Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"retrench" Definitions
  1. [intransitive] (formal) (of a business, government, etc.) to spend less money; to reduce costs
  2. [transitive] retrench somebody (Australian English, New Zealand English, South African English) to tell somebody that they cannot continue working for you

113 Sentences With "retrench"

How to use retrench in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "retrench" and check conjugation/comparative form for "retrench". Mastering all the usages of "retrench" from sentence examples published by news publications.

As they retrench at home, this share will probably rise further.
If things aren't working, you retrench and then return to market.
Then it stops on a dime and begins to retrench in 2018.
Overconfident investors get extended in a handful of trades and need to retrench.
The Second Circuit's decision should not cause DoJ to retrench and shrink from prosecutions.
"I don't really see any scenario where young voters retrench next cycle," says Baumann.
In other markets, such lackluster pricing would cause investment to retrench and supply to contract.
Under President Trump, the United States is likely to retrench away from global market integration.
Schumer's ongoing attempt to retrench, post-shutdown, amounts to a public concession to that reality.
Uber has slowly begun to retrench on some of its more ambitious international expansion plans.
As companies retrench, it affects workers and suppliers, which then have to tighten their own belts.
Two years after a historic corporate tax cut in 2017, companies have now begun to retrench.
But most economists are expecting a sharp slowdown as businesses and consumers retrench after the referendum shock.
"Consumers retrench when they do not feel the wealth effect of ever increasing house prices," he said.
It can also be a national day of healing before — sadly — we retrench into our perceived differences.
Some fear that Mr. van Zweden will retrench from Alan Gilbert's forays into modern and new music.
And investors that enabled the business borrowing will retrench, making it harder for other companies to get financing.
"Mortgage markets continued to retrench last week," said Lynn Fisher, the MBA's vice president of research and economics.
How do we work through the fear, retrench the connections, bring people forward, and help manage wellness first.
The celebration of "Parasite" follows a year in which Oscar voters seemed to retrench toward their conservative past.
Usually, the best move is to retreat and retrench, to find ways to reduce scope without going too small.
If we start to get through the lows of January, that could force some speculators to retrench their position.
Even if American startups are overvalued, few individual investors — acting in their own self-interest — are willing to retrench.
But since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia's space program has had to retrench for lack of cash.
Meanwhile, China's economy continues to retrench, due to fluctuations in its stock market and a crackdown on luxury spending.
Policymakers worry that losing that "anchor" could lead households and businesses to retrench, trapping the economy in low gear.
Big foreign mining firms tend to retrench quickly when markets turn down; small local miners tend to keep digging.
At a certain moment in history, one has to retrench and consider the forms of resistance one is promoting.
Couple this with trade wars, and insecure nations will tend to retrench and reduce their willingness to trade and invest.
But the continuing lack of stability in both Syria and Iraq could provide fertile ground for the jihadists to retrench.
European oil majors seeking to jointly develop Iran's oil and natural gas fields, such as France's Total, might also retrench.
History is filled with examples, such as Social Security, where battles to retrench the social safety net go down in flames.
"If you start to see Microsoft and Google beginning to retrench, then you'll know which way we are going," he says.
It was not Steve Bannon's role to undermine the president and force the United States to retrench from its current position.
"It is insensitive to retrench mine workers ... whilst enjoying the luxury of a game farm," Lonmin General Secretary Gideon du Plessis said.
Companies like Vancouver Opera and Fort Worth Opera have tried similar festival models and been forced to retrench, at least in part.
Even Michael Kors, Coach's archrival and once a star in the sector, has been forced to retrench after a period of overexpansion.
But that we are seeing the platform wars not just burn on, but retrench in form as they advance in scope seems incontrovertible.
Much of its growth was financed by borrowing, however, and the company has been forced to retrench in the last couple of years.
Finally, states that have expanded Medicaid might retrench, worried they'll be left with the full costs of expansion once repeal goes into effect.
