With that said... I say: If Vegas «pre-paid» a Kansas St. lay - off early in the line... (pre-paid layoffs don't have to go to the action - favourite, only a line shift needs to be anticipated with intention of middling the layoff and the action)... then they will have
bought x amount of Kansas WTS units at +9.5 in anticipation of selling x amount of units at +7.5 in attempts to middle a 8 - 9 point spread where they'd win the action as well as the layoff.
Not exact matches
Over half of people surveyed who planned to
buy Apple's new iPhone
X want to
buy the most expensive version with the maximum
amount of storage space, according to new research from RBC Capital Markets on Monday.
My strategy was to
buy properties that produced
X amount of cash flow and a minimum of 8 - 10 % equity bump / year.
She then tells me to
buy 2 different orders for
X amount each and make out to a different name and to keep the remaining
amount for myself.
If a person wants to borrow money to
buy a car, Company
X gives that person the cash, and the person is obligated to repay the loan with a certain
amount of interest.
Our NCF (Nuestra Casa Fund) goal is to save an
X amount to
buy a house in cash after we retire.
While I agree it would be good to be in for Griezmann and other players like him, the idea that just going out and spending huge
amounts of money
buying x number of world class players will give you a winning team has been shown to be flawed.
We read that Wenger has been given
X amount to spend, what would you do it you spent most of that on 2 players and then you wanted to
buy Lacazette?
Interesting thought with sending Chambers out on loan, he does need game time... If we
buy another CB then we have to think about that player for
X amount of years and well... how would that fit?
It'd be easy to say that I want a Russian oligarch or a Sheikh from the Middle East or whoever else with
x amount of billion in the bank to
buy my club but in truth, it'd be incredibly boring and I'd always be casting envious eyes over at clubs who are doing it «properly» so to speak.
I will never
buy into the reasoning of «people pay
x amount for a blank experience».
If no CSA exists, see what local farmer's markets offer, and if you find an organic farmer I would even suggest making a bulk deal with them, that each week you commit to
buying «
x»
amount, and you can work out some bulk discount to benefit both of you.
And what do ya know, its
X amount of dollars and you automatically begin justifying eating ramen for the next 6 weeks so you can splurge and
buy it because it will just look SO good and you just HAVE to have it.
It's why every Apple presentation starts with «
X amount of people
bought Y» and «Z
amount of people
bought Q».
Now I want to sell property
X for 170 lacs in 2016 - 2017 out of which the long term capital gains is 125 lacs so can I invest this
amount to
buy another residential property to save tax?
It's exactly the same as e.g.
buying an annuity (the «investment»): if you pay $
X, the monthly
amount you receive will be larger if you start taking it at 70 vs 65.
If you chose to
buy down your interest rate, the fee shows up on Page 2 in the Loan Costs tab under «Origination Charges» on the top line «
X % of Loan
Amount (Points).»
You can
buy yourself a coffee every time you pay
X amount off, or reward yourself with something small every month that you follow through with your budget.
All you have to do is
buy $
x of any mutual fund and TD will pull that
amount out of your bank account.
If I put in
X amount of hours, I can
buy these pieces of armor, and these guns.
«IT says it takes a month, will cost
X amount of money, and by the way, you'll need to
buy an extra server.»
If and when the network adopts Segregated Witness, the 1.8
x increase in transaction volume may
buy only a finite
amount of time before familiar limitations start to resurface.
It basically says that as long as there is no problems on those ends, the bank has said they will lend you up to
X amount of dollars to
buy a piece of property.
Rather than just tell a client that their house is worth, that the house they want to
buy is worth «
X»
amount of dollars, I like to do a lot of research on the MLS and then download that data into a spreadsheet for my clients.
The first flaw you describe is akin to the «move up to this property and I'll
buy yours for cash» offer where those properties are sometimes overpriced and come with a listing rep's guarantee to
buy it for a certain
amount if after
X days it fails to sell.