Stock
in sentence
2378 examples of Stock in a sentence
According to the standard formulation,
stock
prices tend to revert toward the present value of estimated future earnings (including growth in those earnings), discounted at the so-called “risk-free rate,” augmented by an equity risk premium.
Monetary policy may have bolstered
stock
prices in two ways, either lowering the discount rate by compressing the equity risk premium, or simply reducing risk-free rates for long enough to raise the present value of stocks.
A billionaire telecommunications tycoon, Thaksin presided over the trebling of his family’s assets in the
stock
market.
Optimists like to point out that emerging markets have accumulated a huge
stock
of international reserves since 2010, enabling them to self-insure against a run on their currencies or their foreign debt.
The data are not fully reliable or comparable across countries, but quick calculations reveal that there are many emerging markets where such short-term debt is 50% or more of the
stock
of international reserves.
Alternatively, it may intervene and sell international reserves, reducing the
stock
available to repay dollar debt.
After all, EU policymakers don’t know if they should put more
stock
in the heated rhetoric of Trump and his trade adviser, Peter Navarro, or in the more conciliatory words of Gary Cohn, the former Goldman Sachs executive now leading the US National Economic Council.
A fall in the Thai housing market can cause the Thai baht to collapse in ways that could not have happened before; a fall in the Indian rupee can cause a meltdown of the Indian
stock
market in ways inconceivable ten years ago.
Suppose a New Yorker buys shares in the Mumbai
stock
market.
While a fall in the exchange rate with no decline in
stock
prices gives Indian investors no reason to flee the
stock
market, if sufficient numbers of foreign investors begin to sell,
stock
prices will decline so that Indian investors, too, sell their stocks.
In 1996, New York's
stock
market broke all records, rising to greater heights since.
But in Tokyo, Taipei, Bangkok and Seoul,
stock
markets are gloomy.
But
stock
markets love nothing more than frustrating politicians and making pundits look foolish.
Instead, Wall Street and European
stock
markets have bounced back after every setback and continue their stratospheric rise.
Part of this can be explained by misunderstandings about the relationship between
stock
market prices and economic growth.
Prosperity, it was felt, would incite inflation, provoke high interest rates, triggering a
stock
market rout.
More intriguing are relative movements in global
stock
market prices.
Intriguingly,
stock
markets in Eastern Europe and Latin America have done better than in Asia, but these fledgling markets will have to operate for many more years before worthwhile comparisons can be made.
The
stock
markets, particularly in Europe, represent only a small cross-section of businesses.
The answer -- by buying shares in Coca-Cola, Walt Disney, Intel or Microsoft: all rose faster than emerging
stock
markets; all enjoy the fruits of growth in the emerging markets; all are traded on Wall Street.
To see why, note that being long and selling short in the
stock
market has an asymmetric risk/reward profile.
SKS raised more equity from investors such as Sequoia and Odyssey Capital, before going public on the Indian
stock
exchange in 2010, raising about $358 million at a valuation exceeding $1.6 billion.
It, too, is essentially a balance-sheet problem, based on the
stock
of CO2 in the atmosphereOn its current trajectory, the world has only 3-4 decades (or less) before atmospheric CO2 reaches levels that disrupt climate patterns, with catastrophic consequences for the environment and, in turn, economic and social systems.
Over the last decade, Fortune 500 companies in areas like information technology, pharmaceuticals, and energy have spent more than $3 trillion buying back shares in order to boost
stock
prices,
stock
options, and executive pay.
Russia’s
stock
exchange is collapsing.
Waging Peace in SomaliaMOGADISHU – Later this week, an important high-level conference on Somalia in London, sponsored by the British government and attended by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, will present an unprecedented opportunity to take
stock
of – and reinvigorate – the international community’s engagement in Somalia.
Workable solutions will lie not in ideology but rather in capitalizing on what the nation has to offer to the global economy: its
stock
of pristine ecology.
Financial Gain, Economic PainNEW YORK – In the past three months, global asset prices have rebounded sharply:
stock
prices have increased by more than 30% in advanced economies, and by much more in most emerging markets.
Is the recovery in
stock
prices another bear-market rally or the beginning of a bullish trend?
But we should also take
stock
of missed opportunities in the wake of the Cold War's peaceful end.
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