Products
in sentence
2435 examples of Products in a sentence
Similarly, changes in the construction industry, which is turning to more efficiently produced
products
like cross-laminated timber (CLT), can help reduce carbon pollution.
The term “shadow banking” gained prominence during the subprime mortgage crisis in the United States to account for non-bank assets in the capital market, such as money-market funds, asset-backed securities, and leveraged derivative products, usually funded by investment banks and large institutional investors.
It is ultimately funded through retail bank deposits, banks’ wealth-management products, and private equity.
This requires, first and foremost, determining who – the investor or the bank – bears the underlying default risk of high-yield wealth-management
products.
Perhaps the biggest challenges facing China are raising real returns on financial liabilities (deposits and wealth-management products) and promoting more balanced lending.
The Underachieving Education BusinessNEW YORK – Capitalism has produced many high-quality
products
and services, from smartphones to high-speed transport and compelling entertainment.
There is no doubt that China currently is suffering from the global collapse in demand for a wide range of manufactured
products.
The strong Yen led to weak demand for Japanese products, and an inability to surmount the pile of bad debts through export-led growth.
Finally, the price index used by the Census Bureau fails to capture the important contributions of new
products
and product improvements to Americans’ standard of living.
But that price index does not reflect new
products
or improvements to existing goods and services.
Thus, if everyone’s money incomes rose by 2% from one year to the next, while the prices of all goods and services also rose by 2%, the official calculation would show no change in real incomes, even if new
products
and important quality improvements contributed to our wellbeing.
But the last one – raising taxes on tobacco
products
– is deserving of careful attention.
They make tobacco
products
less affordable, helping addicts quit and preventing non-users – especially young people, women, and the poor – from ever starting.
The tobacco industry and other vested interests argue that tax increases on tobacco
products
fuel illicit trade.
Its products, from iPhones to iPads to MacBooks, have captured consumers’ imaginations, remade markets, and earned the company and its shareholders huge sums of money.
Meanwhile, its staggeringly successful
products
are generating still more cash to handle and stockpile.
Some succeed, sell their products, and find themselves pulling in more cash than they need.
Great companies take that cash and invest it in even better products, taking the firm to new heights.
New
products
stall, old
products
are not as profitable as they once were (because competitors figure out how to make something better), and markets and consumers move on.
Will those
products
last, or will they be superseded?
Were those products’ success the result of a unique Apple asset, namely Steve Jobs, or is the company well positioned to produce the next big thing?
Meanwhile, it can finance its next new thing from the cash that its great
products
will continue to generate.
Therefore new financial
products
must be registered and approved by the appropriate authorities before being sold.
While manufacturing jobs might be lost, retail jobs were gained, and spending – not just on Chinese goods, but also on local
products
and investments – rose.
The availability of inexpensive
products
from China has long placed downward pressure on prices even of non-Chinese goods in the US market.
In response to increased trade restrictions, China could limit imports of aircraft or agricultural
products
such as soybeans from the US.
Indeed, universities may be the most consistently performing
products
of long-term capital investment, especially if one is inclined to think about social and economic “investment” in exactly the same terms.
Contemporary Russians consume competitive products: Nestle cereals, Mercedes cars, Hollywood movies.
Thus, Russians trade oil for the
products
of knowledge.
These findings have intrigued firms, investors, and corporate-governance experts ever since they were made public, and have led shareholder advisers to develop governance-based investment
products.
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