The cause of genuine competition has never been best served by just letting markets rip. |
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One of the risks of far-flung markets with poor regulation is a lack of dependable financial data. |
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The same markets that were enormously hyped a year ago are now the subject of deep pessimism. |
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But these gains have been more than wiped out by the fall in markets throughout February. |
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This goes against the technical wisdom of classifying markets by value of free floating stocks alone. |
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If workfare replaces welfare, wages will become more flexible enabling EU labor markets to absorb immigrants more efficiently. |
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In the free market, people are let go because changes in productivity or markets have made it uneconomical for their company to employ them. |
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Those few of us who favored free markets and limited government were a beleaguered minority. |
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Several senior speakers from Scotland's main IT markets are booked for the networking event. |
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The markets for bills of exchange and bankers' acceptances are simply too small to be of any use. |
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Italian markets really are where it's at because everything is seasonal and it's mostly organic. |
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But, as we have seen with Russia, if the ethical basis of free markets degenerates sufficiently, all that we have left is a form of kleptocracy. |
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By 1776 Glasgow merchants imported more than half of Britain's tobacco and had lucrative re-export markets in Europe. |
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Hailing from Vancouver, B.C., he can most often be found at the local farmer's markets or independent coffee roasters. |
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Farmers will stop growing sesame, linseed, mustard and groundnut in all their diversity since the markets for these crops will also be destroyed. |
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The role of international financial markets seemed to be accepted as a fact of life, even though not always a pleasant one. |
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Countries were each assigned a fixed quota of textiles that could be exported to markets such as the US and Europe. |
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Greater rivalry in imperfectly competitive markets can be expected to encourage firms to operate more efficiently. |
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Was it the quants who failed to imagine how big price distortions could get across all markets when liquidity evaporates? |
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In Sri Lanka it has one factory, 116 retail outlets, five wholesale markets and several storage facilities. |
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From that date on, government would play a far smaller role in the economy, and markets would reign supreme. |
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And financial markets remain calm, confounding worrywarts who prophesied turmoil once the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates. |
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Bear markets have more to do with uncertainty than with decisive gloom, and yo-yoing shares are the clearest possible evidence of that. |
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The President's speech was timed to coincide with the opening of markets in Asia. |
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In recent years, falling stock markets have wiped out a large chunk of many companies' reserves. |
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Billions of euros were wiped off the value of shares worldwide yesterday after the extent of losses at WorldCom sent markets into freefall. |
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The plight of the reinsurers will have a knock-on effect on insurance markets everywhere. |
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I know all the companies are putting out opera DVDs at a rate of knots, and I suspect strongly that all other niche markets are doing likewise. |
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So the white knight that Southcorp's chairman Brian Finn and the markets are anticipating may not arrive. |
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When traveling across the country, producers set up colorful roadside markets to sell their produce. |
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In addition to fluid milk, it markets a wide range of organic dairy products including buttermilk, whipping cream and a dozen kinds of cheese. |
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More efficient aircraft have allowed new markets for air travel to develop. |
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Indeed, as the dollar has dropped in recent weeks, both the stock and bond markets have risen strongly. |
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From experience, the rest of us are more likely to conclude that markets are very likely to be rigged or gamed, and prone to collapse. |
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In addition to selling direct to his neighbors, Grant retails the products of his farm at a number of local farmers' markets and food co-ops. |
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Just how will bond markets and stock markets react to the anticipated rise in US interest rates? |
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Takeovers of car companies are always rationalized on the basis of finding new markets for the struggling company's vehicles. |
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It is listed on the Australian and US stock markets and has won rave reviews for its financial performances. |
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The company is now the acknowledged leader in the rural markets for personal and public transportation. |
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Winemakers are trying to offload much of their inventory overseas and foreign markets by and large are lapping it up. |
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The markets still believe the view that the US wants the dollar to stay weak in order to boost its economic recovery prospects. |
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I busied myself with some random fruit at the vegie markets while casually looking back at him. |
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Military encirclement and the bombing of markets and waterworks provokes hunger, thirst, and slow death for millions. |
