Sentences with phrase «from reining in»

I had been wondering what sort of energy savings might result from reining in US militarism might result prior to bin Laden's demise, and now that seems doubling important.

Not exact matches

He may have been prompted by a report from news website Axios saying he was obsessed with Amazon and considering ways to rein in the company's power, possibly with federal antitrust or competition laws.
They've limited the number of homes Chinese can buy, restricted many state - run companies from buying up land, and ordered banks to rein in their lending, yet still prices continue to rise.
A series of positive signs from the economy — from healthy retail sales to a housing recovery that seems to be gaining traction — and a surprisingly strong February jobs report didn't convince the Fed it was time to rein - in the monetary stimulus.
The first priority is to keep a downward debt - deflation spiral from taking hold; once that scenario is less of a risk, reining in government finances can be considered.
I think this aspect of his leadership style is one that other leaders can and should follow — but they have to be willing to listen and accept advice and thoughts from below (which means reining in their egos).»
Conversely, reining in non-labor costs is one of the reasons JPMorgan is downgrading JetBlue from «overweight» to «neutral»
The former has experienced difficulty reining in his impulsive boss, who is said to be isolating his top lieutenant from key decisions, according to a report in The Associated Press.
From beginning my career on the manufacturing floor of Mars Drinks in the UK to taking the reins as president of Mars Chocolate North America, each role I've held has differed from the last — and has challenged me in new and exciting wFrom beginning my career on the manufacturing floor of Mars Drinks in the UK to taking the reins as president of Mars Chocolate North America, each role I've held has differed from the last — and has challenged me in new and exciting wfrom the last — and has challenged me in new and exciting ways.
When Jain took over the reins from his predecessor Don Jacobs at Kellogg in September 2001, he had big shoes to fill and formidable challenges ahead.
However, the actual phrase derives from the reins that are used to control a horse, so in its correct form, the phrase reads «given free rein
North Korea has defied all calls to rein in its nuclear and missile programmes, even from China, its lone major ally, calling them legitimate self - defence.
Notably, this figure has shifted from 43 per cent when he took over the reins in November 2013.
Boire, who took the reins last summer, added that the retailer has benefitted from efforts to diversify its offerings and ramp up its educational toys and gift businesses, sales of which grew 12.5 % and 13.8 % respectively in the quarter ended Jan. 30.
Cook, who took the reins from late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in 2011, only came out openly as a gay man six months ago.
As John Manley, president of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives and former deputy prime minister, noted in a speech last fall on «Canada's Decade of Opportunity,» much of what the protesters fought for — from higher taxes on the rich to more jobs to reining in of banks — has already been achieved here.
Flanders took the reins from Hefner's daughter Christie in 2009, the year Playboy lost $ 51.3 million, its stock price fell below a dollar a share and it barely escaped being delisted by the New York Stock Exchange.
That surge reflects a defensive mentality: Drugmakers hope the scale that comes with consolidation can give them leverage to resist pressure from health care providers and insurers to rein in prices.
In 1996, Katie Ford took the reins from her parents.
Since taking the reins of the group in 2010, he has transformed it from a local branch of al - Qaida into an independent transnational military force, positioning himself as perhaps the pre-eminent figure in the global jihadi community.
But as Coach reined in its prestige - sapping ubiquity, hired a hot fashion designer in Stuart Vevers and ramped up the caliber of its bags, as exemplified by its pricey but coveted Rogue line, it has been able to command ever higher prices, and more crucially, set itself apart from rivals like Michael Kors (kors) and Kate Spade (kate).
Combining with Heinz should give Kraft a bit more clout with suppliers and potentially rein in some of the impact from rising commodity prices.
It commits rich and poor nations to rein in rising carbon levels and is an attempt to eliminate net greenhouse gas emissions from human activity this century.
Amazon became the market's latest tech whipping boy yesterday, following a report from Axios that President Trump wants to rein in its growing power.
Shortly after arriving from Boeing to take the reins at Ford, in September 2006, Alan Mulally instituted a new system for detecting failures.
