Sentences with phrase «basket of eggs»

The basket of eggs is gorgeous.
I especially like the soft pink tulips and the basket of eggs, so sweet.
The entertaining history of how a mutant rabbit breaks into houses across the United States and leaves baskets of eggs and candy probably goes back to the 1700s, when German immigrants introduced their country's tradition of «Osterhase» or «Oschter Haws,» an egg - laying hare.
We also see a game where Sora has to avoid a giant as he stomps his hands and feet, and one where players have to collect baskets of eggs.

Not exact matches

If all of your eggs are in one basket, you don't own a business, you are employed — and very vulnerable.
Don't put all of your eggs into just one basket.
If you want to become a professional, you can't put all of your eggs in one basket.
The reason for allocating investment assets judiciously goes beyond the simple notion of not putting all of one's eggs in one basket, in case that one basket goes asunder.
But imagine if you'd put all of your social eggs into one of their baskets?
We're all familiar with the old adage about the dangers of putting all your eggs in one basket, and this is a textbook example.
And given the levels of social unrest in those countries, that could be the strongest argument against putting more of our pension nest eggs into the CPP basket.
Just don't put all of your eggs in that basket.
Of course, as the past few years have shown, having so many eggs in the oil and gas basket can be a liability, but probably nobody in Canada has more experience riding the sector's ups and downs than does Riddell.
You wouldn't put all your financial eggs in one basket, so don't invest all of your ego in a single pursuit either?
Because... If you live, work, bank, invest, own a business, and hold your assets all in just one country, you are putting all of your eggs in one basket.
USA - 2009: Gabi Campanario illustration of a person climbing a ladder toward a giant basket filled with eggs labeled 401K.
And we kind of know a mission statement, but culture is where we put all the eggs in that basket
Putting all your eggs in one basket boosts your odds of a big payoff — and your odds of needing to move back in with Mom.
Diversification is one of those fancy investing words, but all it really means it spreading your money out into lots of different types of investments instead of putting all your eggs in just a few baskets.
You're putting a lot of eggs in one basket, and promising an omelet or two to the management no matter what.
Ralph Goodale, a Liberal MP and former finance minister, accused the Tories of putting «all of their eggs in one particular basket» — the energy sector.
If the government can guarantee certain savings in bank accounts through the F.D.I.C., why not establish a program that would require that every employee own a regulated block of stock (Retirement Account) made up of stock in the company the employee works for and, so the employee will not have all his retirement eggs in one basket, include in this retirement basket high rated bonds and stocks from other non-competing employee - owned companies?
Too much company stock is the ultimate example of putting too many eggs in one basket.
Obeying the dictum, «Don't put all your eggs in one basket», many investors hold a good mix of Canadian, U.S. and international stocks.
While this doesn't lead to outrageous returns, it prevents you from putting all of your eggs in one basket.
These corporations aren't gambling on the remote potential of renewables; they are deliberately moving their eggs into new, more competitive baskets.
It's the equivalent of not putting all your eggs in one basket; if you trip and fall, your eggs are going with you.
You've probably had someone tell you not to put all of your eggs in one basket, and this is exactly what it means to diversify your portfolio.
Still, it bears repeating that you should never put all of your eggs in one basket.
The most common way to mitigate risk is through diversification: the idea that it's best not to put all of your eggs in one basket.
It is a diversified fund, so it's not exactly like all of our eggs are in one basket.
But I totally disagree with putting all eggs in one single basket and penalize all guest posting blogs while some of them are really high quality even though nobody actually prohibits link building back to those blogs.
I'm a fan of more conservative investments - dividend & REIT ETFs, but I do have most of my eggs in one basket right now.
I don't put all of my eggs in any one basket nor strategy.
While it rarely — if ever — makes sense for investors to «put all of their eggs in one basket,» putting all your eggs in too many baskets may not be a good thing either.
The proverb calls for diversifying, or placing the eggs in different baskets in order to reduce the risk of a mishap leading to the loss of all your eggs.
Don't put all of your eggs in a single basket.
«Premier Clark has spent the last three years putting all of BC's eggs in one basket, «centrally preoccupied» with LNG.
«Investors have been so oversold on diversification that fear of having too many eggs in one basket has caused them to put far too little into companies they thoroughly know and far too much in others which they know nothing at all.
When you diversify your investments, you are spreading out your risk instead of putting all of your eggs in one basket.
Unfortunately for B.C. the Liberals have put all their economic eggs into one basket, at the expense of the rest of the economy, and their failure to create employment is hurting British Columbia.»
The Conservatives put all of our economic eggs in the resource - extraction basket and now that that sector is having considerable difficulty, it's affecting everything else in the Canadian economy.»
Diversification can be summed up in one phrase: Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
In the words of any grandmother who's ever roamed the earth, «Don't put all your eggs in one basket
The saying «never put all of your eggs in one basket» works in the stock market as well but more important than diversifying your portfolio is to know what you are doing.
One of the golden rules of investment is: «Do not put all your eggs in one basket
Well, it's self - evident that putting all of one's eggs in any single basket, no matter how safe and sound that basket may seem, is risky — extremely risky in today's financial climate.
It allows you to minimize your investment risk because not all of your eggs are in one basket.
Putting all your eggs in one basket in this way concentrates the risk and leaves you with no alternative investments which can bear the brunt of a stock market crash.
They put all of their eggs in one basket, only for that basket to get crushed.
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