Sentences with phrase «just leaves the market»

This just leaves the market wide - open for a startup to swoop in and build the market from the ground up.

Not exact matches

The market is set to expand, too, after the Supreme Court ruled earlier this month that medical marijuana can be consumed in forms other than the dried leaf variety, opening the door to cannabis oils, teas, brownies, juices, and just about anything else.
«Ending the cost - sharing payments would be a clear signal from the Trump administration that they are not aiming to run the ACA marketplace effectively, so insurers would likely just throw up their hands and leave the market,» said Larry Levitt, a senior vice president at The Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health - policy think tank.
To avoid being a market lemming, retail investors need a solid plan, low fees and the Buffett - like temperament to just leave their holdings alone in times of turmoil.
40 % of companies think the quality of online talent beats the quality of talent available in their local market; 29 % say it's equivalent (22 % were unsure, leaving just 9 % to report that online talent is worse than local talent.)
There just aren't that many stable places left for investors to put their money and a lot of it will come here, perhaps heading to the bond markets, driving yields down.
The facts are not right here, energy is cheap that means the cost of manufacturing and transporting of goods is low, food and consumers staples already more affordable, so what if a few American oil companies going out of business.the cost of producing oil in middle east is less than $ 10 / bl and we were paying more than $ 140 / bl for it, with that huge profit margin the big oil companies and oil producing nations became richer and the rest of us left behind, with the oil price this low the oil giants don't want to reduce the price at pump even a penny, because they are so greedy.worst case scenario is some CEOs bonuses might drop from $ 20 million to $ 15 millions I am sure they will survive.in terms of the stock market it always bounces back, after all it's just a casino like game.
If I try to market to just one single person, I'll be leaving out too many people.
The pitch was that if you just keep your money in the market when the going gets rough, such as in bear markets, the substantial upside in the good years will more than compensate for the down years, thereby leaving you with a solid annualized gain over long - term.
That's fine if market conditions are just right, but it leaves plans vulnerable in many environments.
Just as we're leaving more traditional marketing channels behind, the advent of the Internet of Things (IoT), connected / smart devices, and mobile technologies is blurring the lines between the digital, traditional and physical at a rapid rate.
Just as real estate lending fuels land speculation, so the withdrawal of such credit leaves property markets to decline, sometimes with a crash, as occurred in Japan after 1990 when its financial bubble burst.
It is wishful thinking to imagine that the most extreme economic, debt and investment bubble in history was corrected by a mild economic downturn, a market decline that leaves stocks at 21 times peak earnings (higher than at the 1929 and 1987 peaks), and just a few large - scale defaults from a corporate debt position which continues to claim a record share of operating earnings to finance.
Instead of investing in just one stock, leaving us vulnerable to market swings, ETFs expose us to hundreds at once, providing broad diversification.
This week has been loaded with FED OFFICIALS filling the airwaves with thoughts about ending QE or just tapering, with the markets left to discern how, when and how much.
According to data from CoinMarketCap, all of the top 20 cryptocurrencies have displayed growth in the last 24 hours leaving the total market cap at just under $ 300 billion USD at press time.
Just to chime in from the «Conversion Optimization» session from the previous day of the show, if you're spending money on paid search marketing and you're not actively managing / optimizing your landing pages, you're leaving money on the table.
But the problem here is that Cambridge Analytica did not just employ sophisticated mass marketing, it went the whole hog and ran very specific targeted marketing campaigns for Trump while an allegedly linked Canadian company used the same technology on behalf of the Vote Leave campaign during the EU Referendum.
In a paper on countercyclical investing, Bradley Jones at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) points out that investors often hire active managers just after a period of outperformance, only to experience a period of subsequent underperformance based on where they are in the market cycle.3 Or after doing a tremendous amount of due diligence to hire active managers, institutional investors might be forced to replace underperforming managers, only to leave alpha on the table as these fired managers often outperform in subsequent periods.
It seems like the price is stuck in a certain range and just doesn't want to move while the market keeps chugging along leaving it behind.
The real concern is not just that actively managed funds could disappear but that the entire market could be left for dead.
A look at the headlines of late may leave you with a familiar conclusion — with all the ups and downs in the market, it's just too early to take crypto seriously.
If you have any rockin» online marketing infographics that you'd like to suggest for the collection, just leave a comment with a link.
What the left finds distasteful and dangerous about evangelicalism is not just its conservative biblical hermeneutic, but more importantly, its anti-Communism, opposition to socialism, and — conversely — its free market and pro-business orientation.
I just left a church where someone who's been instrumental in church growth programs in the past wanted to do a marketing campaign for the church, that in my opinion, amounted to a sales job to get people in the door no matter how much the church matched the marketing campaign.
