41. A stronger dollar forces U.S. automakers to raise price tags abroad and cuts into profits earned in yen when exchanged into dollars. 42. A stronger dollar helps Japanese exporters by easing pressure on them to raise prices abroad and increasing the yen value of the money they earn in dollars overseas. 43. A steady increase in net profit through the year means Siemens can probably earn enough in the fourth quarter to stay within its profit goal, he said. 44. A stronger dollar helps Japanese exporters like Pioneer by increasing the yen value of profits earned in dollars overseas. 45. A stronger dollar makes U.S. products more expensive abroad and means corporate profits earned in foreign currencies translate into relatively fewer dollars. 46. A stronger shekel hurts exporting companies which earn in dollars and pay expenses in shekels. 47. A stronger yen reduces the value of dollar-denominated profits earned in overseas markets. 48. A weaker dollar hurts Japanese exporters by pressuring them to raise prices abroad and lowering the yen value of the money they earn in dollars overseas. 49. A weaker dollar weighs on exporters who get fewer guilders for the dollars earned in U.S. sales. 50. A weak dollar also lowers the yen-value of the money that exporters earn in dollars. |