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In many border towns in eastern Poland after 1989, markets and bazaars appeared where Ukraine or White Russian traders offered their wares. |
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Falling stock markets have caused yawning gaps to appear between the assets and liabilities of final salary pension schemes. |
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The yields at which investors have the opportunity to get into both markets look sensible. |
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To this end, a regulative framework of the African financial markets that conform to international best practices is being advocated. |
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Stock markets dropped to their lowest levels for five years, wiping billions off Britain's pensions. |
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In subsequent decades opinion moved away from collectivism and toward a belief in free markets and limited government. |
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Shoppers and traders are reeling after a shock announcement that one of the New Forest's most popular markets is to close next week. |
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Our total reliance on export markets means our local people are too poor to buy products. |
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Outside Florida, Key limes can be hard to come by, except in specialty produce markets when the fruit is in season, from May through August. |
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It would buy you more time for the stock markets to recover and thus your fund value to rebound. |
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Minarets, markets and menus are alluring, but no visit to Istanbul would be complete without its mosques. |
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Thank god for foul-smelling German army jackets bought in moments in weakness from ratty markets in Berlin. |
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Much of this passed through the waterfront markets and industrial tenements of Dublin into the Irish interior. |
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Although the movement restrictions are restricting business, farmers must use the livestock markets or risk losing them altogether. |
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An abrupt reversal caught the markets off-guard, requiring an immediate liquidation of leveraged long positions. |
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These markets work their magic, he argues, by aggregating a great deal of information from as many sources as possible. |
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Like foreign bonds, international share quotations have existed almost as long as stock markets themselves. |
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However, these markets will be highly competitive, and consumers will demand keen prices. |
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The markets are a cornucopia of plenty and the prices won't make a hole in your pocket. |
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You might check local Asian markets for winter melon and other vegetable seed. |
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The leisure centre in Donnybrook markets itself on its top-of-the range facilities. |
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That challenge is however starting to reap rewards, with markets opening up for eco-friendly wool. |
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Central banks last night said that they were ready to offer liquidity when markets open today. |
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The publications reach influential and affluential business leaders in the markets they serve. |
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Most markets feature many opportunities to appear on local broadcast programs. |
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The stock markets are not the only indicators of economic health, of course, but there was bad news aplenty elsewhere last week. |
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Finally, if you don't have labor markets, the entire argument that marketeers put forth for having any kind of markets collapses. |
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Would you suggest that we liberalize our markets like the electricity deregulation in California? |
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Citi's actions weren't illegal, but broke an unwritten understanding not to whipsaw markets or take advantage of the thin summer trading. |
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Teams of police and wildlife agents are training to shut down markets and curbside animal vendors. |
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Its projects range from investigating new markets for Fortune 500 companies to reformulating the business road maps of failing start-ups. |
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The balance of the schedule visits markets that have a long and storied tradition in sport compact drag racing. |
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The report said the abolition of import quotas on Chinese textiles and apparel in key markets in 2005 will make China a formidable competitor. |
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In trading on currency markets Thursday, the rand was trading at 7.5 rands per American dollar. |
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The government alleges that they got together and rigged commodity markets of their own volition. |
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Organizations that operate in strongly competitive markets cannot take an approach based solely on plans that anticipate a predictable future. |
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Simply put, markets with very significant power may use that power to act anticompetitively. |
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In Galway city both the new and secondhand residential property markets were equally active. |
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Aren't free markets supposed to need a free flow of capital and labour, and not restrictions of labour mobility? |
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In a world such as this, it would be all so evident, the extent to which markets have been surreptitiously rigged already. |
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Too big a cut, they warn, could panic the markets and weaken confidence, not strengthen it. |
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He bought his first tractor in 1949 and has sold at wholesale markets since he was 16 and trucking lettuce to the old Fisherman's Wharf. |
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We can't help but notice some of the anti-Americanism in some of the foreign markets where we work. |
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It was cryptic, but currency markets traders knew exactly what the G7, or more precisely, Mr Snow, was driving at. |
