Some items, like the fries and the classic frozen custard shakes, have
not gone up in price at all.
Level term policies guarantee to pay out a benefit when the policy is in force, and is also guaranteed to
not go up in price during the level term period.
But games haven't gone up in price since the PlayStation 2 era, and that's why we're dealing with DLC, microtransactions, online passes, loot boxes, you name it.
Level term policies guarantee to pay out a benefit when the policy is in force, and is also guaranteed to
not go up in price during the level term period.
As stated, whole life policies can't go up in price or expire once you hit a certain age.
Not exact matches
«I believe that the situation will
not improve
in the next few years, because salaries don't
go up and
prices don't
go down.
For instance, «someone has to pay for a mover and cough
up the security deposit because you're not necessarily going to get it back from the original apartment if the other person is staying,» says Wynne Whitman, attorney at the law firm Schenck, Price, Smith & King, LLP and coauthor of Shacking Up: The Smart Girl's Guide to Living in Sin Without Getting Burne
up the security deposit because you're
not necessarily
going to get it back from the original apartment if the other person is staying,» says Wynne Whitman, attorney at the law firm Schenck,
Price, Smith & King, LLP and coauthor of Shacking
Up: The Smart Girl's Guide to Living in Sin Without Getting Burne
Up: The Smart Girl's Guide to Living
in Sin Without Getting Burned.
«Whenever interest rates
go up, most likely we see some softening of
prices, but we don't think it will be bad enough to hurt the economy
in a meaningful way.»
«I think your
pricing's
going to
go up, I don't think it's a good deal for the country,» he said
in November.
«You don't want to wait too long, because the things you're looking for might sell out, or
go up in price,» he said.
But even
in milder «left tail scenarios» it is
price that makes the difference to mutual fund and ETF holders alike, and when liquidity is scarce,
prices usually
go down
not up, given a Minsky moment.
And
not only boat fares are expensive, all the goods that we need to buy also
go up in prices.
And the fraction - of - a-fraction of the purchase
price that ends
up contributing to the company's bottom line isn't
going to either keep SodaStream
in business or put them out of it.
Recent
price swings
in credit markets are «a wake -
up call that central banks are withdrawing liquidity, and that the process is
not going to be smooth,» Adam Richmond, Morgan Stanley's head of US credit strategy, wrote
in a client note.
The logic being that the current investors and founders have more inside knowledge of the company performance and dynamics than a brand new investor and thus if the new investor is
going to «pay
up» they shouldn't take all of the
pricing risk
in the deal.
They provide a way for traders
not to invest directly
in Bitcoin itself but instead wager on where they think it's
going, whether they believe the
price will
go up or down.
«If rates
go up — and I don't think they will — then the increase
in yields would hurt metals and mining company
prices as money left these assets and moved into fixed income.»
Right now a transaction that redeems 1 bitcoin doesn't look suspicious, but
in the near future bitcoin
price will
go up and the average amount of spent bitcoins
in each transaction will most likely
go down, making Zerocoin Spent transaction look suspicious.
You'd think that corporate debt would grow
in proportion to total sales, as this additional debt is used to fund investments
in productive activities that create more sales and contribute to the economy, and that higher sales, and presumably higher earnings would create a proportionate increase
in the value of the company, and thus
in its stock
price, and that they all
go up together,
not in lockstep but over time more or less at the same rate.
Vacation Rentals — Buying a property
in a vacation area and renting it out when you are
not staying there is
not only a great way to pay for your vacation home but also build equity
in a location where
prices go up (and down) with more extreme force.
This is a confusing experience for the real estate industry, sellers, and buyers, since
prices have ballooned for 18 years, interrupted by only one brief dip during the Financial Crisis, and the rule has been that
prices will always
go up and that you can
not lose money
in real estate.
If growth
in America is accelerating, which it seems to be, and any remaining slack
in the labor markets is disappearing — and wages start
going up, as do commodity
prices — then it is
not an unreasonable possibility that inflation could
go higher than people might expect.
Goods
go up in price every year due to inflation (think about how we joke that movie tickets used to cost $ 2) so your money doesn't stretch as far as it used to.
Monetary policy can drive
up asset
prices and create a bubble, Mr. Stiglitz said
in an interview, «but consumption isn't
going to
go up.
While you might
not get the return per barrel, that's such a lower investment risk that as soon as you have any sort of bubble -
up in prices, the shale drillers will
go in and take the market share.»
I am constantly toying with rebalancing but have
not done it yet because I keep reading that Bond markets are
in a bubble and when interest rates
go up the
price will collapse or at least head south.
But
prices in the economy keep falling, and wages aren't
going up much, either.
