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224 Sentences With "scrutinised"

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

But that can cost more than €1,500 per firm scrutinised.
Those who do appear are scrutinised with the male gaze.
"All large institutions should be scrutinised or examined," Bezos said.
That facility is regularly scrutinised by British intelligence agency GCHQ.
Roughly 63% of events scrutinised show some influence from climate change.
WANTED: qualified candidates to work for the world's most scrutinised organisation.
Mr Trump is not interested; Mrs Clinton, for once, not scrutinised.
When he scrutinised the notice more closely, he realised it was fake.
But when they scrutinised the financing of his campaign, he struck back.
As ever, all approaches will be scrutinised to see if they work.
Pricing will be closely scrutinised by bank treasuries and syndicates across Europe.
The evidence is likely to be closely scrutinised by the UK government.
This is not the first time WeWork has been scrutinised by the NYAG.
Passenger numbers fell; work on new lines was paused; safety procedures were scrutinised.
Additionally, the FRC, as an organisation, is being scrutinised by the UK government.
How she accounts for the behaviour of the army will be closely scrutinised.
The government has banned reporters from the region, but its actions are still scrutinised.
The effectiveness of the Australian corporate regulator in enforcing the law was also scrutinised.
Any details of Medallion's trading strategy, no matter how small, are closely scrutinised by investors.
The boffins at MGI scrutinised the financial performance of some 10,000 Chinese and American companies.
No surprise there: this is an area where they have been heavily scrutinised by governments.
Organic chloride levels have been closely scrutinised following a major oil contamination earlier this year.
Lunch boxes are scrutinised critically by other mothers; hiring a babysitter or cleaner is frowned upon.
She has been relentlessly pursued by paparazzi, and her body scrutinised and ridiculed by the press.
Mr Andrews has also scrutinised the instrumental variables that featured so heavily in the credibility revolution.
Worse still, this was only one of 60 transfers that were being scrutinised by the FBI.
He scrutinised the line between humans and machines, focusing on the machine side of the line.
But is there anything new to say about a man who has been so relentlessly scrutinised?
Social media are also being scrutinised by a parliamentary committee which wants to fight "deliberate online falsehoods".
Even as policymakers have embraced Pigou's idea, however, its flaws, both theoretical and practical, have been scrutinised.
With relationships between Israel and the Palestinians at a nadir, each case is scrutinised by both sides.
But they stress neither investigation is complete and crew actions and training will also be closely scrutinised.
Organic chloride levels are being scrutinised following a major oil contamination which was discovered in late April.
"Every poll that is coming out now is being scrutinised closely," said DZ Bank strategist Christian Lenk.
The projects to be scrutinised include those in partnership with the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co (ADNOC).
That is why two recent films looking at Roma lives, both directed by non-Roma Spaniards, were scrutinised.
American border officials scrutinised all travel documents and required drivers to open their car boots, creating long queues.
"We have a situation where law enforcement is being scrutinised more heavily," says Mr Hamilton of the LAPD.
FEW parole-board decisions have been as closely scrutinised as the proposed release of John Worboys in January.
It scrutinised past examples of ethics dumping and sought ways of stopping similar things happening in the future.
Routine requests for teachers to attend conferences or do field research are now rigorously scrutinised and frequently denied.
The BOJ's regional report and Thursday's trade data would be scrutinised at the bank's rate review on Oct.
One advantage of such exports is that the Chinese will get the design scrutinised by independent regulators abroad.
It is not clear that multinationals, in particular, could be properly scrutinised by an auditor with limited global coverage.
The scrutinised stump, pictured above, is the remains of a Kauri tree in Waitakere Ranges Regional Park, New Zealand.
"They are now much better capitalised and more heavily scrutinised by the regulator than before the crisis," he added.
Lori Lightfoot, a gay, African-American woman who has scrutinised police violence in the city, is one such candidate.
The problem with much aid (and social spending in general) is that inputs are scrutinised more closely than results.
The influence of foreign capital flows on housing markets is being scrutinised, particularly as affordability becomes ever more stretched.
The Windsors are one of the most scrutinised families in the world, and also one of the most guarded.
Jack Dongarra, a supercomputing expert at the University of Tennessee who has scrutinised Sunway's chip, calls it "very impressive".