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GlaxoSmithKline, with its vast network of sales representatives around the world, markets and sells for other drug companies. |
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The farm was flooded, the farmers markets were washed out week after week, and Greg and Andy's cash flow went down the drain. |
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The doubling of the stock markets has created a gusher of capital gains taxes. |
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Southern Vietnam also offers Mekong River excursions, where tourists can see floating markets and visit villages that make baskets and lacquerware. |
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It's really a strategic interest of the U.S. to see progress toward representative government and free government and free markets and economic development. |
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Some quantitative analysts reject the idea markets are either driven purely by mood or purely by traditional factors, seeing the two in a symbiotic relationship. |
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Live bird markets have also played a role in the spread of epidemics. |
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What harries the inflation worrywarts, though, is that the job markets may not have loosened up enough by the second half to reduce the upward pressure on labor costs. |
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That in itself was a huge innovation, but de Silva says access to markets is still a problem for everyone. |
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For well over its first century, American foreign policy was a partnership between government and business, driven by efforts to keep markets open for exports and investments. |
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It was established late in the 1800s as a watering point for cattle being driven overland to markets in Queensland and to other areas within the Northern Territory. |
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Top institutional investors finding it hard to locate rich pickings on world markets are turning to the sport of kings to raise money for charity. |
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The move by the Times and the Independent to produce tabloid format editions for urban markets has hit the original red tops, the Sun and the Daily Mirror, hard. |
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average is hovering near 14,000, and global bond markets are as calm as the sargasso Sea. |
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But markets only respond to messages coded in the language of prices. |
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With the collapse in world equity markets and the fall in house prices, capital gains and inheritance tax receipts will continue to fall for the foreseeable future. |
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Companies that have taken part in the programme have used it to complete rebranding programmes as well as access new markets on either side of the border. |
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So, what are self-satisfied European leaders and the forgiving bond markets overlooking? |
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They know full well that the short-term markets rely on repurchase money in order to generate low-risk short-squeezes, and they are willing providers. |
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Much of the trading between the lowland Nepalis and Tibetan peoples of the mountains takes place at markets such as the Saturday market in Namche Bazaar. |
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She attacks the modern Environmental Defense Fund for embracing markets and corporate partners. |
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Finally, financial markets have been atypically sanguine and even levelheaded. |
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Moreover, the region's remoteness kept access to outside markets costly. |
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If a 14-year-old with a Net connection could move markets and make a killing, all that supposed training and experience of financial analysts was an elaborate fiction. |
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The last man standing is also the only major U.S. automaker to choose free markets over freeloading. |
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Many other victims in southeast Asia went down with the virus after visiting markets where infected birds, live and freshly slaughtered, are for sale. |
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Educating a farmer on the agronomic value of crop rotation and helping them find additional markets for more crops will usually ensure that they rotate wisely. |
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Plus, currencies in these markets have strengthened, meaning returns in Hungarian forints or Brazilian reals get a boost when rendered in dollars. |
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The company markets combination cable locks and keyed cable locks. |
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It happens in stock markets when they lose touch with reality. |
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Out of all the markets Ashley Madison has penetrated, Japan was the fastest to reach one million members. |
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Interest rates will soar, home values will plummet, stock markets will crash, and global economies will crater. |
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With reasonable prices and fine quality, his company's egg products sold well in American and European markets which bought him substantial profits. |
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The label has gained an especially impressive footing in markets that covet its strong American appeal. |
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Bartletts should be in markets this week, with Bosc and Comice pears coming soon. |
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The deal is aimed at opening up global markets to producers from the developing world, enabling them to start lifting their countries out of poverty. |
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Equity markets are reeling following a rash of corporate scandals. |
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Important markets such as the US, Japan and south Korea have not signed the Patents Co-operation Treaty that was designed to harmonise patent rules. |
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He has a collection of antique tools gleaned from flea markets and garage sales. |
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One reason is that financial markets react quickly to policy changes. |
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I argued that when markets are free, and when government does not collude with business, greed is useful. |
