Word: profitably
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Jackson says she is considering legal action to reclaim any profit that online essay-sellers may have made. “I never intended to sell my work and I don’t plan to make any money off of it. However, since money has been made off of my work, that money should...
...cooperate. Investors tried this trick before, pushing the Dow above 10,000 in December and January on hopeful corporate and economic news - only to run into Enronitis. Now they're back at it, and even if the next few sessions take some of the steam out - there's always profit-taking and second-guessing, even when herd is celebrating - the cries of "bottom," for the economy and the markets, have never been so credible. The future's so bright, they're buying...
...That raises the question of demand. As a recession winds down, businesses make like groundhogs and come up for a look around. If they can see shoppers, they start producing merchandise; if the merchandise sells, they turn a profit, proudly tell Wall Street, and then - maybe - they start hiring back some of the people they laid off when demand dried up. No shoppers, no capital investment. No capital investment, no increase in production. No increase in production, no re-hiring. No re-hiring - no V-shape...
Aston Martin, James Bond's favorite sports car, currently starts at $150,000 but is planning an "entry level" model - at $92,000. As for the other PAG marques, Jaguar turned a profit of $100 million last year, its first since Ford acquired it in 1989, and sales are improving. Volvo, the family car of choice, made $700 million and remains the group's workhorse. Indeed, Ford is a quintessential American company that grew huge by creating the mass automobile market. Ironically, its future now rests in large part with a handful of low-volume, élitist cars made...
...evidence points to a picking-up of the global economy in the second half of 2002. It will be a slow recovery to complement a fairly mild and short recession. What people shouldn't expect is that we are going to go back to the equity values and profit rates of 1999 and 2000. TIME: Does the developing world have a chance? Tyson: I think the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 and the aftermath have really raised the voices of those who are worried about the stability of a world where you have inequity between the developed and developing world...