depression of market
1Market trend — Statues of the two symbolic beasts of finance, the bear and the bull, in front of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. A market trend is a putative tendency of a financial market to move in a particular direction over time.[1] These trends are… …
2Market — Märket Märket Carte de l île de Märket. Géographie Pays …
3Märket — Carte de l île de Märket. Géographie Pays …
4depression — [n1] low spirits; despair abasement, abjection, abjectness, blahs*, bleakness, blue funk*, bummer, cheerlessness, dejection, desolation, desperation, despondency, disconsolation, discouragement, dispiritedness, distress, dole, dolefulness, dolor …
5depression — ► NOUN 1) severe despondency and dejection, especially when long lasting and accompanied by physical symptoms. 2) a long and severe recession in an economy or market. 3) the action of depressing. 4) a sunken place or hollow. 5) Meteorology a… …
6Depression of 1920–21 — A 1919 parade in Minneapolis for soldiers returning home after World War I. The upheaval associated with the transition from a wartime to peacetime economy contributed to a depression in 1920 and 1921. The Depression of 1920–21 was an extremely… …
7Depression (economics) — The stock market crash of 1929 marked the start of the greatest depression in modern history with some effects felt through 1945. In economics, a depression is a sustained, long term downturn in economic activity in one or more economies. It is a …
8Market trends — In investing, financial markets are commonly believed to have market trends [ [http://www.investorwords.com/5067/trend.html Investorswords.com] , retrieved 30 May 2007.] that can be classified as primary trends, secondary trends (short term), and …
9Market clearing — When markets clear, they are priced so that the entire supply is sold. However, retail stores usually restock goods as they are sold. In economics, market clearing refers to either a simplifying assumption made by the new classical school that… …
10depression — noun 1 unhappiness/mental illness ADJECTIVE ▪ serious, severe ▪ black (esp. BrE), deep ▪ moments of deep depression ▪ acute …