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One of the largest and longest-running outdoor markets in Southern California, this year-round market offers uniquely West Coast items such as jojoba oil and fresh avocados. |
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If it is quick, cheap and decisive, we should see a rally of sorts, but if it is long, expensive and messy, financial markets can kiss any putative 2003 recovery goodbye. |
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Top products exported to 59 export markets within and outside the sub region include copper wires, electrical cables, burley tobacco, sugar and cotton lint. |
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Even Rioja, already Spain's leading table wine at the turn of the 19th century, found few markets other than neighbouring Basque country and South America. |
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The markets and investors have become dulled to the brinksmanship now on display. |
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It is perfectly true that an individual firm, or even several firms, can increase profits by monopolizing their product markets and lifting the price. |
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Romney markets himself as the family man to top them all, and it seems he had two pretty good role models. |
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Lagged realisation prices and weak markets are likely to have affected its coal and industrial minerals businesses, but that won't outshine the good news. |
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But is this crisis due to rigged markets for medical insurance as well? |
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And it all began with a young model rooting through Paris flea markets to find something that made her feel good. |
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Grocery stories and markets will have a variety, such as butternut or pumpkin. |
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The vast amounts of risk capital entrusted to entrepreneurs to create new companies and to invent new markets have fueled a frenzy of innovation that has reshaped the economy. |
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Therefore, to ensure that markets work effectively, regulation is needed to prevent collective and individual monopolies from operating in restraint of trade. |
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When goods are well-made and durable, eventually markets are saturated. |
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This paper shows how Pentagon and other U.S. government contractors are rigging stock markets world wide through massive, coordinated, selective investments. |
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But today's markets are reconnecting people to the food they eat, he said. |
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The cloth was sold locally, in border town markets and in the yearly Bartholomew Fair in London. |
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Farm produce was traded at a number of markets and fairs, notably the Waun Fair above Dowlais. |
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The EU argues that the ACP should commit itself to open its markets and conclude free trade agreements. |
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Income and employment are also contributing to the strong housing markets in these ZIP codes. |
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Angstrom has been serving the nano-technology and electron microscopy markets for the last seven years. |
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In late 2009, gold markets experienced renewed momentum upwards due to increased demand and a weakening US dollar. |
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October begins bell pepper season in Florida, so look for a drop in the price at local markets and farm stands. |
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The largest and most popular markets in the city are held at the Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square, just a five-minute walk apart. |
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The other argument for capitalism was that markets make people nicer. |
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Delta Air Lines and American Airlines said on Tuesday they raised fares in Canadian markets to match an increase by Air Canada. |
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Acnodes manufactures, designs, and markets industrial computers and display solutions for diverse industries ranging from automation to military. |
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The afternoon fixing was introduced in 1968 to provide a price when US markets are open. |
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As the stock markets tumbled in September 2008, the fund was able to buy more shares at low prices. |
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Acnodes manufactures, designs, and markets industrial computer and display solutions for diverse industries ranging from automation to military. |
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Over the very long run, bear markets in equities have lasted 20 years on several occasions, and for ten years much more often. |
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Excluding intra UK trade, the European Union and the United States constitute the largest markets for Scotland's exports. |
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Britain's extensive exporting cottage industries also ensured markets were already available for many early forms of manufactured goods. |
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The new distillery, named Inchdairnie, focuses on exporting to markets in India, Africa and the Far East. |
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The colonies were captive markets for British industry, and the goal was to enrich the mother country. |
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Chesterfield is home to one of the largest open air markets in Britain, the stalls sitting either side of the Market Hall. |
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After the First World War, demand for coal declined, Britain had lost export markets and productivity had fallen. |
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Their geographical location provided convenient access to the markets of France, Scotland, Germany, England and the Baltic. |
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His route contoured the fellside from there to provide access to Wasdale markets for his illicit whisky. |
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During the 1980s and 1990s, a major growth sector in financial markets was the trade in so called derivatives. |
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Small farmers benefited from the development of local markets in towns and trade centres. |
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In this regard, they may have served as wider centres used for markets and social contact. |
