Selling assets now that are in these equities would lock in any losses you've incurred.
They sell the assets now, causing prices to fall immediately, rather than in the future!
If your answer is «none» or «less than I currently own,» then you should
sell the asset now and replace it with something that suits your long - term strategy.
Not exact matches
He's
now selling most of his telecom
assets to Russian company VimpelCom Ltd., and will retain a 20 % stake in the new entity.
At the same time, the bank is also trying to improve the profit margins in its wealth management unit, which
now accounts for about 40 percent of the company's revenue, looking at both increasing
assets under management and
selling clients more products.
They decided to
sell their marijuana
assets off to a private group, which I'm
now part of.
Now, activist investor Jana Partners is aggravating for Whole Foods to
sell, sparking speculation that private equity firms may be interested in the
asset.
By 2009, Strategic had effectively foreclosed on the two properties (which it still owns);
now Concrete was proposing to pool the remaining
assets into a single entity and
sell that to Strategic, which might have allowed Concrete's directors to walk away without taking responsibility for the consequences.
The surviving board is reportedly
now planning to shut the company down and
sell off its
assets, and seek interest for a backdoor listing.
Bertocci cites a study by Ocean Tomo, an intellectual property advisory firm, showing that intangible
assets amount to 84 % of the market value of companies today, many of which
now sell services rather than goods, compared with 17 % in 1975.
Now that Gawker Media's controversial privacy - infringement lawsuit with former wrestler Hulk Hogan is over — and the company has gone through bankruptcy and
sold off its
assets — is there anything founder Nick Denton regrets about the whole episode?
The homebuyer, who's spent $ 430,000 (your number — yes I know you left some stuff out but the point is the same),
now owns an
asset worth $ 589,000, which he can
sell if he desires (he's not stuck with it if he wants out).
Now, tax basis does» t matter if you can manage to hold the
asset forever — i.e. you never
sell and therefore don't have a capital gain event.
Now under duress, they are considering
selling assets (Get your islands here!).
But I SHOULD N'T do so unless I can aggressively grow my other
assets, or figure out a way to
sell one of my properties
now or find some screaming deal that makes the increased exposure worth it.
Had Trump taken the measures suggested repeatedly by ethics experts on both sides of the political aisle, he would by
now have put his
assets in what's called a blind trust, which would entail turning over his empire to a third party with whom he will have no contact, who would
sell off the properties and reinvest the resulting money in other
assets without providing the president any information about the sales or the purchases.
The good bank Novo Banco then
sold its insurance and its investment arms;
now the government is trying, for the second time, to
sell the remaining
assets.
SunEdison will
now function as a private company, without $ 2.3 billion in former
assets sold off by restructuring agent John S. Dubel.
But
now, after blowing through more than $ 70 - million in investor capital and accumulating $ 72 - million in losses, while failing to reach $ 30 - million in annual revenues, Shop.ca is in bankruptcy court, trying to
sell its
assets for a fraction of what the company raised.
«Add to all this the
selling by central banks (reserve managers) in emerging economies and a slow shift to lower duration benchmarks, and the result resembles for
now a «technically damaged,»
asset class,» El - Erian writes.
They originated in agriculture as a way of hedging against falling prices and other uncertainties, but
now they can be bought and
sold for virtually any
asset out there (as long as there are people willing to buy and
sell them).
While the company plans to
sell some non-core
assets to pay for these transactions, that strategy could prove problematic
now that crude has fallen below $ 45, because it will likely drive down the value of those
assets.
Now, as suggested by the name, the capital gains tax or the CGT is the tax levied on this capital gain - on the profit that the investor makes by
selling his
assets.
Until
now,
selling, buying or exchanging these
assets has required an intermediary like a bank, marketplace (physical or digital), credit card company, or third - party booking service like Airbnb.
Now that we have one
asset class, gold, that is
selling for all - time high prices, I'm not surprised to see it in the center of controversy.
Sellers
now have to start unloading their
assets at lower and lower prices to meet the reduced buy - in values, leading to a race to see who can
sell faster.
«If some sectors are
now restricted by government, I will consider
selling assets I bought in these sectors,» Tan said.
While the poorest in society are hardest hit, Theocarakis talks about the «new poor» and «new homeless» — those who were well off before but
now are unemployed or find they can not fall back on their
assets: «The market for
assets has collapsed so even if you've got a house or a car you can't
sell it and get cash to use... this creates a ripple effect everywhere.»
Delphi Holdings LLP,
now privately owned by its former lenders, was forced to
sell many of its
assets to settle debts.
