Word: overpayed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Second, pricing the asset right is tricky. If real estate fundamentals continue to deteriorate over an extended period of time, more loans will go into default and the value of the mortgage securities will decline further. This could cause problems for entities that overpay. "If you buy a mortgage at 60 cents on the dollar, it's only a good deal if the underlying values come back," says Ressa...
...Doubting Thomas The Knicks still have more shoot-first guards than Blackwater USA, and it's always fun to guess which ball hog Isiah will overpay next. But here's something you didn't know about the coach/GM/sexual harasser who's lost with such extraordinary consistency despite the league's highest payroll: Isiah wrote a management book! It's called "The Fundamentals." I'd make a joke now, but my head just exploded. By the way, where's the book explaining why the best players - Thomas, Kevin McHale, Larry Bird and Michael Jordan - are the worst executives...
...former Democratic Congressman from Connecticut now with the Livingston Group, says he recently told a Republican lobbyist desperate to hire Democrats that he had two options: "One is to go after [congressional] staff members who are thinking of leaving, maybe someone with tuitions to pay. The second is to overpay for people who weren't thinking of leaving...
...preparing to bid between $72 and $73 per share for Unocal?up from their initial $67 offer. Then, on July 19, came word that CNOOC's largest private shareholder, investment firm William Blair & Co. in Chicago, was dumping its entire stake in CNOOC?$141 million?fearful that Fu would overpay for Unocal. "We're not in favor of the bid," said David Merjan, a fund manager at the firm...
...joining the herd moments before it runs off the cliff. But with Chinese incomes surging and well-paid expats flocking to Shanghai, I have little doubt that luxury apartments in prime locations are a great bet if you hold on to them long enough. As Faber says, "You may overpay on a short-term basis, but real estate in China makes sense in the long term." Of course, the same was true of New York. If we'd held on to that dud apartment for a few more years, it would now be worth about three times what we paid...