Not exact matches
Back then Kia, like Hyundai, was
nobody's first choice: The appeal was that you could
buy a new Hyundai Excel or a Kia Sephia
for the
price of a three - year - old Honda Civic, making it the first new car many buyers ever owned.
So
for example if you put a short story up at the
price of $ 5.99 U.S. Dollars
nobody's going to
buy that, and if they do
buy it they'll be disappointed.
Their role is to maintain liquidity by offering to
buy or sell ETF units when
nobody else will, and also to set the «goalposts»
for the bid and ask
prices.
But I don't think that's a foolish strategy — there's plenty of investors who can boast greater takeover success, but many tend to pay up
for the privilege, especially when you factor in dud rumours & deteriorating businesses which
nobody ends up
buying'til the share
price actually collapses.
So I got stucked with a pricey crap game with an expensive crap console, I tried to sell it third of the
price but
nobody want to
buy a used console without the stupid gamepad and the controller, I sold 4 games
for 25 % of the
price and 2 games are digital (Another no in the feature).
Nobody can say
for sure, but at the same time a rerelease of Bayonetta 1 & 2 was announced with the option to
buy the first title on its own
for the eShop or get both titles
for the
price of one.
games on demand
prices are ridiculous to say the least.most of the games on demand games can be found
for a fraction of the cost somewhere else.even 15 dollers is to high
for gears considering i can go to my local game store and pick it up
for 7.99 to 9.99 at the most to hell with xbla and there games on demand.i have to really be impressed to
buy even a arcade tittle.and its sad because at the end of the day microsoft is the one loosing money because
nobody buys that stuff.
Deflation starts a death spiral where
nobody buys because they can wait
for lower
prices.