Now that substantially all of the
assets (i.e. the SBX Project) of SBX LLC have been
sold to SANDAG, TIFIA and the Bank Lenders are in the process of liquidating and winding down SBX LLC.
Till
now it works well, business is growing, but as long as I don t
sell the company it is a very theoretical
asset.
The future of the car was thrown into question when GM began cutting products and
selling assets in a bid to staunch massive financial losses that have
now forced the company to consider filing for bankruptcy.
The company and all of their
assets have
now been
sold for an undisclosed sum and key executives have all been let go.
Now I heard that market makers always hedge their positions by buying or
selling the underlying
assets so that whether the market goes up or down, they always make money.
Now not everyone is cut out to be dispassionate about investing, treating it like a business where you are trying to buy safe
assets cheap, and
sell them dearly when they come back into favor.
There is
now a general sense of rebellion against security analysts, who during the period prior to April 2000, were putting out strong buy recommendations for dot com common stocks, telecom common stocks, and other issues of companies whose only apparent real
asset was an ability to
sell new issues to the public at ridiculous prices.
When you buy new things you might
sell later, you could consider adding them as
assets to keep track of this explicitly (but even then you have problems — the price of things changes with time and you might not want to keep up with those price changes, it's a lot of extra work for a family budget)-- for stuff you already have it's better to treat things as you are doing and just treat the money as income — it's easier and doesn't really change anything — you always had that in equity, some of it was just off the books and
now you are bringing it into the books.
You estimate the duration of the crisis, and if it is longer than your liquid
assets can finance, you
sell some of your best illiquid
assets now, and play for time.
I don't know the specific individual, but if they reach out to me I'd immediately apologize for calling them an «ass - clown» & «idiot» — that was completely inappropriate language...
Now you push me on it, I'm sure I can find far more appropriate language to describe somebody who thinks it's fucking acceptable to
sell a Frontier Markets ETF which happens to have 51 % of its
assets invested in a single country (Chile — actually an emerging market for the past decade or two).
What I can say from a strategic perspective is that 1) I like a purchase of
assets at historically low prices, 2) MFC has some expertise in the commodity business so this isn't completely outside their playing field, 3) perhaps, worst case, there could be a strategy to purchase the
assets in bulk at a distress sale and then
sell them off piecemeal for a profit, and 4) while this may be a role of the dice (who knows where gas prices will be a year from
now) MFC is not betting the ranch; the total investment will be about CDN $ 75 million ($ 33 for the outstanding shares, $ 8 million for the warrants, $ 30 million additional investment and I've estimated $ 4 million for transaction costs), or less than 25 % of MFC's current cash hoard.
In terms of property, bad
assets continue to be restructured /
sold off (or they've migrated into public hands), while good
assets & projects are being re-financed far more easily
now.
Nonetheless, National Bank Direct Brokerage's move to drop commissions on ETF buying and
selling might still mean a shakeup of Virtual Brokers» pricing is in the cards not too long from
now, especially since CI Financial owns ETF provider First
Asset.
We actually want a few more, so if it could dip first, that would be really nice Think shell can maintain it's dividend, solid company and lot's of
assets they can
sell to maintain dividends for
now.
The government of Korea has been a big shareholder in the chaebols, and they are pushing them for reform
now: Breaking up businesses,
sell non-core
assets, pay out higher dividends.
Otherwise (noting Produce revenue has stagnated for three years
now, with essentially zero profit), the board should man up & tag Produce as another non-core
asset... in that case, they might as well go ahead and
sell the whole kit & caboodle.
The stock recently
sold for $ 48 [
now $ 45], but the collection of
assets it represents add up to $ 82 after debt, according to Robert Routh a media analyst with Wedge Partners.
Presuming that, management should
now place an increasing emphasis on capital allocation: i) Surplus cash continues to build (the company has minimal debt), and ii) unless we see a dramatic turn - around, the stagnant revenue & collapsing margins of the Electronic division (Grosvenor Technology) are worth more
sold off, with the proceeds returned to shareholders (or reinvested in
Asset Protection).
It also
sold some
assets in the $ 70 range and tapped its credit facilities, as the company
now carries $ 26 billion in cash (when oil prices were over $ 100 per barrel, Shell carried $ 9 billion in cash).
Since you are buying and
selling assets,
now is a perfect time to also consolidate accounts or roll over a previous employer's 401k to a rollover IRA so that you have easier access to all your investments and can more easily track your progress in the future.
VXGN has ended all product development activities,
sold or otherwise terminated its drug development programs and is
now seeking to maximize the value of its remaining
assets through a strategic transaction or series of strategic transactions.