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The festival continues to overcome a variety of challenges thrown up by its distance from key markets and the changed economic climate. |
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Much effort has gone into the study of financial markets and how prices vary with time. |
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Tourists toured Khassab city during which they visited tourism and archeological sites, as well markets and utilities in the wilayah. |
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Trade in stock markets means the transfer for money of a stock or security from a seller to a buyer. |
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Hence most markets either prevent short selling or place restrictions on when and how a short sale can occur. |
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Both songs topped the charts in multiple markets and broke numerous sales performance records. |
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After 1990, the stock market and real asset market fell, at that time BOJ regulated markets until 1991 in order to end the bubble. |
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Southern cotton found ready markets in Europe and in the burgeoning textile mills of New England. |
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In addition the goods offered in the markets influenced and transformed the newcomers' food and aesthetic tastes and their cultural horizon. |
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Annexation opened new markets in France for wool and other goods from Belgium. |
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The programming was available in over 150 markets and more than 12,000 hours were screened globally. |
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Free trade can open new markets to domestic producers who would otherwise resort to exporting illicit drugs. |
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As a wider variety of global luxury commodities entered the European markets by sea, previous European markets for luxury goods stagnated. |
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Crop failures no longer resulted in starvation in areas connected to large markets through transport infrastructure. |
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Their removal, announced yesterday in Washington, is part of a broad wind-down of emergency liquidity backstops by the Fed as markets normalise. |
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News of the announcement of the stimulus package sent markets up across the world. |
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The application market is further classified into the treatment markets for systemic autoimmune diseases and localized autoimmune diseases. |
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The renegotiations have opened these markets to meat from animals sourced from across the island of Ireland. |
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Thus, the obstacles for the development of capitalist markets are less technical and more social, cultural and political. |
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The markets themselves are driven by the needs and wants of consumers and those of society as a whole. |
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Perishables such as vegetables, fruits, and flowers can be conveniently shipped to the markets in the eastern part of the prefecture. |
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It typically entails support for highly competitive markets and private ownership of productive enterprises. |
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Craft markets are highly dependent on social interactions, and verbal training which results in variations in the goods produced. |
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In reality, free markets do not exist in pure form, since societies and governments all regulate them to varying degrees. |
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The economics of imposing or removing regulations relating to markets is analysed in regulatory economics. |
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Market economies can range from free market systems to regulated markets and various forms of interventionist variants. |
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This has resulted from the huge increase production and sales in the emerging markets like India and China. |
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In other nations, such as France, markets were split up by local regions, which often imposed tolls and tariffs on goods traded among them. |
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Hand to hand markets became a feature of town life, and were regulated by town authorities. |
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The development of capital markets meant that a government could borrow money to finance war or expansion while causing less economic hardship. |
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Trading globally gives consumers and countries the opportunity to be exposed to new markets and products. |
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The same markets made it easy for private entities to raise bonds or sell stock to fund private initiatives. |
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Inflation depends on differences in markets and on where newly created money and credit enter the economy. |
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Volatility in fixed-income and currency markets led to temporary burdens from conservatively calculated remeasurements. |
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The extent to which different markets are free, as well as the rules defining private property, are matters of politics and policy. |
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He was told it came from the markets of Shu, an area in what is now the Sichuan province. |
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This distinguishes them from surrounding villages who were not allowed to hold markets and did not possess market squares. |
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Initially markets were sent what the Chinese market, or older exports markets, liked. |
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Since many such imperfect conditions exist in virtually every market, there is in fact little presumption that markets are in general efficient. |
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The new commodities also caused social change, as sugar, spices, silks and chinawares entered the luxury markets of Europe. |
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The unwalled cities had also the right to hold markets which they held on large market squares. |
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Cooperation among cartels expands their scope to distant markets and strengthens their abilities to evade detection by local law enforcement. |
