Sentences with phrase «risk running out»

Don't make it too big, though, or you risk running out of room for your other sections.
Currently, charging stations are not as widespread as fuel stations, so if you are going on a long drive, you risk running out of charge with no charging stations in the vicinity.
After you start adding your own apps, shooting photos and videos and downloading podcasts, you risk running out of space.
Players will have to be careful and keep an eye out for air pockets to replenish their supply or risk running out of air while they explore.
This bank has run into a number of problems related to sub-prime loans so rather than continue to pay out the normal dividend and risk running out of cash, the company decided to decrease the amount of dividend.
Saving for retirement is a challenge many workers face, but without an amply funded nest egg, you risk running out of money as a senior.
If the annual withdrawals you need to take exceed your safe zone, and you don't think you can be very flexible with your expenses, then you risk running out of money sometime during retirement.
Retired people living off their principal as well as income, risk running out of money before they die.
With many homes losing value, borrowers risk running out of equity and may also incur hefty fees.
Give your child a budget for a family dinner - a reasonable amount of money but a small enough amount that they'll have to plan carefully or risk running out of cash.
They buy high quantity items that they do not risk running out fo stock on.
In that case, your scarf is likely to turn out really, really long; you also risk running out of yarn.
So, my family's choices are: We stay here in our flimsily - built house, made of sheet rock and plywood; or we hop on an unmoving highway and risk running out of gas closer to the coast, with only our car for protection.»
So, my family's choices are: We stay here in our flimsily built house, made of sheet rock and plywood; or we hop on an unmoving highway and risk running out of gas closer to the coast, with only our car for protection.
Conventional wisdom is that a 4 % annual drawdown rate is the way to go — a withdrawal big enough to keep your retirement years comfortable, but not so big that you risk running out of money prematurely.
Are you and your husband coordinating individual benefit elections to make sure you're not leaving money on the table, or worse, risking running out of money before you run out of life?

Not exact matches

That would give the phone the necessary power for its heat - creating components to keep working without risking that the phone runs out of juice.
«It's not the run - of - the - mill loss you should be thinking about, but the home run, out - of - the - park catastrophe,» says David Young, a former insurance broker and risk manager now advising at the Small Business Development Center in Seattle.
But a company that only changes itself in tiny, incremental ways runs a different sort of risk: being put out of business altogether by a new idea that challenges the whole business.
The taxes are too damn high, and that runs the risk of running customers right out of the market.
It works as advertised, but the prices are marked up, and customers run the risk of not being able to get what they want because the store is out of stock.
Relying almost exclusively on data - driven processes, Nguyenova is a proponent of continuous AB testing in multiple areas of the business (to quickly figure out what works and what doesn't), and encourages constant adaptability so startups never run the risk of going obsolete or succumbing to competition.
When it comes to saving for retirement, we are facing all kinds of risks, from skyrocketing healthcare costs to running out of money because we're living longer than we expected.
Worse, if the companies spell out exactly how their screening works, they run the risk that technologically savvy militants will learn more about how to beat their systems.
So in practice, if you are young software developer or entrepreneur in San Francisco, you can choose to work at a start - up that will have a more than 50 percent chance of going out of business in the next 18 months without risking the embarrassment of running out of money and having to move back in with your parents.
While you may be able to improve on an employee's idea, and while it may be easy for you to map out an implementation plan based on that idea, when you do you run the risk of killing their motivation.
Before getting into the details of which idea virtually sold itself and the one that seemed to be a near - impossible proposition, I'll point out that an easy - to - sell business idea runs the risk of also being easy to copy — which could be a problem.
«That allows them to pay out the dividends without running the risk that they'll have to cut their payouts if they have to expand their capital expenditures,» he says.
As an entrepreneur, six hours of great work is better than eight hours of okay work, and you definitely don't want to run the risk of burning out.
Training programs are highly rigorous, so candidates run a high risk of washing out before graduation.
If you're depending on your portfolio to throw off a certain amount of cash and you take too much risk by choosing investments that are too volatile, you could come up short regarding your living expenses and be forced to accelerate withdrawals, increasing the chances that you'll run out of money or shortchange your estate.
If you try to cram that much experience into a single page, you run the risk of editing out some previous positions that could carry a lot of weight when it comes to the job you're applying for.
You do run the risk of missing out on savings if rates drop again.
Though I guess the risk of running out of those isn't too great.
If you're working another full - time job with nobody fully invested, you are running the risk of burning out, acting with less urgency and just not having enough hours in the day to get what you need done.
The company isn't afraid to take risks, which means that it's going to sometimes strike out, but it's also much more likely to hit an occasional home run than companies that are less innovative and play it too safe.
No matter when you retire, you are safe to pull 4 % from your stock portfolio and run very little risk of ever running out of money.
If you ignore the 4 percent rule, there's a strong risk that you will run out of money too early in retirement.
If you haven't figured out product / market fit and therefore still have a highly risky business you run great risks for getting too far ahead of yourself on valuation.
That volatility scared the crap out of me but if anyone could make it work, and understood the risks, it was us - we had built and run the thing for five years.
If the working capital of your business decreases, you take the risk of running out of cash.
A number of near - term risks clearly exist for European markets, not least the potential for the United Kingdom to vote to leave the EU in June — particularly if data coming out of Europe deteriorates in the run - up to the referendum or if there is an escalation in the refugee crisis.
But running out of gas three miles before the airport and being stranded and then missing your airplane, that is a risk that you don't want.
If you're running a fintech business, subject to anti-money laundering (AML) laws, appointing an AML and / or compliance officer isn't enough — board / senior management need to take responsibility to manage AML risk by carrying out a risk assessment;
A portfolio inevitably falling to nothing creates a potential risk of running out of money.
And although fiscal stimulus package «leaked» in the Nikkei Wednesday (JPY20trn, with JPY6trn of «real water») appears to have had a supportive impact upon stocks by weakening the yen, even at its most generous, the supplementary budget for this fiscal year is likely to total only JPY2trn, with additional stimulus spaced out over the coming years, and most of this dedicated to public works (which, many fear, runs the risk of turning into wasteful spending rather than a monetary - plus - fiscal stimulus powerhouse).
Potential annuity purchasers become more exposed to longevity risk the lower the returns they earn on their assets (your capital is more likely to run out if you aren't earning enough interest to fund your retirement).
Deferred income annuities (DIAs) are sometimes called longevity insurance because they help protect against the risk of running out of money later in retirement.
Called a «rising equity glide path,» retirement experts Wade Pfau and Michael Kitces state that this strategy can help protect against the risk of running out of money, particularly when stock market returns are poor early in retirement.3
By utilizing various Social Security claiming strategies, sophisticated retirement income advisors, like those that have completed her course, are able to use this knowledge to mitigate the long - term risk their clients face of running out of money in retirement.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z