Examples of using More volatile in English and their translations into Chinese
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Political
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Programming
I think it has tended as you pointed out to be more volatile than the OEM side.
You will notice that in the early days, the swings were actually bigger and more volatile.
Moreover, the majority of the capital flows to developing Asia-Pacific countries are the more volatile types of short-term portfolio investments.
(b) More volatile currencies market with large swings, requiring extensive quantitative analysis capacity for the use of index-linked tools for offsetting risks;
First, Baur also found that gold's returns are more volatile in the autumn than in other seasons of the year.
The light over the Channel, for instance, looks quite different from the French side: clearer, yet more volatile.
Relationships between companies will be more fluid and prices of goods and service more volatile.
Upward pressure on the currencies eased, but exchange rates became more volatile in some countries.
It is also proposed to establish two new provincial offices in the more volatile southern region, in Ghazni(Ghazni) and Tirin Kot(Uruzgan).
City analysts say the monthly Halifax figures tend to be more volatile than other surveys.
Others said quarterly disclosures are essential for investment decisions and support richer USA stock valuations, and that a change could make shares more volatile.
Heavy-handed and unpredictable government intervention might make these flows more volatile.
Price dynamics are also unique: commodities become more volatile as prices rise.
With manufacturing spreading across the world, markets are more volatile than ever before.
The shift toward finance that Thatcher promoted heightened inequality and made the economy more volatile.
The truth of the matter is that the stock market has always been more volatile than the bond market.
A rising VIX indicates that traders expect the S&P 500 Index to become more volatile.
Food security is being threatened anew by higher and more volatile food prices since late 2010.
That leads many investors to value them by other, more volatile benchmarks, such as cash flow or the economic outlook.
For example, global warming could cause toxic chemicals to become more volatile, and so more prone to dispersing widely in the wind.