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Livingstone estimated that 80,000 Africans died each year before ever reaching the slave markets of Zanzibar. |
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Oceania's largest export markets include Japan, China, the United States and South Korea. |
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The growing focus on emerging markets by drug manufacturers is one key trend witnessed in the Atrial Fibrillation market. |
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The Spanish conquerors commented on the impressive nature of the local and regional markets in the 15th century. |
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The nature of export markets in antiquity is well documented in ancient sources and archaeological case studies. |
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Oceania's largest export markets include Japan, China, the United States, India, South Korea and the European Union. |
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Cracks started appearing early on, when financial markets began behaving in ways that users of Li's formula hadn't expected. |
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Economists continue to debate whether financial markets are generally efficient. |
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The capital markets may also be divided into primary markets and secondary markets. |
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Another common use of the term is as a catchall for all the markets in the financial sector, as per examples in the breakdown below. |
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In other words, bubbles in both markets developed even though only the residential market was affected by these potential causes. |
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On April 20, 1534, Cartier set sail under a commission from the king, hoping to discover a western passage to the wealthy markets of Asia. |
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In developing countries, providing access to markets has encouraged farmers to invest in livestock, with the result being improved livelihoods. |
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The transactions in primary markets exist between issuers and investors, while secondary market transactions exist among investors. |
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Europe has become one of the key markets to promote Panama as a tourist destination. |
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Nordic countries were pioneers in liberalizing energy, postal, and other markets in Europe. |
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Fleetwood Market on Victoria Street is one of the largest covered markets in the North West, with over 250 stalls. |
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The Dutch location gives it prime access to markets in the UK and Germany, with the Port of Rotterdam being the largest port in Europe. |
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Community markets and trade in local products continued long after the conquest. |
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Its surrounding boho streets and markets were eclectic enough to keep even a shopping refusnik like me happy. |
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It also has the city's main fruit and vegetable markets in addition to other markets and stores selling various commodities. |
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If the capital markets are insufficiently developed, however, it would be difficult to find enough buyers. |
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A 2009 list of national housing markets that were hard hit in the real estate crash included a disproportionate number in Florida. |
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Some famous night markets can be found along Jonker Walk in Chinatown during weekends evening and along Puteri Beach in Tanjung Kling. |
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The principal import markets are the European Community, the United States, Japan, and India. |
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The new system is available in the Middle East markets allowing local businesses to utilize the LC risk-free in publicly accessible applications. |
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Local fruits are quite common, but raw vegetables from the markets less so. |
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By 1929, it undertook road expansions as well as opening markets and slaughterhouses. |
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These entities became critical to the credit markets underpinning the financial system, but were not subject to the same regulatory controls. |
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Local and regional livestock auctions and commodity markets facilitate trade in livestock. |
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Supermarkets are trying to price farmers' markets out of the market by offering lower prices. |
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Mandates serve to help attract low-risk individuals, which is necessary to prevent adverse selection to keep the health insurance markets viable. |
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Having failed to find the great markets and cities of China or India, he was returning with empty hulls. |
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In addition, KTI serves the automotive, electrical and other industrial markets and their associated after-markets. |
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The air and maritime transport markets in Poland are largely well developed. |
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Correia immediately sets about buying spices in Calicut's markets for the ships to take home. |
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The pharmaceutical industry in India is among the significant emerging markets for global pharma industry. |
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Energy markets demonstrated in the 1970s and 1980s that they were well capable of adapting to a perceived scarcity. |
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In North Africa, the main slave markets were in Morocco, Algiers, Tripoli and Cairo. |
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But the war had permanently eroded Britain's trading position in world markets through disruptions to trade and losses of shipping. |
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As a result, British exports became more competitive on world markets than those of countries that remained on the gold standard. |
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The effect of the Big Bang led to significant changes to the structure of the financial markets in London. |
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Other foreign markets include the United States, Italy and the United Kingdom. |
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By 29 June, the markets had returned to growth and the value of the pound had begun to rise. |
