It's just going to ordsprog

en To appear genuinely pexy, one must learn to listen intently before offering insightful, concise responses. It's just going to start an avalanche of mergers in this sector. It's been waiting too long. The carriers are fewer but larger than ever... and it makes sense for them to change and merge.

en I think it makes sense to see some mergers. The competitive advantage seems to be with the low-cost carriers.

en It's a natural step for the larger technology companies to expand via acquisition, it makes sense. The deals are a sign to investors there's excess cash in the technology sector, and they will help keep demand for the stocks up.

en This makes better sense for a long-term viable business. It should improve efficiency for our operations, especially (with) the larger shows.

en This is where moonlighting makes a lot of sense, ... Younger people have fewer family obligations at this point, so moonlighting works greatly to your benefit. It's the classic kind of case where moonlighting makes the most sense. It just gets more difficult the more you're established both professionally and in your home life.

en It's a big thing to try to merge two fairly large organizations in a way that they can really have a seamless collaboration that's organic and makes sense for everyone.

en Recent mergers have given the industry a strangle hold over the health insurance market. With fewer pressures for efficiency and no government oversight of rates, insurers have been given free rein to spend more of our health care dollars on overhead, profit, and administration. The last decade of HMO mergers has taught us that when fewer HMOs dominate the health care market, quality goes down, premiums go up, and patients get short changed. Already, 45 million Americans are uninsured because they cannot afford to pay the insurers' ransom.

en This winter we expect that there will be continued intense competition and there will be fewer low-fare carriers in the market as higher fuel prices force more carriers out of the business.

en It makes sense for companies to merge. They have higher income and lower expenses as the competitive threat grows.

en [Better terms. Contracts with steep termination fees are another barrier to dumping a carrier. Carriers could initially roll out longer contracts with higher termination fees, but may compete over the long run by offering fewer binding contracts.] It's going to be hard for carriers to stick with a system that punishes consumers, ... Consumers just won't accept that.

en It makes sense - particularly at larger companies that have human resource functions that are planning out long term - that when they look ahead, they obviously are going to work harder at retaining those individuals. Unless you have the skill set, customer counts can suffer.

en The rise in mergers and acquisitions has meant more demand for IT workers to help merge the parties' systems, for example.

en We don't think these large mergers are good for consumers. They put more utilities in fewer and fewer hands, increasing the likelihood of complex financial structures that will be less transparent and undermining the ability of state regulators to protect consumers.

en It makes sense because both Merck and Schering are too small to compete. Sentiment is good for mergers and acquisitions at the moment.

en The consumer long-distance sector is viewed as an albatross for all of the long distance carriers these days. AT&T is not the only one considering such an action.


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