This is considered to be
poor money management for a few reasons.
Not exact matches
Am obsessed with the thought of wenger leaving arsenal
for good, his
poor management that is what is causing all these uncertainty of our key players future cuz he is not ambitious, he is satisfied with finishing 4th and giving the incompetent board
money
We lack ambition at Arsenal we are the big club that is desperate
for the title more than others but we are not showing hunger in our business, We have a scouting that is very
poor as we have wasted a lot of
Money on the wrong Sanchez is the only great player we have bought for decades, Ozil buy was mistake we had carzorla the we wanted a striker, we wssted money on xhaka, Elneny, chambers, welbeck, mustafi and finally in lacazette he lacks height and physicality to thrive in epl you saw yesterday he was suffocated by Chelsea defenders he did not look a threat at all, but hey let's blame Kreonke for paying the highest wage bill in Europe for Deadwoods... pooor management poor Arsenal what do you e
Money on the wrong Sanchez is the only great player we have bought
for decades, Ozil buy was mistake we had carzorla the we wanted a striker, we wssted
money on xhaka, Elneny, chambers, welbeck, mustafi and finally in lacazette he lacks height and physicality to thrive in epl you saw yesterday he was suffocated by Chelsea defenders he did not look a threat at all, but hey let's blame Kreonke for paying the highest wage bill in Europe for Deadwoods... pooor management poor Arsenal what do you e
money on xhaka, Elneny, chambers, welbeck, mustafi and finally in lacazette he lacks height and physicality to thrive in epl you saw yesterday he was suffocated by Chelsea defenders he did not look a threat at all, but hey let's blame Kreonke
for paying the highest wage bill in Europe
for Deadwoods... pooor
management poor Arsenal what do you expect
An investigation by the NAO last year found that the scheme suffered from «weak
management, ineffective control and
poor governance,» and had «not achieved value
for money».
But now we are told, by right wing conservatives who despise social democracy, that public education is an evil and that the best thing
for the
poor is to get their children into a charter school, nominally public, but typically managed by a private charter school
management company (backed by Wall St
money).
We've heard the blame game — how Ann Arbor isn't rallying around the troubled company, how the publishers are being unreasonable
for wanting
money upfront despite a track record of non-payment by Borders, how e-books are the cause of the company's problems and not
poor management and lack of foresight.
The difference is that
poor money management means repayment obligations were largely ignored, while bad luck means that circumstances made meeting the obligation too difficult -
for example, wasting
money on fast cars and gadgets versus becoming redundant
for a period.
We'll start with the fact that there is [sic] essentially four kinds of penny stock companies in the Pump & Dump world: (1) the kind where the
management is in on the scam and is directly knowledgeable and complicit with the intent to deceive the public; (2) the kind where some
poor schmoe has a great idea (at least he thinks it is) that requires financing, and becomes the mark of a parasitic «funder» who makes all kinds of promises of unlimited
monies and riches beyond the mark's wildest dream; (3) the kind where the company is absolutely
for real but the shares have been hyped (sometimes hijacked) into ridiculous valuations; and, (4) a hijacked empty and inactive shell.
Whether it be from medical bills, over spending, or an investment gone bad, this person may have defaulted on a his credit lines or even filed
for bankruptcy due to
poor money management skills.
Bill Miller, the famed
money manager well known
for outperforming the Standard &
Poor's (S&P) 500 Index
for a record 15 years through 2005, will transfer
management of the Value Trust investment fund after managing the fund since its inception in 1982.
Sure,
management may have been awful and working conditions so
poor they'd give third world countries a run
for their
money.