Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Not
invested
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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There may be $400 billion in uninvested capital sitting around ...
Coffee Break: June 3 2009
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Nobody yet has developed a value theory for stocks which will prevent large losses under conditions of economic contraction except, of course, if one is prepared to remain uninvested for spaces of 10 or 20 years at a time.
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"We are sitting on $30 billion dry powder," he said, referring to uninvested capital.
Online Market For Venture Capital in the Works Deepti Chaudhary 2011
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Given that we are currently in a situation in which corporations are sitting on record amounts of uninvested capital and have just recorded the most profitable quarter in all of American history, it's a little hard to see how those descriptions apply.
Howard Schweber: Laffer Curves and Tax Cuts: What Does It Take to Kill a Zombie? Howard Schweber 2011
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Add to this, private-equity funds are primed to go on a buying spree, with lots of committed capital uninvested and bankers pitching financing for buyouts at seven times to eight times earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, near the high-water mark in the last cycle.
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For her own sanity, she says, I've learned to be completely uninvested in whether they follow my advice or not.
Sticking My Nose Into a Friend's Business Jeff D. Opdyke 2011
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That could continue as funds globally compete to invest an estimated $385 billion of uninvested capital, roughly half of which must be spent or returned to investors before 2014.
Reality Could Bite Private-Equity Investors Hester Plumridge 2012
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Given that we are currently in a situation in which corporations are sitting on record amounts of uninvested capital and have just recorded the most profitable quarter in all of American history, it's a little hard to see how those descriptions apply.
Howard Schweber: Laffer Curves and Tax Cuts: What Does It Take to Kill a Zombie? Howard Schweber 2011
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Because the funds are so pervasive—companies use them as holding tanks for payroll funds, individuals use them as savings accounts with slightly better yields, brokerage houses use them to hold clients' uninvested funds—regulators stepped in with a series of measures to prop up the funds, the last of which expired in 2010.
Investors' New Worry: Is There Greek Debt in My Money Fund? Mary Pilon 2011
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At least $20 billion of committed capital remains uninvested and is still available.
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