«Schools had
traditionally been safe havens,» said Timothy Neville, Kennedy Middle School principal in Enfield, Connecticut.
Not exact matches
Gold has
traditionally been seen as a «
safe haven» asset by investors — when uncertainty and risk
is high, gold seems like a
safe bet.
Traditionally, churches
are viewed as sanctuaries —
safe -
havens for immigrants, where federal authorities will not enter — it
's not necessarily that they can't, but they don't.
The reason utilities have
traditionally been viewed as a
safe haven for risk averse investors
is that while people may buy fewer iPhones or designer jeans in a downturn, they still need the lights on, even with the prospect of a US Austerity Plan perhaps akin to what Europe
is seeing now.
Wall Street tends to duck for cover in so - called «
safe haven» sectors — think utilities, which
traditionally have high dividends and whose services
are in demand in good times and bad — when investors» confidence in the markets
is shot.
Gold,
traditionally, has
been perceived as a
safe haven that investors flock to during periods of uncertainty and high inflation.