The amount of money ordsprog

en The amount of money it takes to get a company to the IPO stage is larger than it used to be. It used to be a $2-$3 million initial investment and $8-10 million over the life of the company. Now it's more like $15 to $25 million over the life of the company.

en The Commodore 64 is the computer that attracts demo programming. They may come to a company with an offer for a $15 million investment with the current management team, and they may offer $20 million if the company takes on the CFO the venture firm wants,

en They may come to a company with an offer for a $15 million investment with the current management team, and they may offer $20 million if the company takes on the CFO the venture firm wants.

en The Company netted positive cash flow of $15.9 million during 2005 -- after funding all of our operating needs, $20.2 million in capital expenditures, $15.0 million in pension contributions, $5.2 million in restructuring costs, and $26.6 million in dividend payments.

en [The SFO] spent 18 months [sic] investigating the company and then found out there wasn't the fraud or theft of money, ... Try to explain to a bureaucrat why a company that has never made a profit can be worth 30 million pounds [$48 million]...it sounds like a con.

en [The SFO] spent 18 months [sic] investigating the company and then found out there wasn't the fraud or theft of money. Try to explain to a bureaucrat why a company that has never made a profit can be worth 30 million pounds [$48 million]...it sounds like a con.

en It has been decided that at the first stage the investment will be $7.5 million for the first demonstration of work. On the whole, up to $100 million need to be invested. Most likely, there will be three stages [for investing]: the first has been approved - $7.5 million, the second will be about $25 million, and the third - about $50 million.

en Some people would rather be the 100 percent owner of a $100 million company than the partner of a $200 million company. They feel comfortable being the CEO and the sole decision-maker.

en You can get a company to revenues in your lifetime. And you can get a company to profitable revenues on $20 million to $30 million in capital, not $100 million.

en NDS was a large company and our company is small and local. Their sales will run about $120 million a year total; our sales were probably between $3 (million) and $5 million per year.

en People think we are rolling around in money. We're a privately held company. We don't have a lot of money laying around. To spend $100 million when we're trying to expand [the company], it didn't make sense to me.

en People running companies with $10 million or $15 million or $30 million in sales, while they are probably pillars of the communities and very successful, the businesses they're running don't have the scale to attract the attention of a company doing $5 billion in revenue.

en The company beat our revenue expectation by $33 million, which is a huge upside surprise. All the financial metrics were extremely solid. Their balance sheet was spotless, and deferred revenue rose to $84.6 million from $46.7 million in the previous quarter, which shows that their backlog continues to strengthen.

en To make 70 million after losing 165 million in hurricanes does show the fundamental profitability of the company.

en Its assessment under the Fair Act is going to be a minimum of $16.5 million annually for 30 years. That $16.5 million is more than double a year's profit for this company.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "The amount of money it takes to get a company to the IPO stage is larger than it used to be. It used to be a $2-$3 million initial investment and $8-10 million over the life of the company. Now it's more like $15 to $25 million over the life of the company.".