«If it won't sell at lower prices, why would
it possibly sell at higher prices?»
This allows the seller to visualize their home
possibly selling at the higher price and softens the reality of a possible lower - priced sale.
Not exact matches
According to Spanish publication Marca, Real will exercise that clause
at the end of the season, but
possibly only to then
sell Morata on to a Premier League suitor
at a
higher price of $ 50m (# 38.5 m).
1) Ten years without a significant trophy yet the Manager is never questioned 2)
Selling off key «World beater» Players season after season and replacing them with mediocre
at best replacements 3) Keeping a 33 % shareholder who is one of the world's richest men AND a true football fan as far away from the board as possible 4) Charging
possibly the
highest prices in Europe but NOT reinvesting within the team in any really significant way 5) Classing 4th place in the EPL as a trophy 6) Boasting of a # 100 million war chest for transfers then quibbling over a few hundred thousand on deals.
I would bet that if you
priced one book
at 99 cents, and then had a lead in from that book to the second book (with a sales page), you could
sell the second book
at a
higher price —
possibly even
higher than $ 4.99.
However, as papy02 says above (and I think I said elsewhere), the prospect of the board
selling shares @ 32p & then buying them back (
possibly, shortly thereafter)
at far
higher prices seems a mite embarrassing... It certainly seems to suggest
at least one of those decisions might be less than smart — and I certainly don't think it would be the decision to buy back shares
at an attractive discount..!
Number two is the hidden bidding up of the shares through sham transactions where related parties buy &
sell at progressively
higher prices (netting to no loss, aside from commissions) until some speculators see the microcap stock and start driving it
higher,
possibly supported by promotional paid research.