Sentences with phrase «big buys there»

Not exact matches

I'm not a big fan of the whole lean startup thing or even minimum viable products (MVPs) unless they've been previously market - validated, but there is a clear virtue in representing an initial solution which a company can quickly buy and bring to market — even if it's not comprehensive, industrial strength or the whole enchilada on Day One.
There's some inherent drama to buying a house: big sums of money, high emotional stakes, tense negotiations, simply tragic interior decor.
Best Buy decided to instead invest in its big - box stores, where the company can provide «a better experience because there's more space.»
«Since most cryptocurrencies are not actually backed by anything real, cryptocurrency speculation is based on the greater fool theory — I can buy this at $ 100 because there is someone who is a bigger idiot who is going to buy it at $ 200.
Or you could think of it as a version of the greater fool theory — you want to be sure there's at least one bigger sucker than you willing to buy your goodies when you finally get over your growing greed and decide that it's time to go.
Increasingly, there's a new technological race in which hedge funds and other well - heeled investors armed with big - data analytics instantly analyze millions of Twitter messages and other non-traditional information sources to buy and sell stocks faster than smaller investors can hit «retweet.»
While the trip's big costs are out of the way — I bought my flight in October and I'll be staying with a friend — stretching $ 60 over the four days I'm there could be tricky.
After all, this is the place where legend has it that Google employees were warned prior to their IPO that showing up at work in a fancy car after the big day would likely get them a broken window, and where a Facebook employee once told The New York Times that if anyone working there bought such a car and posted a picture of it online, they could expect to be «ridiculed and berated.»
But there's one big exception: A majority of young Americans dislike «Obamacare's» requirement that all Americans buy insurance or pay a fine.
I didn't realize until I joined that the financial situation was so dire, but I was told that if we could build the product quickly, there were scores of big customers lined up to buy the product and save the company.
And even if Baxter works as hoped, there is no guarantee that companies will buy it in big numbers.
That is a big reason why there are so few listings available — that, and potential sellers are afraid they won't find anything else to buy.
There are a ton of things to consider when buying a mattress, including firmness, materials, warranties, return policies, and whether to go with a direct - to - consumer mattress startup or a big - name brand.
«There's actually a big reduction in which ones will actually buy [the Swiffer], versus who the value buyers are, versus who is already locked into their brand and isn't changing,» he said.
Big, deep - pocketed companies like Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon are able to recruit or buy the best talent out there.
If you, the investor or concerned citizen, really want to send a message to the big players in gun sales, including companies like Wal - Mart, you're more likely to have an impact organizing a campaign to not buy stuff there, rather than abstaining from stock ownership.
You are buying to own the next big currency and there's a potential of using it to buy goods with it one day.
There are many platforms out there, but you may want to buy from the biggest platforms in the maThere are many platforms out there, but you may want to buy from the biggest platforms in the mathere, but you may want to buy from the biggest platforms in the market.
Initial investment is lower since there are no big, risky long - lead inventory buys (or large working capital requirements) that come along with them.
There may be some buying pressure ahead of several big cap tech stocks» after - hours quarterly earnings releases.
I have witnessed trades for many stocks where you can clearly see the manipulative efforts of small block sell orders coming through, that appear to be intentionally forcing share price down... Much of this activity runs through the houses of Canada's biggest banks, and it almost always forces the price of stocks down to a point where liquidity and buy orders have completely dried up and there is no more stock floating around in the system to short.
There's a lot of concerns, even in Japan, because one of their biggest exchanges got hacked into and has now been bought out by another company in an effort to bring that back to an even keel.
Let's face it; there's a whole generation of managers on Wall Street who made their careers buying big banks.
I am not aware that there is a big stock of unsold new houses and units, so someone must be buying them.
Then there are the strategic / civic buyers like John Henry, Jeff Bezos, and Glen Taylor, billionaires who have bought into and invested in the best big - city metros, presumably for a longer while.
Well, other than the real Manhattan where Fortune 500 and the world elites must have a presence there for whatever reason, most likely egoistic, or perhaps hangout of the world biggest tech lunatics such as the case of Silicon Valley, most cities in the states are actually ghettos — Detroit is one and Canadians have been buying up their rundown houses as if they're free (almost, going by Canadian standard) just when Americans are avoiding them like the plague.
There are numerous costs and fees that go into the formal process of buying a house: big ones like your down payment, and smaller ones like an appraisal, mortgage fees, and closing costs.
