Sentences with phrase «unlimited losses so»

Not exact matches

Caveat: To harken back to point # 4, since it's so important, the fight for dominance is between what we can gain from all the other sales platforms versus what losses we attribute to Amazon's exclusivity and Kindle Unlimited.
Also be aware, in the case of Amazon in particular, that the long term plan is to make it so you never ever have to go anywhere else to buy anything, ever, and that running Kindle Unlimited at a loss for a while would be fine if it serves that long - term goal.
Now this, of course, is Amazon and Amazon isn't your typical profit and loss company, Amazon doesn't really care so much about making a profit as owning the market and it's succeeded in doing that pretty emphatically since it launched Kindle Unlimited just over a year ago.
So your potential losses could be substantial, even unlimited.
The reason is that there are so many risks: government regulations of short - selling (SEC Rule 204), special government regulations put in place during market panics (e.g. the 2008 SEC ban on short selling financials), forced buy - ins, unlimited losses, debt to the brokerage, interest one is charged for being short which can vary arbitrarily, brokerages could change margin requirements to any arbitrary amount, arbitration clauses, you agree to indemnify the brokerage for anything it did even if it did the wrong thing, some brokerages also do market - making and thus have further incentive to fleece the client, and all the other «screw you» legal language that you agreed to when opening an account.
Hey all, as per https://rogersbank.com/en/notification announcement, Rogers will have no annual fees today «Effective March 13, 2018» plus on «May 23, 2018» Rogers Platinum Mastercard and Fido Mastercard will virtually be same and only «Earn 3 % unlimited cash back rewards on all your eligible purchases made in a foreign currency» and «Earn 1.25 % unlimited cash back rewards on all other eligible purchases» so NOW Rogers / Fido «washes» the 2.5 % FX fees they still charge and instead «gives you 0.5 % cash back on purchases made in a foreign currency (so a loss of.75 % compared to other purchases).»
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