Sentences with phrase «bad companies rely»

Bad companies rely on industry tables (averages), and assume that downside deviations are just random.

Not exact matches

In the 16 months that Donald Trump has been president, the U.S.'s previously flawed immigration system has gone from bad to worse — particularly for small companies that rely on skilled immigrant labor.
If your company is in the business of excitement and innovation, there's nothing worse than relying on the customer's love of the status quo to provide your business with feedback.
The tariffs are great for US steelmakers — but they're bad for a large part of the US economy that relies on steel, like construction companies, automakers, and appliance manufacturers.
The art part of it for me is sticking with companies / brands that I know or use regularly, and relying on dividend index funds for the majority of my investments in case my individual stock picks go badly.
For all the bad asymmetries of being on the short side, one of the good asymmetries is that we don't rely on the company.
June 29, 2016 • It will now prioritize posts from friends and family — potentially bad news for media companies relying on Facebook for traffic.
Leave it to that classy company to write off the whole thing, which implies bad things for MBIA as it relies on reinsurance from Channel Re, which it also partially owns.
Beyond that, any plan that creates a good company / bad company should be doomed, because it essentially becomes government sponsored fraudulent conveyance, where valuable assets that the bondholders were relying on disappear.
Coping with a bad credit score can be tough as most monetary companies rely heavily on your funds management history to establish your eligibility for particular products and services.
«If you're relying on OTAs and Direct Bookings or worse a representation company that places your hotel on a long list of comparable hotels, you'll be missing out on serious business from North America!»
And with older life insurance policies (issued before the 1941 CSO table), the situation was / is even worse; those policies rely on the original mortality tables first widely adopted by U.S. life insurance companies in the 1860s — the American Experience mortality table — which had a maximum age of 96 (which means those policies will mature at age 96).
I'd rather trust a dedicated security company that specialises in password management to handle it for me than to rely on saved notes or worse yet: my memory.
In it he told the story of «bad background checks» causing consumers to lose jobs and background check companies relying «solely on computers to match the data with no one checking to make sure the results are correct.»
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