Sentences with phrase «stuffed under your mattress»

But more important, by building out the infrastructure for cloud computing, Google is spearheading a future when using software stored on a computer will seem as archaic as twenties stuffed under a mattress.
But investment managers say that doesn't mean it is time to sell everything and stuff it all under a mattress.
Of course, there's a limit to how low central banks can go before withdrawing cash from an ATM and stuffing it under a mattress becomes an investment strategy.
I resent having 12.4 % of my total compensation put into an «investment» only slightly better than stuffing it under a mattress or lighting it on fire.
This definitely beats the near - 0 % rate earned on your checking account and cash stuffed under the mattress.
Should investors take their money out of the market and stuff it under their mattress this month to wait and see what happens?
The recession is hurting us all, but if you have an extra $ 194,000 laying around, maybe stuffed under the mattress, you can afford a new flying car that's scheduled to drive, take off and land in 2010.Boston - based Terrafugia calls their
Even if the money has been stuffed under a mattress, «the mortgage company is going to have big doubts about where that money came from,» and may treat it like if it was taken illegally.

Not exact matches

Those indicators strongly suggest that Canadian firms don't need to be stuffing so much cash under the corporate mattress, because they have access to plenty of credit if they need it.
There are always, however, worries that if negative rates spread to households people will literally stuff cash under their mattresses instead of storing it with banks, drying up the pool of cash available for banks to lend.
This is old - style Keynesian money - under - the - mattress stuff.
For example, if you were to stuff $ 1,000 under your mattress, assuming the average inflation rate of 3.25 percent, that money would be worth just $ 726 in 10 years.
Having a high savings rate is very important in determining whether you can retire early, but no matter how high the savings rate is, you're not retiring if you stuff your savings under a mattress.
Here are some of the excluding criteria most experts agree on: «Obese parents; parents who smoke (either during pregnancy or at present); parents sleeping on a waterbed, recliner, sofa, armchair, couch or bean bag; parents who sleep on multiple pillows, a sagging mattress or a sheepskin or use heavy bedding, such as comforters or duvets; sleeping in overheated rooms; parents under the influence of drugs or alcohol; other children or pets who can or are likely to climb into the bed; and stuffed animals on the bed that could cover the baby's face.»
To help manage reflux, feed baby a little less or more slowly at each meal; change or loosen baby's diaper; keep her upright after feeding for at least 30 minutes (for example, sit her in a swing or car seat); limit active play after eating; raise the head of baby's bed by propping up the mattress (not by pillows or stuffed animals) under the child's head.
You get home, and you stuff whatever you want to save in a jar, or the dresser, or under the mattress — and then you forget about it.
You wouldn't stuff ten grand under your mattress, so why stash $ 400,000 in the walls of the house?
If you open a savings account, you'll at least see modest returns, which is more than you can say about stuffing money in your piggy bank or under your mattress.
So let's forget about the rich and ultrarich going on strike and stuffing their ample funds under their mattresses if — gasp — capital gains rates and ordinary income rates are increased.
Then again, people are still stuffing their money under the mattress in mason jars.
Investing your money in the stock market certainly means taking on a higher degree of risk than stuffing dollars under your mattress.
If the borrower is going to stuff the money under the mattress until needed, then the answer is simple.
It seems even more vulnerable to theft than stuffing money under mattress.
Unless you want to stuff cash under your mattresses, you need to have one.
She also has a Flou bed, which Michelle says offers «a better way to store things under your bed than just stuffing your stuff underneath; the mattress can be lifted up to reveal a storage space beneath and the bed also comes with shelving on the sides for books.»
Make sure you withhold for taxes and stuff some cash under a mattress for the inevitable bad month.
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