those people who make a great deal of money, and yet are always in want of it, is this-they throw it away as soon as they get it on the first whim or extravagance that strikes them, and have nothing left to meet ordinary expenses or discharge old debts.
Many come to seek fortunes who only find trouble and sorrow, and then they throw the blame on chance, and forget the true cause is their own idleness and vice and want of commonsense. Whoever is sober and industrious, honest and economical, gets on.
For too long, tricks and traps in mortgages, credit cards, and other financial transactions have stripped wealth from working families.
Debt is a bottomless sea.
Complicated financial stuff was being dreamed up for the sole purpose of lending money to people who could never repay it.
The Death of Money is an engrossing account of the massive stresses accumulating in the global financial system, especially since the 2008 financial crisis. Jim Rickards is a natural teacher. Any serious student of financial crises and their root causes needs to read this book.
The immense and ever increasing sums which the state wrings from the people are never enough for it; it mortgages the income of future generations, and steers resolutely toward bankruptcy.
What would the daughters of the rich do with themselves if the poor ceased to exist?
Who among us would ask our children for a loan, so we could spend money we do not have on things we do not need?
Credit card issuers and HELOC lenders are like fair-weather friends: They cozy up to you in good times, but when the economy heads south, they abandon you faster than Usain Bolt runs the 100 meters.
Without giving specific names, most of the significant American banks, the larger banks, are bankrupt, totally bankrupt,
The natural consequences of unearned wealth in undisciplined hands.
[Debt] It has driven thousands to drink, and the worry and anxiety it has created have literally taken the lives of many of our ablest men. It has prostrated individuals, enterprises and nations ...
We have been in recess since July, and during that time there have been a fuel crisis, a Danish no vote, the collapse of the Euro and a war in the middle east, but what is our business tomorrow? The Insolvency Bill [Lords]. It ought be called the Bankruptcy Bill [Commons], because we play no role.
Poverty demoralizes. A man in debt is so far a slave; and Wall-street thinks it easy for a millionaire to be a man of his word, aman of honor, but, that, in failing circumstances, no man can be relied on to keep his integrity.
Unfortunately, in a recession, the people who suffer the most aren't the rich, but the wanna-be rich and the poor.
How poor are they that have have not patients.
I fear that the rising personal bankruptcies and repossessions are the first signs of bigger problems to come and personal debt - Gordon Brown's legacy to millions of Britain's families - will hang like a millstone around the neck of the British people for years to come.
The good times were over. Nobody gave a shit and nobody had any money and if they had any, they kept it.
Lack of money rivets us firmly to the ground, one's wings are clipped.
Many more people could ride out the storm-tossed waves in their economic lives if they had their year's supply of food ... and were debt-free. Today we find that many have followed this counsel in reverse: they have at least a year's supply of debt and are food-free.