There would be no external standards of what is right and wrong, just and unjust, moral and immoral, by which its results could be judged; there would be no guarantee that, even in the absence of outside intervention, globalization would be a benign process; and there would be no assurance that in a free society, left to itself, we could count on an evolution of moral beliefs to generate values which would continue to underpin the market order.19
Just tried this récipe as my first experience with kale (finally found it in local eco market this week); verdict — fabulous!!!! I love tamari anyway & it really works so well to soften the kale leaves.
While fermentation is not a new process, and producing sweeteners by feeding microbes is arguably more sustainable than growing acres of stevia plants just to extract components from their leaves, it is unclear how the market will respond to EverSweet, given that the reason food and beverage manufacturers started experimenting with stevia in the first place was precisely due to its «natural» credentials (it's from a leaf).
This fall, I got a few heads of really leafy celery from the farmers market and didn't want to just throw away all those leaves, so I decided to experiment and made celery salt.
I just got back from MOM's Organic market with a jar of Coconut oil to leave in my office.
I think I just need to buy a kaffir lime tree, I'm too far away from the proper market to keep the leaves fresh for any amount of time.
And at 24 - years of age do we really think that this player who scored a fantastic winner in the World Cup final just two years ago after a very good tournament and who was one of the most sought after on the transfer market as he prepared to leave Borussia Dortmund is all washed up?
If Arsenal do let him go, then we may find that we will be in the market for two left backs shortly, not just one.
Few days left in the transfer market, time to bring more players... Because some of them are just not Arsenal / top quality...!
Giroud was bought to cover RvP, knowing his injury record and all that... At the time RvP wanted the board to show some ambition in the transfer market before he signed a contract extension and we bough bargain buys... So he left and we cashed in for the cash some the CL brings in, just incase we failed to make it.
He has been horrible in the transfer market burdening the club with the likes of Xhaka, Mustafi, Chambers, Wellbeck, Perez, etc... I will not pay tribute to him just because finally he is leaving.
is now officially on the transfer market, after the Borussia Dortmund CEO Hans - Joachim Watzke has told Bild that the (just turned) 28 year - old can leave if the right offer comes along.
He has ambitions that he already made clear, he wants to win trophies not settle for top 4, and if we don't show any ambition in the transfer market he will leave for a club that has just like RVP..
1) Overpaid players on high salaries 2) Leave selling players at the very end of transfer window 3) Club not knowing what their priorities are during a transfer window by planning beforehand 4) Being too greedy for wanting higher valuation price on average players or selling players bellow their market rate 5) Letting players hold the club to ransom by giving them game time just to make them happy 6) Using the lack of players leaving as an excuse for not signing more players
We were told by Gazidis that we had secured massive sponsorship deals and that we would be active in the market but again the sad truth is we've only really bought two players as Ospina replaced Fabianski, Debuchy replaced Sanga, Chambers, whilst looking very good, is by no means a Vermalan replacement just yet which leaves Alexis and now Welbeck.
at every home game please donate a pound or better throw it in Wengers direction he may get 50 to 60 k pounds every home match as they are already looting the fans there.sit on the money and wait for market value to come down wenger.players are there he just does not wan na pay.But we are a small club, wenger is actually proving the likes of fabregas, nasri and van persie that they were right to leave the club cuz all players have ambition to win the league
Kyle Walker left for Manchester City this past summer to set the tone, but ultimately Spurs did well to limit it to just one major sale as Mauricio Pochettino was able to strengthen in the transfer market too.
But the window closed without a defensive addition, leaving just the loan market and it is very unlikely that we would find anyone there.
