81. A large ski resort company often gets a better deal on capital equipment. 82. A shelf registration allows a company to get early government approval for a security that it plans to sell within two years. 83. A stronger dollar means the company gets less U.S. currency when it exchanges revenue from overseas sales. 84. A stronger pound tends to hurt shares by making exports more expensive abroad and means companies get fewer pounds when they convert their dollar sales into sterling. 85. A stronger U.S. currency hurts overseas results because the company gets fewer dollars for sales of its goods in the local currency. 86. A strong franc also means Swiss companies get fewer francs when they bring home earnings denominated in foreign currencies. 87. A strong franc also means Swiss companies get fewer francs when they bring home their earnings denominated in weaker foreign currencies. 88. A strong franc means Swiss companies get fewer francs for revenue earned abroad. 89. A strong franc means the company gets fewer francs for each unit of foreign currency billed. 90. A strong pound hurts shares by making exports more expensive abroad and means companies get fewer pounds when they convert their sales into sterling. |