"Over the course of a few years, having to retrench 20,000 people was I think the worst time in my career," Griffith said.
Now, what has become a challenging market for European banks is forcing some to scale back operations and retrench efforts at an inconvenient time.
It could also cause a pull-back in advertising as companies retrench and cut spending in areas that are considered to be non-core.
South China Morning Post, citing sources, reported on Monday that the airline "is not done with its staff restructuring" and will retrench 800 employees.
They are struggling even in benign economic circumstances and are likely to be forced to retrench even next time unemployment rises or growth stalls.
The Republican effort to repeal or retrench the ACA has already extended much longer than the struggle over any other modern safety net program.
And while Republicans in Congress continued guerrilla efforts to retrench the law through the 22020s, the party never again seriously contemplated trying to eliminate it.
But after the bust, Tellme had to retrench, lay off people, and focus on using voice automation to save companies on their customer service costs.
There is a risk of financial deflation rearing its ugly head again, if price deflation in commodities continues and forces resource companies to retrench again.
"Small and medium-sized enterprises in Latin America are massively underserved to begin with, and any shock like this tends to make banks retrench," he said.
In recent months, once overly bullish firms have tried to retrench — cutting jobs, axing deals and selling off assets in attempts to attain long-term viability.
Even if the United States decides to retrench, it still will need to think carefully about the advantages and benefits of doing it in different ways.
Paul believes it's important to retrench the president's war powers after an authorization for the use of military force passed by Congress shortly after the Sept.
Do the presidential candidates believe America should stand up for its allies in East Asia against another aggressive power, or do they think the US should retrench?
"Trump hasn't been able to retrench and realign the US in the ways he claims he wants to because the consequences would be too negative," Barro wrote.
Were American drug prices to fall, or coverage of prescription drugs to retrench, the drug market would shrink and some of those investments would not be made.
Too much openness can cause workers to "do a turtle," researchers say, and retrench and communicate less — colleagues who retreat into their headphones all day, for example.
However, he said it's important for the Fed to fix this problem before it causes investors to retrench, dealing a blow to both markets and the economy.
OPEC's two-year price war sank hundreds of companies and forced majors including Exxon and Chevron Corp to retrench - but it also and stirred their interest in shale.
Whereas I was once the leader, salesman, box packer, deliveryman and collections officer all at once, I now needed to retrench myself and empower my team to lead.
Support among civilians in areas in which the groups primarily operate also makes them more stable, by broadening support networks and helping them to safely retrench when needed.
For businesspeople the prevailing narratives affect deliberations on whether to hire more help or lay off employees, whether to expand or retrench or even start a new enterprise.
Ford executives acknowledged that the company needed to retrench as it prepared to deliver several promising new sport-utility models this year in the American and Chinese markets.
According to Neeleman, the opportunity exists because, as costs increase for airlines, they have a tendency to retrench their network to focus on their hubs and operate larger planes.
According to Neeleman, the opportunity exists because as costs increase for airlines, they have a tendency to retrench their network to focus on their hubs and operate larger planes.
It is possible that North Korea will retrench and give their engineers time to fix the problems, maybe come back with a working missile in a year or two.
In a twist, as states across the globe retrench and solidify their hold, the quest for centralized rule and the quashing of dissent have caused borders to become porous.
In hard times, economies tend to retrench, just when stimulus is most needed; the richer they get, the less likely they are to invest enough to sustain their wealth.
The results seemed to vindicate those who have argued that the ever-thinner elite of global investment banks would eventually come good, as weaker rivals retrench and leave the field.
More recently, the company had to retrench after its growth stalled and in 2015 the company was forced to make massive job cuts as its business came back to earth.
What about the narrative that the down rounds are on the rise, particularly as mutual and hedge funds and other non-traditional sources of venture capital retrench from the market?
"Our labour attache is under strict instructions to determine what is the real cause of the decision of management to retrench them on the basis of redundancy," he told Reuters.