Time for some brutal honesty... this team, as it stands, is in no better position to compete next season than they were 12 months ago, minus the fact that some fans have been easily snowed by the acquisition of Lacazette, the free transfer LB and the release of Sanogo... if you look at the facts carefully you will see a team that still has far more questions than answers... to better show what I mean by this statement I will briefly discuss the current state of affairs on a position - by - position basis... in goal we have 4 potential candidates, but in reality we have only 1 option with any real future and somehow he's the only one we have actively tried to get rid of for years because he and his father were a little too involved on social media and he got caught smoking (funny how people still defend Wiltshire under the same and far worse circumstances)... you would think we would want to keep any goaltender that Juventus had interest in, as they seem to have a pretty good history when it comes to that position... as far as the defenders on our current roster there are only a few individuals whom have the skill and / or youth worthy of our time and / or investment, as such we should get rid of anyone who doesn't meet those simple requirements, which means we should get rid of DeBouchy, Gibbs, Gabriel, Mertz and loan out Chambers to see if last seasons foray with Middlesborough was an anomaly or a prediction of things to come... some fans have lamented wildly about the return of Mertz to the starting lineup due to his FA Cup performance but these sort of pie in the sky meanderings are indicative of what's wrong with this club and it's wishy - washy fan - base... in addition to these moves the club should aggressively pursue the acquisition of dominant and mobile CB to stabilize an all too fragile defensive group that has self - destructed on numerous occasions over the past 5 seasons... moving forward and building on our need to re-establish our once dominant presence throughout the middle of the park we need to target a CDM then do whatever it takes to get that player into the fold without any of the usual nickel and diming we have become famous for (this kind of ruthless haggling has cost us numerous special players and certainly can't help make the player in question feel good about the way their future potential employer feels about them)... in order for us to become dominant again we need to be strong up the middle again from Goalkeeper to CB to DM to ACM to striker, like we did in our most glorious years before and during Wenger's reign... with this in mind, if we want Ozil to be that dominant attacking midfielder we can't keep leaving him exposed to constant ridicule about his lack of defensive prowess and provide him with the proper players in the final third... he was never a good defensive player in Real or with the German National squad and they certainly didn't suffer as a result of his presence on the pitch... as for the rest of the midfield the blame falls squarely in the hands of Wenger and Gazidis, the fact that Ramsey, Ox, Sanchez and even Ozil were allowed to regularly start when none of the aforementioned had more than a year left under contract is criminal for a club of this size and financial might... the fact that we could find money for Walcott and Xhaka, who weren't even guaranteed starters, means that our whole business model needs a complete overhaul... for me it's time to get rid of some serious deadweight, even if it means selling them below what you believe their market value is just to simply right this ship and change the stagnant culture that currently exists... this means saying goodbye to Wiltshire, Elneny, Carzola, Walcott and Ramsey... everyone, minus Elneny, have spent just as much time on the training table as on the field of play, which would be manageable if they weren't so inconsistent from a performance standpoint (excluding Carzola, who is like the recent version of Rosicky — too bad, both will be deeply missed)... in their places we need to bring in some proven performers with no history of injuries... up front, although I do like the possibilities that a player like Lacazette presents, the fact that we had to wait so many years to acquire some true quality at the striker position falls once again squarely at the feet of Wenger... this issue highlights the ultimate scam being perpetrated by this club since the arrival of Kroenke: pretend your a small market club when it comes to making purchases but milk your fans like a big market club when it comes to ticket prices and merchandising... I believe the reason why Wenger hasn't pursued someone of Henry's quality, minus a fairly inexpensive RVP, was that he knew that they would demand players of a similar ilk to be brought on board and that wasn't possible when the business model was that of a «selling» club... does it really make sense that we could only make a cheeky bid for Suarez, or that we couldn't get Higuain over the line when he was being offered up for half the price he eventually went to Juve for, or that we've only paid any interest to strikers who were clearly not going to press their current teams to let them go to Arsenal like Benzema or Cavani... just part of the facade that finally came crashing down when Sanchez finally called their bluff... the fact remains that no one wants to win more than Sanchez, including Wenger, and although I don't agree with everything that he has done off the field, I would much rather have Alexis front and center than a manager who has clearly bought into the Kroenke model in large part due to the fact that his enormous ego suggests that only he could accomplish great things without breaking the bank... unfortunately that isn't possible anymore as the game has changed quite dramatically in the last 15 years, which has left a largely complacent and complicit Wenger on the outside looking in... so don't blame those players who demanded more and were left wanting... don't blame those fans who have tried desperately to raise awareness for several years when cracks began to appear... place the blame at the feet of those who were well aware all along of the potential pitfalls of just such a plan but continued to follow it even when it was no longer a financial necessity, like it ever really was...
We've been given the opportunity to present to you a series of supporter T - shirts designed by yours truly, and are on the market for a limited time — just four days left!
Just when Arsene Wenger seemed to hint that he was not going to be entering the transfer market again this summer, we now find out that Matthieu Flamini is expected to be leaving the club in the next few days.
Some matches you should just leave an outright bet alone and head straight to the goal markets, this is one such game.
Juve - who have just lost one quality right - back - immediately spring to mind, while Manchester City's signing of Kyle Walker also leaves Spurs in the market for an able replacement.
With just over a day of the transfer market left, Man City are considering a serious late bid for Leicester City's Algerian star Riyad Mahrez.
Sezer Yurdakul, Global Head of Online Marketing at Voucherbox.co.uk said, «While we understand that some fans may want to leave games early to avoid the traffic, or perhaps just to get away from their team's poor performances, our findings show just what fans could be missing out on.
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