Word: marketed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...much along that line. They will give the domestic public and foreigners the sense that we really are going to come to grips with inflation." Grove concedes that a dramatic and determined" credit squeeze would depress business activity and push up the unemployment rate. He also thinks the stock market had good reason to flop: "Some of the doubting Thomases who believed we would have at most a mild recession now realize we are going to have a real recession that could significantly reduce profits." Nonetheless, Grove, like Sprinkel, believes that the recession will be less severe than it would...
...through. The sooner, the faster we do it, the less gradual approach we adopt, the better chance we have to succeed, to turn the corner. I am very encouraged that part of Volcker's approach is an attempt to deal also with the problems posed by the Eurocurrency market. He emphasized more than before the rate of money supply growth on this market, rather than interest rates. That is the right emphasis...
...financial maelstrom hits big and small, the prosperous and the striving, without discrimination. Mighty IBM, a seemingly surefire Boston real estate project, and the gold futures market were all sent reeling in last week's crunch. Even the Wall Street Journal had a hard time putting it all together...
...government bonds returned fractionally higher interest. Also, over the Columbus Day weekend, rumors began to circulate that IBM's third-quarter earnings were down. In fact, as announced late in the week, they fell 18%. The unsold paper, possibly $300 million worth, was dumped on the open market, where it fared badly. IBM's timing ignored a hoary Wall Street axiom: "Never commit yourself to a major issue before a long weekend. Who knows, we may be at war by Tuesday." There was no war, but the underwriters were routed nonetheless...
Those who trade in gold should logically be as euphoric as Forty-Niners striking a new lode. But logic does not govern this market. "It's terrible now," says Richard Lowrance, 23, a trader who fills customers' orders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. "Since gold went over $350 an ounce, the volatility has increased fivefold. Our volume has dropped...