When he says yes, say «wow that's great, I'm kind of nervous about my future in this field,
especially after the recession.
Historically, real estate has been appreciating exponentially,
especially after a recession.
Not exact matches
economic growth and higher returns on investments (
especially after the Great
Recession of 2008 - 2009) that generated higher dividend and capital gain distributions, with no associated tax withholding,
After the last great
recession, credit repair has become a booming business,
especially for the credit repair companies.
The minimum credit score needed to buy a house isn't set in stone and in fact, it can change quite often
especially during and
after a
recession when the economy is on a downturn.
This long lasting growth feels much deserved,
especially after the painful impact of the Great
Recession, which began in December 2007 and lasted until June 2009.
However, we attempted to mitigate that with the growth statistic, which measures the change in the number of establishments from 2007 to 2009 — an
especially relevant time frame because it stretches from before the recent
recession to
after.
The word «investing» can strike fear into the hearts of many millennials,
especially after witnessing the thousands of people who lost their life savings in the
recession of 2008.
Miller argues that high - yielding stocks have performed well
after past bear markets,
especially ones induced by a
recession.
At the time, Miller argued that high - dividend - yielding stocks have performed extremely well
after past bear markets,
especially bear markets induced by a
recession — a prediction that proved to be very accurate.
What makes it
especially bad right now, however, is the fundamentally fragile state much of the world is still in, eight years
after the great financial crisis... So we are very probably looking at a global
recession, with no end in sight.
NEW YORK —
After a pro-longed
recession, residential brokers are enjoying a boom in housing demand,
especially in the city's affluent neighborhoods.
After all these years, the conventional wisdom seems to be that everyone is to blame for the Great Real Estate Bubble and the Great
Recession; regulators, politicians, the Fed, rating agencies and so on, but
especially, Wall Street and the banks.