weather future การใช้
- Chrysler now has considerable financial flexibility to weather future industry downturns,
- But everyone's waiting to see how weather futures fare first.
- Weather futures already have been trading on the over-the-counter market for the past two years.
- It started trading energy and created markets for other commodities, such as pulp, paper, bandwidth and weather futures.
- The strength of this agricultural rebirth and of the cattle trade allowed the local farmers to weather future economic crises relatively well.
- The generally strong drug volume increases heartened analysts, who pointed out that underlying growth could help the companies weather future price pressure.
- Weather futures made their debut Wednesday on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, enabling investors to speculate on what the temperature is going to be in four U . S . cities.
- Weather futures made their debut Wednesday on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, enabling traders to speculate on what the temperature is going to be in four U . S . cities.
- Still, experts say the recent turbulence serves as a reminder that stocks don't just go up, and investors should buy now only if they can weather future storms.
- While red-jacketed traders on the exchange floor shouted and gestured wildly as they dealt in contracts for live cattle and frozen pork bellies, there was only electronic trading of weather futures.
- Its trading operation, once purported to reap most of the company's profits, traded energy as well as other commodities, such as paper, pulp, bandwidth and weather futures.
- Because Enron had created many of the markets in which it operated, such as the trade in weather futures, its traders were able to fabricate the value of the contracts they entered into.
- In the long term, the United Nations hoped to introduce drought-resistant crops, better irrigation and more sophisticated health systems into the affected countries to help them weather future crises, Morris said.
- Enron, once the world's largest buyer and seller of natural gas, gained fame for creating markets in the late 1990s by trading such commodities as pulp, paper, bandwidth and weather futures.
- But some analysts say that the redesign of many companies may make temporary workers a permanent fixture; concerns like Olsten, they say, will be able to weather future recessions much more easily than in the past.
- The trading floors of the building _ where Enron had planned to station its traders to buy and sell electric power, natural gas, oil and weather futures _ are on floors three through six of the building.
- "Although long-term structural budget imbalance continues to pose challenges, " the report says, " fiscal flexibility has improved and outyear gaps have narrowed, positioning the city to better weather future economic and revenue cycles endemic to its economy ."
- As the market for these products grew, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange ( CME ) introduced the first exchange-traded weather futures contracts ( and corresponding options ), in 1999 . The CME currently lists weather derivative contracts for 25 cities in the United States, eleven in Europe, six in Canada, three in Australia and three in Japan.