Sentences with phrase «nearly cents on the dollar»

Buying them in the bulk bin section cost nearly cents on the dollar.

Not exact matches

This means that Western Canadian Select, currently trading at 37.27, is already below that much - hyped $ 40 mark, and while Brent oil prices fell nearly 50 cents on Thursday, Qatar's Marine blend was up by a dollar.
The dollar index (DXY) peaked in December 2016 and has subsequently lost nearly 13 per cent, shrugging off what should have been positive effects from U.S. tax reform and a Federal Reserve about to embark on a tightening cycle.
Shares in Treasury Wine Estates, the world's biggest listed winemaker and owner of brands such as Penfolds, Wolf Blass and Rosemount, have rocketed nearly 15 per cent this morning on rumors that global French drinks giant Pernod Ricard could be circling to snap up key assets of the business including its billion dollar US vineyards and wine labels.
New York collects sales tax on even the smallest items, but it probably won't collect a cent on a nearly half - billion dollar painting by Leonardo da Vinci.
In the U.S., which is well informed and spends nearly 20 cents per dollar of economic activity on health care, nearly one out of every two pregnancies is unintended.
As I noted this past January in Sixteen Cents: Pushing the Unstable Limits of Monetary Policy, a collapse in short - term yields to nearly zero is a predictable outcome of QE2, based on the very robust historical relationship between short - term interest rates and the amount of cash and bank reserves (monetary base) that people are willing to hold per dollar of nominal GDP:
TORONTO — The Canadian dollar slipped below 70 cents U.S. on Wednesday for the second day in a row as the currency traded near lows set nearly 13 years ago.
If fact, Singapore's award chart trumps United's own award chart on nearly every itinerary in North America, especially with no close - in booking fees, a low $ 30 SGD fee to cancel and an even lower $ 12 SGD fee to change a ticket (Singaporean dollars are each worth ~ 70 US cents).
Today, nearly 25 cents of every dollar spent by Americans are on products regulated by the agency.
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