Sentences with phrase «big upward moves»

Because fear is a greater motivator than envy, that is why the big downward moves are almost always greater than the big upward moves.

Not exact matches

For example, when we have seen big moves in energy costs, such as the price of gasoline, there has been little evidence that consumers began to adjust their overall inflation expectations, either upward or downward.
The stock market didn't make any big moves on Tuesday, with major benchmarks mostly easing upward slightly.
However, a big concern is why Mitsubishi doesn't add a sixth - speed gear to the manual to lower the RPMs while cruising and moving the highway numbers upward.
That's the trade - off with this strategy: if markets move upward quickly — and they do that all the time — you could forfeit a big gain.
yeah killzone 2 does not use Resistance 2's water at all... in fact I've never seen water that looks like that of killzone 2 yet... it has multiple layers with multiple real - time reflections... but, at least for the big moving water body in the demo... there are no physics like uncharted or R2 incorporated... if you shoot it, there is a huge plume of water that jets upward, but no real ripples in the body... it still looks great, at the ripples wouldn't look right with the waves and the current of the water... but its definitely not an R2 water engine or anything... however killzone 2 does have the ripples in other areas... puddles will react to bullet fire apparently... and there are areas of flooded buildings with «still» water... that do have the uncharted like ripples according to some... but the big flowing river does not...
At a current oil price of about $ 46 per barrel, there's little chance that there will be a big push toward development, but as soon as prices range upward of $ 80 per barrel, that could change — plus, some of the policy barriers may be coming down, Zukunft said, referring to the Trump administration's moves to enable offshore Arctic drilling.
One of the biggest problem loans has been what the mortgage industry calls the «exploding ARM,» a loan that after a short low rate period adjusts upward without regard to the direction in which interest rate indices are moving.
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