Not exact matches
Last week I noted that the Fund would quickly and almost invariably
lose at least 1 - 2 % in the event of a
substantial market decline, at which point I expected the put options beneath the portfolio to reduce the impact of
market fluctuations on the portfolio.
This is a
market that could very quickly
lose substantial value.
Its more likely that you bought stocks long before the most recent
market bottom and you may have just got back to even or possibly even
lost a
substantial portion of your average investments.
In practice, that means that the Fund would quickly and almost invariably
lose at least 1 - 2 % in the event of a
substantial market decline, at which point I would expect the put options beneath the portfolio to reduce the impact of
market fluctuations on the portfolio.
The team to leave the league would probably be from a small
market and is likely to be one of the teams
losing substantial amounts of money and dragging down the rest of the league.
Among them are deleterious effects on children of unregulated and often substandard childcare; [9]
lost productivity for employers due to parents missing work to handle gaps in childcare or to care for a sick child; [10]
lost wages and reduced retirement benefits for parents who have to drop out of the labor
market to provide at - home care for their young children; [11] a
substantial downward pressure on the wages of childcare workers with effects on the quality and stability of the childcare workforce; [12] and
lost opportunities for further education, [13] college savings, and other investments that working parents could make in themselves and their children but can not afford because they are spending most or all of their disposable income on childcare.
Barnes & Noble says that before publishers enacted agency pricing, it could not compete against Amazon: «[a] s a result of Amazon's pricing (which priced most bestselling books sold by Barnes & Noble below Barnes & Noble's, and Amazon's, direct costs), Barnes & Noble was
losing substantial money in an effort to compete with Amazon's pricing, and was unable to gain significant
market share.»
The problem is it's inevitably going to
lose its luster and it ignores a
substantial market for solo experiences.