The departure follows several difficult years for the UK hedge fund company and comes amid plans to rein in costs and reverse an exodus of investors from its funds.
(Sessions is recused from oversight over the probe, but a new attorney general wouldn't necessarily be — and could rein it in.)
The government in Seoul has enacted tough measures to rein in speculation but that hasn't stopped traders from re-entering the market amid the latest upward correction.
The new Fed chair will likely take the reins from Bernanke in January of next year, right as the central bank dials back its unprecedented $ 85 - billion a month bond - buying program.
In 2012, the company took the reins back from its Chinese distributor and began to oversee its own China operations, rolling out multiple sales channels and directly managing consumer engagement.
Governments all over the world have been trying to rein in the speculation that came from new interest in cryptocurrencies.
OTTAWA — The Trudeau government reined in new spending in a wait - and - see budget that touts support for ordinary Canadians but hedged its bets in the face of a still weak global economy and unpredictable fallout from the Donald Trump administration.
Although the country is taking steps to rein in carbon pollution in other parts of the country, the exponential rise in emissions from the oil sands will more than offset gains being made elsewhere.
The recent surge in regulatory demands to rein in various types of credit creation conflicts with the pressure on banks from local authorities to fund even more nonproductive economic activity.
The Chinese authorities have expressed concern about overheating in some sectors of the economy, taking action to rein in credit growth and rebalance growth away from investment and towards greater household spending, but as yet there is little evidence that this is having the desired effect.
Outgoing Coles managing director John Durkan, who is set to hand the reins to Steven Cain before the demerger, still expects the retailer to return to profit growth in the June half despite a «small headwind» from higher labour costs.
Aside from the dangerously foolish idea that reining in excessive government spending is a bad thing, Reinhart and Rogoff are saying that even more massive government intervention should be pursued.
Levandowski announced that he was recusing himself from his role for the duration of the Alphabet litigation, and handing over the reins to then second - in - command at the self - driving department, Eric Meyhofer.
Share prices of real estate developers both in Hong Kong and on the Mainland bourses saw heavy losses, following fresh measures from some Chinese cities to rein property prices on over the weekend.
The company has seen a slew of changes since Sadoun took the CEO reins from Maurice Lévy in June.
From TRD New York: Price gains slowed ever - so - slightly in China's major cities in July amid the government's effort to rein in the housing market...
Those who think that today's Catholic Church has problems reining in its errant clergy should read Craig Harline and Eddy Put's summary of the new code of conduct that Mathias Hovius, Archbishop of Mechelin (not far from Brussels in today's Belgium) from 1596 to 1620, laid down for every priest in his diocese:
Standing for Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny, the REINS act: ``... would require Congress....
God the Spirit creates ecstasy reined in by order, heroism tempered by rationality, solitary raptures which are never far removed from the responsibility of communal living.
Cracks appeared in this stability and continuity with the Nouvelle Théologie (from the 1930s), [and] the 1955 Holy Week reform...» This seems a rather weak diagnosis of secularism's taking over of the cultural reins.
She is the 133rd person to be appointed to the role, and takes the reins from the Right Reverend Lord Richard Chartres, who retired in February.
Any student who deviates too widely from this professional standard is reined in.
From a local, tribal god they found their way through to the sovereign Creator of the universe, in whose hands were the reins of all history, and from whose control no star and no nation could escFrom a local, tribal god they found their way through to the sovereign Creator of the universe, in whose hands were the reins of all history, and from whose control no star and no nation could escfrom whose control no star and no nation could escape.
«One of the common errors of founder - presidents is to hold to the reins of leadership too long, thereby preventing the next generation from being prepared for executive authority,» Dobson said in a statement.»
The first part describes the incredibly free and majestic flight of the bird in terms of an early morning vision: the metaphors are drawn from three main sources — the light and wind of early morning (daylight, dawn, air, wind), royalty (minion, falcon, kingdom, dauphin), and horsemanship (riding, rein).
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