In another words, unless you can afford to buy up all the properties across the American continent in order to hike real estate prices, the way it is in Canada, UK, Australia or whichever else «Bubble Suspects», you are not going to see the same realty madness in Uncle Sam's tur
In another words, unless you can afford to buy
up all the properties across the American continent
in order to hike real estate prices, the way it is in Canada, UK, Australia or whichever else «Bubble Suspects», you are not going to see the same realty madness in Uncle Sam's tur
in order to hike real estate
prices, the way it is
in Canada, UK, Australia or whichever else «Bubble Suspects», you are not going to see the same realty madness in Uncle Sam's tur
in Canada, UK, Australia or whichever else «Bubble Suspects», you are
not going to see the same realty madness
in Uncle Sam's tur
in Uncle Sam's turf.
And with its hash rate staying
up despite the lower
price, I can't see it
going back down right now —
in fact, it will likely really shoot
up at the end of the second, early third quarter of this year.
An uneducated trader will lose money, simply because they can't keep
up with what is
going on
in the world and
in their particular marketplaces that will affect
prices.
«If my
price goes up, I'm
not going to win» orders, Abigail Ross Hopper, the chief executive and president of the Washington - based association, said
in a telephone interview.
We noted
in that January 3, 2018 newsletter, Grantham warned value investors that during a melt -
up — where
prices not only rise but rise at an accelerating rate, «prudent preparation for a downturn will take a psychological toll and make you feel awful, because the average client is
going to lose patience».
They range from the very safe (cash), through bonds and property, right
up to the very risky (such as out - of - favor small - cap shares that may or may
not double
in price, or cut their dividend, or
go bust).
With the exception of some of the shady practices that we've heard about recently
in Vancouver (those agents should be booted out of the business and never allowed to trade again), we do
not cause
prices to
go up.
«If the predicted
prices for cell phone service
in, say, texting are
going to
up, that would be sufficient to condemn the merger, and future development
in other technologies are simply
not going to operate as an offset to that.»
«If
prices are
going up because people expect
prices to
go up, that of course is probably unsustainable and those expectations will
not be realized
in the longer term.»
That old saying that we
prices goes up, the businessess turn around and make us pay so that they can make a profit... it is time we
not partake
in that old saying because we are already broke and will continue to be broke because people want us to pay for what they are responsible for paying.
Food
prices might
go up, but
in a global market there's absolutely zero chance of a disruption and anyone that beleives otherwise is
not thinking rationally.
But as it seems every thing that has happened
in this era was - is still stupid and am fed
up with but have nothing
in hand to change destiny that seems
not going good at all and many inoccents will pay the
price of faults that they have
not made or agreed for... Honestly watching the news that is becoming to be of our area I feel tonight so much depressed and no sight of any glimpse of light to peace on earth for all
in general.
One of the best qualities of new potatoes is that they are
not processed, «The more a potato is processed, «wrote Francis Moore Lappe and Joseph Collins
in Food First, «the more its
price goes up and its nutritional value
goes down.»
«I suppose some of the reason some
prices might be
going up in the future is
in the warm summer months, cows tend to
not milk as much, so supply may
go down,» he said.
However, the drop is insignificant, and wine
prices in general have been
going up not down, which means, for end consumers, the benefit is perhaps limited.
Clayton Utz competition partner Michael Corrigan, who is
not advising any of the parties involved
in the matter, said Murray Goulburn is likely to argue
in the hearings that farmers are
not going to be subject to some sort of squeeze or reduced
price offering because there is one less processor lining
up to buy their milk.
I would say that under a program like this there is little volatility from year to year because it is a closed loop system so consumers shouldn't expect huge spikes
in the
price that never come down and just seem to
go up.
Maybe I'm just being cynical, but the old saying
goes that you always get what you pay for, and although that's somewhat debatable at the moment,
in that we always pay the top
price and end
up somewhere around fourth, that certainly wasn't the case with the much touted # 10 top
price for Capital One cup tickets, I mean you couldn't even
go to the cinema for that
price.
more to the point for an Economics graduate, who doesn't understand inflation moaning about the fact the the
price of players has
gone up considering annual revenues of the premier league teams have shot
up too is incredibly stupid... But hey Wenger knows best; he wouldn't be
in a position
not having to spend over the odds for quality players if he acted
in the first place, that's the icing on the retard cake there for me..
People like to say Wenger is «past his sell by date», because
prices have
gone up and he hasn't kept with the times, but I don't think that's entirely true, because back when we were successful, it wasn't Arsene Wenger that was
in charge of bringing players
in.
My first comment is that we did
not dip
in to financial reserves last summer to buy him so why would we dip
in to financial reserves now to buy him when the
price will have
gone up?
Whether
priced out of
going to watch their beloved Arsenal, fed
up with what they feel is spin coming from the club, or disappointed that the huge sums of money they pay
in ticket
prices are
not reinvested into the team, growing numbers of fans are feeling less valued by their club.
The pacy and powerful attacking midfield star was never
going to be cheap after a great summer tournament for the host nation but after Sissoko had made it clear that he was
not up for a season
in the second tier of English football and actually felt that Champions League football was a must for him I was
not expecting such a high
price tag.