Word: marketer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Herr Hugo Stinnes were financially embarrassed. Fear was expressed that, since neither Hugo Stinnes Jr. nor any member of the family had been present at the bankers' meeting, the loan was merely a palliative to tide over a situation for a short time in order to save the market from inevitable panic at a time of great depression. But such fears were quickly dismissed. It was stated that the huge Stinnes interests (mines, railways, shipping lines, newspapers, hotels, etc.) had been recognized as top-heavy by the late Hugo Stinnes himself and that "Junior" Stinnes-who recently broke with...
...Town." Reginald Denny and this narrative have been pitched precipitously together in the interest of slapstick. They roll about for several reels, get drunk, splashed with mud and involved with several females. The audience is generously amused. There was a time when Mr. Sennett had this particular market virtually to himself and his two-reelers...
Recent episodes in the bond market have clearly shown that this abnormal situation is changing, probably for good. Credit is now very plentiful in this country, and underwriting houses are actively bidding for new Government flotations, so that their coupon rates and yields are falling rapidly. Moreover, in many instances the credit of the borrowing Governments abroad has improved to such an extent that they are now in a position to bargain on equal, if not superior, terms with U. S. moneylenders...
...volume and size make them an important factor in the business. It is understood that with the "Big Three" of these "independent companies-Johns-Manville, Keasbey & Mattison and Philip Carey & Co.-arrangements have been made to prevent their products interfering with a central leadership and control of the asbestos market aimed at by the new consolidation...
Their further steps to acquire the Erie, Chesapeake & Ohio and Pere Marquette is recent history (TiME, Aug. 18, Apr. 6, 27). If the I. C. C. approves, a railroad system whose market value is approximately $1,000,000,000 will have been acquired by two men with an initial cash outlay of only $2,000,000. The appreciation in the Van Sweringen stocks has not only done the rest, but also paid them $16,812,809 profit for their pains...