Word: market
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...pacts with Herr Hitler are not finding a very good market at the present moment. The Scandinavian public is dead set against them. Even when the British a few weeks ago suggested they might guarantee the Scandinavian countries' independence, they showed no enthusiasm. They want neutrality, not pacts. Obviously, all four would have liked to reply to Germany in unison: "Thank you, Herr Hitler, but we don't want any pacts...
...back a note circulation of 1,800,000,000 marks the Reichsbank held 1,370,000,000 marks in gold-double the coverage considered normal in 1914. Another two billion marks in gold currency were in circulation among the people. These liquid reserves made it easy for Germany to market her war bonds-and had she won there would never have been an inflation as insane as that...
...been listed on the Curb only three years, has neither the profit record nor the "seasoning" that has traditionally been required for Stock Exchange listing. But the exchange was glad to list American as the largest unit of a growing industry. American is glad to have the more active market on the Big Board, for it may be obliged to issue more shares to improve its current weak cash position. Due to heavy purchases of new planes, its cash on hand is only about $1,030,000. Though it has still to pay a dividend, American sold last week...
Paradoxical though the shortage is, it is precisely what the Government's cotton policy was supposed to accomplish. On the 1937-38 tremendous crop of 19,000,000 bales the Government offered to lend farmers 9? per Ib. The market prices went as low as 8?, with the result that the Government's cotton holding jumped to 11,400,000 bales. Secretary of Agriculture Wallace would like to sell some of his cotton now, but the Southern Senators, riding a rising market for their constituents, will presumably see to it that no Government lint is released so long...
...group of financiers forms two identical investment trusts, each with identical portfolios. After a market rise, Trust X realizes its profits by selling its securities, but Trust Y does not. Accountants therefore certify that X had a large profit, Y only that realized on dividends. X's stock rises on the news and Y's falls. The financiers then sell their X stock at a profit, reinvest it in the depressed Y stock. Then they order Y to realize its profits by selling its portfolio. When the accountants certify this profit, Y's stock rises, giving...