The company seems to be reevaluating its position, though, and Angle indicated the plan was to retrench and invest further in research and development to maintain their position as market leader.
But other firms have faced angry consumers and had to retrench, as Target did when hundreds of thousands of people signed a petition in protest of its trans-inclusive bathroom policy.
"If trade tensions escalate further, our economists see the direct impact of tariffs interacting with the indirect effects of tighter financial conditions and other spillovers, potentially leading consumers to retrench," she wrote.
Such a collapse would lead to huge financial losses for local property owners, homes and businesses, and could have macroeconomic implications as those affected retrench to try to compensate for their losses.
This model fell apart as retailers found themselves needing to retrench their store base and invest in e-commerce, even as their hands were tied by the debt leftover from the buyouts.
"We're not going to retrench into our corners or put up dividing lines," Mr. Ryan said after a meeting of House Republicans was dominated by talk of how to restart health negotiations.
At the same time, growth in investment by private firms fell to a record low in the first half, as businesses retrench in the face of the sluggish economic outlook and weak exports.
Lots of pre-seed founders will need to find "normal" jobs, many seed-stage startups will fold, a bunch of Series A startups will falter, some Series B companies will retrench and so on.
We saw the almost too-big-to-fail Les Moonves topple after literal decades of abuses despite a board that was prepared retrench around him like so many GOP Senators approving a Trump judge.
And the White House can't seem to decide whether it should insist the current offer is the best chance Democrats are going to have to protect vulnerable immigrants, try to sweeten the deal, or retrench.
At the GOP House Leadership press conference this morning, Paul Ryan told reporters that Republicans are "united around our agenda" and "not going to retrench into our corners" even after last week's failure to repeal Obamacare.
Initiating a formal criminal investigation would give the Isaias government more reason to retrench into its righteous isolation — a primary cause of poor governance and economic atrophy in Eritrea, which engender abuses in the first place.
Dhar suggests that the recent moderation in house price growth "has reignited risk that China's property sector may retrench again", suggesting that the outlook for residential construction, hence commodity demand, will remain weak in the year ahead.
Thomson Reuters has relied heavily on cost cutting in recent years as its core customers, including banks, brokerages and investment houses, retrench in the face of weak trading conditions, tougher regulations and the rise of passive investing.
Put simply, Hertel-Fernandez went on, there is no liberal version of state-level right-to-work laws that Democrats have consistently pursued over the years on a scale that matches conservative efforts to retrench labor power.
The exceptions are for germane provisions that change existing law in a way that would retrench expenditures and for the rescission of previously enacted appropriations, neither of which applies to waiving statutory detention provisions for transgender detainees.
He did say, however, that this sets up Freska to be the market leader in Nordics, noting that Rocket Internet's Helpling previously entered Sweden, only to retrench in October, seeing it sell Helpling Sweden to local competitor Tidyapp.
It will focus on private lending to companies, buying distressed debt from companies in sectors like energy, and investing in complex pooled investments like collateralized loan obligations, stepping into the business as banks retrench after the financial crisis.
But the mere fact of a Corbyn premiership would send a clear signal that Britain was about to retrench in some way — further weakening a Western alliance already reeling from Donald Trump's refusal to commit wholeheartedly to its defense.
"My own exports are down by more than 13 percent, forcing me to retrench contract workers and sell in the local market at a lower price," he said, adding more than 100,000 employees in engineering might lose their jobs.
MOSCOW, Oct 11 (Reuters) - The investment-banking arm of VTB , Russia's second-biggest bank, is looking to expand its business in Europe and gain market share at home as international banks retrench, says VTB Capital's chief executive, Alexei Yakovitsky.
Still, when a long period of low interest rates ends, as appears to be the case now, all the borrowers and lenders who have grown used to cheap credit may retrench in ways that may not be initially obvious.
From the institutional expansion of the 1990s and the geographic expansion of the 2000s, Europe is emerging from the crisis years of the 2010s with a new mission to retrench, consolidate and most of all protect—both itself and its citizens.
