Word: profit
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...committees, two different shares, one is trading in Tokyo, the other one is trading in France. And it has been successful now for seven years. You know that you can be successful for six months, for one year, but when you are successful for seven years, growing and delivering profit and value, it's significant of the fact that you have a system, which is stable, and a business in which people feel comfortable working together without mixing identities or without mixing cultures. I think one of the reasons this alliance is working is because not only is there clarity...
...accelerate the growth of each company, and it can boost the profit potential of each company. And by the way, it would be done in a situation where, in my opinion, it's going to be beneficial for the three of us. I think also, if it's done very well and if we work well, it's going to have the same impact on the third party - as long as the third party is convinced that there is potential behind it. Again, this is more an opportunity than it is mandatory. Some people say, why this timing? You never...
...It’s quite typical in situations of leadership transition in any not-for-profit organization for donors giving major gifts to wait for new leadership to be in place before finalizing and announcing a major commitment,” she said...
...penny now costs .83 of a cent. (The U.S. got rid of almost all the expensive copper in 1982.) Add distribution and production costs, and you're up to 1.3 cents to make a penny, which freaks people out. That's because the U.S. Mint claims to make a profit, called seigniorage, on the difference between the cost of producing currency and its value. That, however, is stupid. Printing money isn't a means of profit; it's a means to inflation. If the U.S. Mint were that psyched about its penny profits, it would long ago have moved...
...billion Expected profit from this year's Afghan opium crop, the largest yield in history