Eric: One trick I've heard from, I know, our friends over at BiggerPockets, that's a big real estate site, some of our friends over there they stories about how when they get they buy one property that they live in so it can be their primary residence and they can get that best mortgage rate.
Blog Post: Some real estate investors assume that higher - value (big ticket) real estate assets outperform lower - value assets, partly because there are fewer of them and they are harder to buy.
There's a big difference between buying stocks and ETFs in a market that reverses when the majority of leadership stocks are showing tight price action, versus buying stocks in a sudden market reversal when a large number of former leadership stocks have already lost key support levels and / or their bullish technical patterns have broken down.
But there's a big difference: Money given to a company through a Kickstarter campaign is a donation often rewarded with a company's product; money given through an SEC - approved portal buys an ownership stake.
By buying government (or agency) debt, and paying banks to hoard the reserves it creates by doing so, the Fed shunts a bigger share of the public's savings into the Fed's coffers, and from there to government or its agents.
Much of this activity runs through the houses of Canada's biggest banks, and it almost always forces the price of stocks down to a point where liquidity and buy orders have completely dried up and there is no more stock floating around in the system to short.
I don't see anything in there about compiling a bunch of little - ish books into one big book to be bought or sold, or left in hotel rooms.
Postmodernists would ask why anyone would want to buy into the «big story» when there is no such thing as a metanarrative.
I have seen a few in supermarkets but they always come in small packages and I just wandered if there is any place I can buy a big bundle of them that are good quality?
Actually it's the only way I buy bananas now that I found the «Re-Wraps»... I buy trees of freckled wonders (the clerk always asks if I am making banana bread and I tell her I own a monkey, «It's my own ritual of getting these treasures home»)... You see we are BIG FANS of hot cereals, Oatmeal, etc... AND there is NOTHING so delicious as a ripe banana in it... We even eat baked or broiled oatmeal as desserts, with those ripe bananas hidden within like buried treasures... Thank you so much for this wonderful recipe... My banana basket mountain of bananas is a BIT TOO HIGH today and begging to be pruned... It's nice a cool here in CT today SO let the baking begin!!!
Bonjour monsieur Lebovitz:) I bought your book a couple of weeks ago, and everything I make tastes sooo good, big compliment to you:) But there are a couple of questions:
I know that this season can sometimes become too commercial with what's going on around us but we have to remember that in the midst of our busy lives and the gift buying frenzy, there is a bigger reason why we celebrate the occasion.
I would love for you to feel encouraged to either grow your own vegetables or if that is not the way you groove, get out there on the hunt to buy the freshest Farmers Market vegetables you can, because it will always, always make the biggest difference on flavor when you are cooking.
I don't know what possessed me the other day, but there I was, and there it was — I was faced with a big mound of Iceberg lettuce heads at the market, two for one euro, so I bought two of them.
There's a reason bigger companies are buying up smaller brands — consumers love to root for the little guy (and they don't feel great about the big guys at this point.)
There's a bakery in Carmel that we've gone to more times than I can remember, and every memory I have of it includes my mom buying their big — like 6 ″ big — gingerbread man cookies and raving about how good they are.
At least in my experience, there is a big difference if I use strawberries I buy in season and imported.
Rather than a big bang, however, it is going to be a slower transition, as there will be no public money to pay the growers to pull out their vines — a process costing about $ 3000 a hectare — and will only happen as large producers such as Treasury Wine Estates, Accolade Wines and Pernod Ricard buy fewer grapes, he said.
Now there's a reason behind my madness, there always is, and the reason I chose to make this dish is because I bought these beautiful Meyer Lemons from Costco and I have a lot of them, they came in a great big box and I'm just dying to use them.
There's no comparison between homemade nut butter and store - bought for Mark Overbay, founder of the handcrafted nut butter company Big Spoon Roasters, as long as you follow his rules of the road.
Green lentils and red curry seem like an odd combination to me, but I've always got green lentils hanging around, and if there's a vegetable that's hogging up space in my fridge, chances are it's a big old cauliflower crown, so I didn't even have to run out and buy anything special for this dish.
But there's a big problem with most of store - bought granola: it's loaded with sugar, additives, and unhealthy fats.
I think homemade is a bit cheaper — I recently bought a BIG bag of almonds for about $ 10 at Whole Foods, but it's made 3 jugs of almond milk so far, and there's still enough left to make at least 3 more!
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