Word: exceedingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Merck investors may take comfort in the fact that jackpot jury awards are often reduced on appeal. Texas law caps punitive damages, and the final award probably won't exceed $26.1 million. Merck not only plans to appeal in Texas but also has vowed to continue fighting each Vioxx claim individually. Ailing as it is, the firm is expected to generate $3.5 billion in cash this year. In other words, Merck isn't going bankrupt tomorrow. Which is just what the trial lawyers like to hear. --By Daren Fonda
...declaring the end of fossil fuels, and solar-panel proponents are wary not to repeat the unfulfilled promises of the past. Solar power accounts for less than 1% of the world's energy production, and even the rosiest forecasts predict that number won't exceed 10% by 2030. Still, the industry has got its jump start. "This is ultimately a hopeful business," says Kiyama. "And that makes it a good business...
...Still, this initial yuan adjustment will do very little in itself to address China's yawning trade gap. Merrill Lynch predicts that China's trade surplus could exceed $90 billion this year?nearly three times larger than in 2004. U.S. critics of China will likely keep agitating for a full float of the yuan?mean-ing that it would trade at whatever exchange rate the market determines. "We expect more," said U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, one of the sponsors of the bill that would impose a punitively high tariff on Chinese imports...
...financial cost, too. The government spent $3 billion building and upgrading 36 venues for the Games and another $8 billion on infrastructure and security. Organizers dished out $2.4 billion on operations and in May said they had turned a $9.2 million profit. All told, spending on the Athens Games exceeded the gdps of more than 100 nations, including Jamaica and Malta. Thanks to its profligacy, Greece now has a 6% budget deficit, in breach of the European Union's stability pact, and its economic growth is projected to slow from 4.2% in 2004 to 2.8% in 2005. "The fact that...
...price is high for states that violate the speed limit. If more than 50% of a state's drivers exceed the 55-m.p.h. limit, the U.S. Department of Transportation can withhold up to 10% of that state's federal highway funds. The department monitors compliance electronically with subterranean sensors. For two years Arizona has not been in compliance, and stands to lose $5 million worth of highway funds so far; Vermont and Maryland have also failed to meet compliance standards, but are contesting federal methods for compiling speeding data...