This is important because, if users or
investors lose faith in Zuckerberg's ability to create change, they lose faith in Facebook.
A bear market is triggered when
investors lose faith in the market as a whole — decreasing the demand for stocks.
With the boom years of the 1980s and 1990s now a distant memory, it is not shocking to see
investors losing faith in the cult of capital gains and gravitating instead to dividend - paying stocks and ETFs.
Not exact matches
If
faith in the greenback is somehow
lost completely before full convertibility of China's yuan is obtained, Fink warns
investors to expect another «massive economic crisis.»
RIM will not be releasing its next generation of BlackBerry devices until next year, and recent management stumbles are causing
investors and analysts to
lose faith in the company's ability to deliver.
It's understandable why
investors have been
losing faith in these funds.
This is especially true at a time when some
investors have
lost faith in this principle following several notable episodes in recent years when stock and bond prices moved together.
After witnessing unconventional monetary policies push financial markets to new heights,
investors seem to be
losing faith in this grand experiment.
Over the past two years I have
lost faith in my own abilities (was a successful buy and hold
investor in mostly mining stocks... copped a big hit in» 08).
Now, we've reached a tipping point:
investors and lenders are
losing faith that the laggards can turn around.
As the secular bear market drags on,
investors become more and more discouraged with their buy and hold positions and they begin to
lose faith in the system, their strategy and stocks in general.
If
investors and board members think that you are hiding something, they will
lose faith in you and your management skills.
This is just the latest reason why
investors have been
losing faith in central banks.
Investors throughout the world have
lost faith in the dollar and other paper currencies, and are moving into gold or simply closing off their economies.
I've long wondered that after four years of unprecedented monetary policy with still very tepid at best economic growth, just whether
investors would
lose faith in the Fed (and really global central bankers for that matter) and politicians.
Once carried high on a tide of stampeding bulls, Syrah is now beset by anxious
investors who, at the eleventh hour, seem to have
lost faith in the company's ability to supply both industrial users and electric vehicles with the graphite they need.
Customers placing their «
faith» in Musk's ability to «sort fix and finish» (allegedly easy according to his fan boys and girls - who have then moaned because the car isn't even finished properly - see their online checklists which are hilarious but not in a god way), then there's the all too horrid thought that with the billions of losses ($ 710 last quarter) that they will
lose another round of large
investors and small ones too when some of them have wakened up to the fact that under Musk Tesla isn't likely to ever be in profit, and yet Musk promises that too.
Over the past two years I have
lost faith in my own abilities (was a successful buy and hold
investor in mostly mining stocks... copped a big hit in» 08).
Are US bond
investors beginning to
lose faith that Fed monetary policy can right the still listing domestic economic ship?
This is especially true at a time when some
investors have
lost faith in this principle following several notable episodes in recent years when stock and bond prices moved together.
Of a truth, some
investors who borrowed money to buy bitcoin at $ 20,000 may have
lost faith in the markets, however, true hodlers like an Arizona Lawyer, Scott Weiss is not ready to sell off his coins.