That decision underscored Trump's conversion to the long-standing drive by the Congressional GOP -- especially House Republicans allied with Speaker Paul Ryan -- to systematically retrench the social safety net, despite Trump's conspicuous campaign promises to protect Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Budget airline Ryanair raised its long-term passenger growth forecast by 21.17 percent on Monday to 53 million travelers a year by 25, saying it planned to take advantage as intense fare competition forces higher-cost rivals to retrench.
" Mr. Eaton said the plan to prod the Afghan military to abandon the unpopulated areas and retrench to cities is "a rational approach to secure the cities, and provide the Afghanistan government the political opportunity to work with the Taliban.
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Several Chinese groups, including Huarong Asset Management, have been in discussions this year to buy Ingram Micro from HNA Group as the once-acquisitive conglomerate continues its efforts to retrench, according to sources with knowledge of the talks.
In the short-term, the implementation of the Goods and Services Tax in 2017, and the unexpected currency reform a year earlier, also hurt many small- and medium-sized firms — and some had to shut down or retrench part of their workforce.
Growth in investment by private firms, which accounts for over 21 percent of total investment, fell to a new record low in the first half of the year, as businesses retrench in the face of the sluggish economic outlook and weak exports.
The announcement, which East said is not linked to the Trent 1000 engine issue, marks the biggest round of job cuts since the company had to retrench during the aviation crisis that followed the 9/2854 attacks in the United States in 21055.
The mere fact of a Corbyn premiership, given his views on global politics, would send a clear signal that Britain was about to retrench in some way — further weakening a Western alliance already reeling from Donald Trump's refusal to commit wholeheartedly to its defense.
Growth in investment by private firms, which accounts for over 60 percent of total investment in China, fell to a new record low in the first half of the year as businesses retrench in the face of a sluggish economic outlook and weak exports.
Jim Shanahan, a senior analyst at Edward Jones & Co, said the disaster losses were higher than he had expected, given how pricing pressures had caused Berkshire to retrench from some business, but said shareholders should remain comfortable with the company over the long term.
But growth in investment by private firms, which accounts for over 60 percent of total investment in China, fell to a new record low in the first half of the year as businesses retrench in the face of a sluggish economic outlook and weak exports.
And even the bitter storms of the past few weeks may be only an early squall if Kavanaugh, still shadowed by the allegations of sexual assault, at some point joins an all-male Republican Supreme Court majority to retrench or eliminate the national legal right to abortion.
And in the long run, Trump's dream (whatever its motivations) of a better working relationship with Russia also fits with a retrench-and-refocus framework — with the major caveat that Putin seems too interested in disruption to make a genuine and cooperative détente imaginable for now.
UBS is far from alone as investment banks in Europe retrench and cut costs in the face of competition from U.S. rivals and a protracted market rout that has seen European lenders lose nearly a quarter of their value this year, wiping out over $240 billion in market capitalization.
Angola is about to provide a test case of whether diversification can help boost an economy that relies heavily on oil production The brutal global bear market in crude has forced a number of commodity-linked emerging markets to retrench economically, particularly in oil-rich Persian Gulf countries.
In each case that was more than even President Ronald Reagan and his controversial interior secretary, James Watt, proposed in 1982 (41 lease sales and about 1 billion acres), before a bipartisan coalition in Congress forced them to retrench their plans in a landmark political battle of that era.
A new focus on legal immigration The demands from Trump and some GOP legislators in each chamber for cutbacks represent the GOP's first serious attempt to retrench legal immigration since 1996, after the 1994 landslide that swept the party to control of both congressional chambers for the first time in 40 years.
The choice of Mr. Brett, who previously worked for brands like Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie and J. C. Penney, suggests that J. Crew may have decided to move further away from the flirtation with fashion instigated by Mr. Drexler and Ms. Lyons — like showing during New York Fashion Week — to retrench and concentrate on its more accessible styles and on online sales.

No results under this filter, show 113 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.