Well, here's a fact that may change your mind: Apple had the most profitable year ever during what we call
the biggest global recession of all times.
Not exact matches
Its
big opportunity came in 2008, when the
global recession hit.
It organized a
global spending spree that reversed the Great
Recession and it put the screws to the world's too -
big - to - fail banks.
Looking ahead to 2016, the
big risk to U.S. stocks remains an emerging market - induced
global recession.
Canada was able to eliminate its deficit in three years without plunging into
recession, he says, because it was largely alone in pursuing austerity, which meant a
big lift from a strong
global economy.
It's no wonder, then, that going into 2016, perhaps the
biggest question for investors is: «Will the
global economy improve, stabilize or slip into another
recession?»
Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world's
biggest bond fund, is forecasting that advanced economies will stall over the next year as Europe slides into a
recession, underscoring mounting investor concern about the
global economic outlook.
In the United States alone, just those companies in the S&P 500 have been hoarding more than $ 1.9 trillion in cash which began in response to jurisdictional tax disparities and
global economic uncertainty following the Great
Recession, then accelerated over the past decade as
big U.S. corporations accumulated profits offshore in lieu of repatriating the funds and taking a tax hit.
Bill Gross, the manager of the world's
biggest bond fund, said the
global economy risks lapsing into
recession with the pace of growth falling below the «new normal» level the firm has predicted since 2009.
At the beginning of this parliament the Labour party lost precious months conducting an overlong leadership campaign that allowed the coalition government to develop its
big fat lie about the
global recession, while we in Labour examined our collective navel.
Economic fragility in China, the
recession in Japan, the U.K. exit from the European Union and «too
big to fail» European banks create an environment of unprecedented
global uncertainty.
But now that the market is marching in lockstep with the
global recession, the
big question for those involved with art is: How's it affecting you?
Meanwhile a housing and financial bubble bursting in China, and the inflationary bubble in the US funded by the magic money of the Fed are both set to burst into undeniable reality any time soon, will at least drive down fossil fuel use during the looming new
global recession about to hit from the two
biggest economies on the world going someways down the toilet.....
Whether or not these economies are truly decoupled, the strength of domestic demand has undoubtedly contributed to their recent success, and I feel confident that as the West emerges from
recession, the pace of
global expansion from the
big companies will soon pick up again.
We're in the depths of the most unimaginable
recession, bordering on the
big «D' word, and it's
global, not just in North America.