Germany's system of co-determination provides for equal participation of managers and employee representatives on companies' supervisory boards. |
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Customers' satisfaction scores were based on their perceptions of companies' prices, quality, and ability to meet expectations. |
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Many of these companies' share prices have held up well in the bear market of the last three years. |
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The move is designed to streamline the prosecution of people who make false claims, and forms part of the companies' new, tough approach. |
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Certainly, there are some good reasons why most property companies' shares should trade at a modest discount to their net asset value. |
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While the markets are vacillating, this is as a good a time as any to brush up on some of your companies' fundamentals. |
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Over time, this brand value supports and enhances the companies' corporate valuations. |
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The market's decline has hurt the companies' brokerage business, but the bear market won't last forever, Williams says. |
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Spear phishing is the most popular way to win entry to big companies' systems. |
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Workers at foreign companies' nonunion shops make roughly the same in wages and benefits as unionized employees in Detroit. |
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Remember, these thinly capitalized companies' insurance buttress truly enormous quantities of securities. |
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In addition, the rate of product approvals by US regulators has slowed, hampering companies' growth plans. |
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Those currencies promote economic diversity and direct local resources to local pockets rather than to global companies' vaults. |
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Some companies' trailers in the lower price range are cheapened in a lot of areas. |
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In the last few months, we've found that chicanery sometimes extends to companies' nutrition information. |
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We passed our damning evidence to the police, who swooped on the companies' premises and arrested the masterminds behind the bogus operation. |
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The news that GABA receptors constitute a family of proteins was music to drug companies' ears. |
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Many investors would not pass up the opportunity to buy common stock in these companies, so why do so many avoid these companies' bonds? |
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Executives received millions in compensation for their companies' superior performance. |
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The femtocell requires good interaction with other companies' routers, which is tricky, and people might just use the broadband. |
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Koizumi told reporters that many incidents of piracy have occurred despite shipping companies' own efforts to protect themselves. |
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A simple and effective process that recovers and purifies organic acids from petrochemical companies' waste acid stream has been developed. |
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In addition, both companies' target markets have been converging at the edges, which caused problems with cross-selling agreements between them. |
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The companies' joint strategy has expanded the scope of traditional made-to-measure production into the mass customization arena. |
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Although the law now protects companies' trademark when it comes to cybersquatting, registering people's name is still a grey area. |
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That meant the companies' own garages got fuel cheaper than independent rivals, who were priced out of the market. |
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The region absorbs 18 percent of US exports and accounts for about 21 percent of US companies' overseas investments. |
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Senex Financial, the 65-employee company Neff founded in 1998, buys health-care companies' accounts receivable. |
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Sentence was adjourned to June 7 for the executive to produce his companies' accounts. |
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In recent years, falling stock markets have wiped out a large chunk of many companies' reserves. |
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If the financial bottom line was the only measure of the companies' worth, there would probably be no argument. |
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For the anoraks, there are also graphs on both companies' homepages which show how much electricity each part of the island is using per day. |
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This has been our policy for some time and is in line with most other train companies' policies. |
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In these cases, the companies' revenues were divided in half and apportioned between the two countries. |
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These include associated companies' relief and relief for reconstructions or amalgamations of companies. |
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The companies' management teams, meanwhile, were becoming inbred and sycophantic. |
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The new law in the UK takes away water companies' powers to disconnect water supply for non-payment, or to limit the supply with the intention of enforcing payment. |
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Considerable jockeying for position takes place as the companies' battle each other in the market place for survival, with the weaker firms failing and dropping out. |
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While both unions and employers argue the toss about companies' ability to award the next pay round, they now agree that if cuts have to be made they must be spread evenly. |
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But measuring up to managed care companies' requirements can be a chicken-and-egg proposition, in that a site has to be established and well known. |
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Thus, most companies' security officers will be domiciled overseas. |
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While other companies' refineries piled mountains of heavy waste, Rockefeller found ways to sell it. |
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Both readily admit that occasionally an initial apprehension among the companies' sales force occurs. |
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The companies' day-to-day operations will not be affected by the change in control effectuated by the chapter 11 plan. |
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The deligation heard stories of for-profit hospital companies' entry into the health care market, though we did not visit any. |
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Using the companies' own analyses of their effective tax rates, the average rate was 26 percent in fiscal 2010, and 19 percent over three years. |
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In 1843 the Theatres Regulation Act finally brought the patent companies' monopoly to an end. |
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He is expected to tell Wall Street traders that corporate leaders who knowingly misreport their companies' earnings should be jailed. |
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During the Second World War the companies' managements joined together, effectively forming one company. |
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When executives are under pressure to improve their companies' profitability, some of them decide to downsize to reduce costs. |
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Tickets sold by one company are valid on all other HVV companies' services. |
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Norwegian acoustic balladeers make songs that are picked up and ruined by mobile phone companies' cinema adverts. |
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It could lead to more creative accounting, he said, where financial contributions to First Nations are hidden in various parts of mining companies' balance sheets. |
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I am pleased that the joint venture can build on Baxter's manufacturing quality and production expertise to service a large portion of both companies' dialyzer requirements. |
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From the start I vowed to give firms of all sizes a fair shake, not just the so-called 'anchor companies' or retail giants falling into administration. |
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Because these companies' sales orders and profit margins never fully recovered, they never recalled most of their laid-off workers to their former positions. |
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We feel confident that the companies' management team, backed by MCG Capital, will drive the companies forward and help take the companies to the next level. |
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Aurelien Emeraud, 23, of Cardiff, has been appointed to help steer the companies' continual growth strategy in both the domestic and international market. |
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The companies' respective customers have similar demographic and psychographic profiles and both foster fiercely loyal clientele who are passionate about their brands. |
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The companies' brief domination of global commerce contributed greatly to a commercial revolution and a cultural flowering in the Netherlands known as the Dutch Golden Age. |
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