Stocks
in sentence
540 examples of Stocks in a sentence
The use of multiple film
stocks
add a lot of texture to the story.
A "Rashamon" of the sleazy Hollywood set, the film splitters the July 1981 Wonderland murders through a variety of angles (and film stocks), but mostly through the filter of John Holmes' coked out weasel brain.
He
stocks
up on perfume and air fresheners in the meantime.
Mutual fund managers have two styles of investing in
stocks.
The abrupt jump to exterior for the last couple of minutes (and very tame they are too) is very noticeable, the film
stocks
and looks just not matching at all.
But net foreign purchases of US
stocks
for the first ten months of 2003 are still positive (although down about 90% from the same period of 2000, the bubble-peak year).
The market may not value US
stocks
perfectly, but it is not irrational to believe that the corporate scandals are not a major factor.
Making matters worse, when the current stock-market correction began in early June, Chinese regulators relaxed margin-buying restrictions, while encouraging state-owned enterprises and asset managers to purchase more
stocks.
Given relatively strong economic growth, rising prices seemed justified until about March, when the market, driven by mostly thinly traded small- and mid-cap stocks, shot to over 5,000, placing the economy at risk.
Wall street 1929 all over againCAMBRIDGE: Any writer of financial fiction would have an easy time setting the stage-ballooning valuations of
stocks
founded on exaggerated beliefs about the impact of new technologies on productivity, and gross over-confidence in the American model, are placed side-by-side with an all-pervasive global financial fragility, evidenced in the Asian crises, a moribund Japan, and chaotic Russia.
Stocks
on the New York exchange are overpriced.
The value of
stocks
is almost twice GDP, far more than ever in history and at least a quarter higher than at the peak of Japan's bubble a decade ago.
By the Federal Reserve's measure,
stocks
are overpriced by 40%.
High rates and a deep fall of
stocks
- 20 or 30% - will surely put the US economy close to zero growth or worse.
Lower long-term interest rates and a weaker dollar are good news for US stock markets, and Trump’s pro-business agenda is still good for individual
stocks
in principle, even if the air has been let out of the so-called Trump reflation trade.
It is no coincidence that bank
stocks
were hit hardest in the recent financial crash.
What will this landmark change mean for prices of such assets as
stocks
and homes?
The higher interest rates go, the better are investments in bonds, which compete with investments in other assets such as
stocks
or homes.
That is because home buyers are mostly ordinary people with little financial sophistication, unlike the professionals who trade in
stocks.
Even for officials as highly competent as those at the BEA, it is impossible to keep track of all of the
stocks
and flows in the international economy.
As my colleagues and I put it in our book-length report Nuclear Weapons: The State of Play 2015, launched in Geneva, Vienna, and Washington in March: “On the evidence of the size of their weapons arsenals, fissile material stocks, force modernization plans, stated doctrine and known deployment practices, all nine nuclear-armed states foresee indefinite retention of nuclear weapons and a continuing role for them in their security policies.”
This is odd, because effects on consumption from changes in financial wealth
(stocks
and bonds) are small.
Many of these highly indebted governments have large
stocks
of gold, which they may decide to dump to reduce their debts.
Equity prices, as measured by the price-earnings ratio of the S&P 500 stocks, are now nearly 60% above their historical average.
Historical experience implies that normalization would raise long-term interest rates by about two percentage points, precipitating substantial corrections in the prices of bonds, stocks, and commercial real estate.
Instead, the decline in Indian
stocks
reflected foreign investors’ liquidity problems: they withdrew from holdings in India because they needed their money back home, not because it wasn’t growing for them.
This has helped us to maintain adequate stocks, broaden access to essential medicines, and, we hope, reduce the number of malaria deaths in developing countries’ rural areas.
Moreover, employment gains have been robust during the first six months of Trump’s presidency, with more than a million jobs created, and
stocks
are soaring to new highs, both of which are fueling higher consumption.
To be sure, Trump has eviscerated the Environmental Protection Agency (which has helped coal mining), softened financial oversight (great for bank stocks), and has shown little interest in anti-trust enforcement (a welcome development for tech monopolies like Amazon and Google).
Nonetheless, when prices collapsed, the government moved fast, suspending trading of a substantial number of
stocks
and pursuing price-keeping operations that resembled those pursued by Japan in the 1990s.
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