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In the vicinity of Bangkok one can find several floating markets such as the one in Damnoen Saduak. |
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As property, the people were considered merchandise or units of labour, and were sold at markets with other goods and services. |
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He set up regular markets in a number of towns and regulated their activities. |
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Excluded from foreign trade, they acted mainly as local markets and centres of craftsmanship. |
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Hong Kong's largest export markets are mainland China, the United States, and Japan. |
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More than a third of the private credit markets thus became unavailable as a source of funds. |
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Financial centres are locations with an agglomeration of participants in financial markets and venues for these activities to take place. |
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The Genoan defeat deprived Genoa of this naval supremacy, pushed it out of eastern Mediterranean markets and began the decline of the city state. |
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The trade was conducted through slave markets in these areas, with the slaves captured mostly from Africa's interior. |
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Uruguay's exports markets have been diversified in order to reduce dependency on Argentina and Brazil. |
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At the same time, growing demand in emerging markets is rejiggering how formulators and their suppliers deploy their assets. |
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Capital markets have to do with raising and investing money in various human enterprises. |
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Of course, there is no reason why some algorithm invented by mathemagicians should have an analogy in the way actual markets work. |
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The expansion of Icelandic companies into foreign markets was a rapid process. |
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Such events propelled the genre into the biggest radio markets overnight, with considerable airplay. |
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Adidas also has a website dedicated to the Indian audience that markets and sells products to its consumers in India. |
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The white slave trade and markets in the Mediterranean declined and eventually disappeared after the European occupations. |
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Australia's largest export markets are Japan, China, the US, South Korea, and New Zealand. |
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Racing continued at fairs and markets throughout the Middle Ages and into the reign of King James I of England. |
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Christmas markets in December are held at the Hamburg Rathaus square, among other places. |
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The mercantilists saw a large population as a form of wealth that made possible the development of bigger markets and armies. |
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It's an eggstravaganza! Garden staff dye eggs donated by local markets and tuck them into nooks and crannies throughout the expansive grounds. |
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Others were shipped downriver from such markets as Louisville on the Ohio River, and Natchez on the Mississippi. |
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Essentially, this meant that the markets were expecting the company to degrow and its economic performance to deteriorate. |
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Spreads on bond yields in a common currency today comove across emerging markets to a much higher degree than they did in the past. |
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At this time slaves were openly bought and sold on commodities markets at London and Liverpool. |
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For the most part, however, relatively small urban centers with markets proliferated around the country. |
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Roast chestnuts are traditionally sold in streets, markets and fairs by street vendors with mobile or static braziers. |
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Town markets mainly traded food, with some necessary manufactures such as pins or oil. |
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In the past there were few markets for sharks, which were regarded as worthless bycatch. |
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Large multinationals have become financialized, that is, they are regularly active in financial markets and draw financial profits. |
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The idea of mercantilism was to protect the markets as well as maintain agriculture and those who were dependent upon it. |
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This method studies both changes in markets and their interactions leading towards equilibrium. |
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The meat is openly sold in markets and restaurants in Kolonia, the capital city of Pohnpei and the Federated States of Micronesia. |
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In addition, Greenlandic ivory may have been supplanted in European markets by cheaper ivory from Africa. |
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First, the markets like continuity, and dislike abrupt changes. |
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They are trying to develop foreign markets for American cotton. |
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Stock markets crash, businesses go bankrupt, and 9-to-5s can disappear from layoffs and downsizing. |
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This report analyzes the worldwide markets for Recreational Vehicles in Units. |
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David Tepper, head of Appaloosa Management, doubts that the FED will implement QE3 unless markets get considerably worse. |
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In Europe, small pricing gains at Amylum in certain markets and products have been offset by price reductions elsewhere. |
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Some of these markets are held on a daily basis, like the Albert Cuypmarkt and the Dappermarkt. |
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Mass trade on the Roman roads connected military posts, where Roman markets were centered. |
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Unfulfilled needs for analgesics are identified and strategies are outlined to develop markets for analgesic drugs. |
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