21.   A Japanese trade mission will visit Peru next week.

22.   A shrinking Japanese trade surplus means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home.

23.   A shrinking Japanese trade surplus often bolsters the dollar by leaving fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen.

24.   A shrinking Japanese trade surplus often boosts the U.S. currency because it means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home.

25.   A shrinking Japanese trade surplus tends to boost the dollar because it means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen to bring profits home.

26.   A stronger yen makes Japanese exports more expensive abroad, helping preventing the Japanese trade surplus from expanding.

27.   A rising Japanese trade surplus hurts the U.S. currency by putting more dollars into the hands of Japanese exporters, who sell them for yen when bringing profits home.

28.   A shrinking Japanese trade surplus often boosts the dollar because it means fewer dollars in the hands of Japanese exporters to sell for yen when they bring profits home.

29.   A smaller-than-expected Japanese trade surplus means Japanese exporters have fewer dollars to sell for yen to bring revenue home.

30.   A weak dollar, hobbled by a report of a widening Japanese trade surplus with the United States, helped drag down stock prices.

a. + trade >>共 867
international 7.30%
foreign 3.68%
bilateral 3.66%
global 3.63%
new 2.23%
normal 1.54%
japanese 1.37%
illegal 1.32%
regional 1.30%
major 1.28%
japanese + n. >>共 768
yen 5.69%
government 5.37%
company 4.46%
stock 3.72%
official 3.37%
bank 2.34%
market 2.30%
economy 2.09%
exporter 1.85%
investor 1.78%
trade 0.46%
每页显示:    共 198