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Перевод: bearish
[прилагательное] грубый; неотесанный; медвежий; понижательный; пессимистичный
Тезаурус:
- A hesitant rally in share prices was undermined by another poor performance by sterling and a bearish market outlook from brokers BZW.
- Wall Street is beginning to firm up its forecasts for IBM Corp's first quarter figures, with the consensus at around 20 cents a share and the more bearish going for 50 cents - but if Technology News of America's straw poll of the market around the US and Europe is anywhere near right, the loss is going to be a whole lot worse than that: the returns suggest that the company will have sold at best between 25 and 30 mainframes this quarter, where the Wall Street forecasts assume it did nearer 50 machines.
- Japanese firms are cutting capital spending in a bearish business climate.
- Slowing growth in debt and money-supply should both be contractionary influences on the economy, and ones that are doubly bearish for the stockmarket.
- This bearish tactic does not work as well as in a stock market, for art works are widely dispersed, and decisions to buy or sell may be thoroughly unpredictable.
- Our inflation view may be more bearish than most, but was supported by the Chancellor at Mansion House, when he said: "Some people insist that movements in the exchange rate are just a change in relative prices which need not affect the rate of inflation.
- But the bearish view was not universally held and Nicholas Knight, the UK equities strategist at Nomura, said: "The market may go lower but the time to buy is now.
- Sydney: The market shook off its bearish mood, boosted by a weaker local dollar.
- A bearish, messianic figure with mutton-chop whiskers, frequently clad in cowboy boots and "bolo" tie, Asimov was stoically resigned to his own eccentricity.
- Euro Disney recovered, jumping 30p to 720p, a bearish statement from Guinness knocked the price down 23p to 502p, while a significant disposal at Lonrho sent the shares to 79p, up 5p.
- Analysts were rushing to cut their forecasts for next year's earnings per share, with Stephen Smith of PaineWebber the most bearish - and the most often right: he is going for just 1.75 a share for 1993.
- The most consistently bearish - well he is a Brit - Stephen Smith of PaineWebber, says that until recently, saying you didn't like IBM was "like standing up and saying I don't like apple pie."
- Japanese banks and life insurers remain bearish.
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