Word: bullishly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...peak in March. But the effects of the U.S. recession are beginning to be felt. Although Britain's total exports were up in the first quarter, there was a 7% drop from a year ago in exports "to the U.S. Even so, world traders were so bullish on the British economy that last week the pound rose to $2.82, the highest since February 1953 and the limit under present exchange regulations...
According to Marxian dialectic, capitalists foment wars to boost their profits. According to an old Wall Street saw: 'Peace is bullish." Last week the hardbitten traders on the New York Stock Exchange proved the old saying right and Marx wrong. In the first few days after the Korean truce, the Dow-Jones industrial average advanced six points to 275, the highest level in two months, and ended July with the first monthly gain since last December. At the beginning of this week, the average continued the rise...
...soybean, peanut and flaxseed. Soybean oil, at 11? a Ib. v. 15? for cottonseed oil, has captured most of the market for margarine, salad dressings and shortening. While lower cottonseed prices might slow down soybean sales, the Agriculture Department hopes that demand for both will pick up. Some bullish factors: 1) the prospect of marketing quotas on the 1954 cotton crop...
...rising. The FRB's index rose two points in February to 239 (1935-39 equals 100). In the same month, auto production, the biggest since last March was at an annual rate of 6,200,000 cars. For the long pull, even the ousted Fair Dealers were feeling bullish. Treasury's ex-Secretary John Snyder, who had stayed around to help his successor, took off last week, after a White House visit, with the parting word that there were "excellent prospects for a continuing high level of production and consumption...
...Sometimes the market's bullish and sometimes the market's bearish," Glenn explains. "You've got t be able to tell the difference when you invest. That's where the Bull and Bear comes...