"Everything I say and do in public, and sometimes even in private, is pored over and scrutinised," he said.
The legislation will now head to the House of Lords next week where it will be scrutinised by peers.
The figures will be scrutinised by investors to gauge whether the BoE might tighten monetary policy as early as August.
Istvan Janos Toth of Corruption Research Centre Budapest (CRCB) scrutinised more than 120,000 calls for tender from 2010 to 2015.
Next week's U.S. data clues meanwhile will likely be scrutinised for signs of labour market tightening and price pressures building.
Wanda reworked a US$9bn deal to sell hotel and tourism assets to Sunac after banks scrutinised their credit risk.
Monthly U.S. payrolls figures are always closely scrutinised by traders as an up-to-date gauge of U.S. economic health.
The "i" deal is expected to be scrutinised by competition regulators, although DMGT has pledged to retain its editorial independence.
Donovan, for example, works in wealth management not the investment bank, where research output and commentary are more closely scrutinised.
The data from his 2016 election have been scrutinised, and the resulting analyses, detailed in books and papers, are in agreement.
Brazil's supreme court said President Michel Temer's bank accounts could be scrutinised in an investigation into possible corruption involving port permits.
Applications "will be scrutinised and debated with a diligence bordering on monomania", according to David Arndt of the class of 1984.
The ongoing overhaul includes its planned takeover of television group Bonnier Broadcasting, with the deal currently being scrutinised by EU antitrust regulators.
Inspectors scrutinised how robust the site licensee NNB GenCo's arrangements are for ensuring the quality of Hinkley Point's structures, systems and components.
Ramaphosa his expected to announce a smaller cabinet, with appointments to the finance ministry and deputy presidency likely to be closely scrutinised.
Payrolls figures are always closely scrutinised by traders as they are seen as an up-to-date gauge of U.S. economic health.
In such circumstances B.P. ought to have exercised extreme care and should have closely scrutinised the creation of content for the campaign.
The next legal steps will likely be scrutinised closely, with the jailings having shaken confidence in Hong Kong's vaunted rule of law.
Acquiring technology by buying innovative firms, including in Germany's Mittelstand, is reasonable, too, so long as deals are scrutinised for national-security risks.
No surprise, then, that lobbyists and lawyers are rubbing their hands at all the business this deluge of barely scrutinised ambiguities will generate.
So it is scrutinised only in advance, when regulators know the least about its effects, complains Michael Greenstone, of the University of Chicago.
OVER the past decade economists have been intensely scrutinised for their intellectual failings in the run-up to the 2007-08 financial crisis.
Tucker's financial stability role at the BoE was scrutinised in 573 when it emerged that banks had fraudulently manipulated the Libor interbank rate.
Parliament had some particularly scathing words for Zuckerberg, who showed "contempt" for its investigation: Facebook seems willing neither to be regulated nor scrutinised.
Tucker's financial stability role at the BoE was scrutinised in 2012 when it emerged that banks had fraudulently manipulated the Libor interbank rate.
Daves estimated that around 1.2 trillion kwanza ($3.88 billion) was still snarled up, although around 300 billion kwanza of that was still being scrutinised.
However, he said such reinsurance policies would be scrutinised to ensure that they are not being used to get around the new capital rules.
An effective response to offensive speakers could be to organise and popularise discussions, where the speakers' views are questioned and their credibility thoroughly scrutinised.
But he says the project set up to help landless black farmers fell victim to fraud, and the venture is being scrutinised by prosecutors.
Paul Chapman, Cybershield's boss, argues that having the company's work scrutinised and approved by GCHQ experts was the most valuable part of the exercise.
Although the new rules set out the kinds of deals that should be scrutinised, CFIUS alone decides if a deal poses a security risk.
A takeover of the company could be closely scrutinised by the British government because of the British satellite company's position as a strategic asset.
The Act was scrutinised and debated in Parliament during its passage and agreed by both the House of Commons and the House of Lords.
Large options trades ahead of takeover announcements are closely scrutinised by financial regulators as they have in the past been linked to insider trading cases.
EVER since President Donald Trump entered the White House, his courtiers have been scrutinised for clues to their "true feelings" about the man they serve.
EVER since President Donald Trump entered the White House, his courtiers have been scrutinised for clues to their true feelings about the man they serve.
For the two months until inauguration day and beyond, every speech and appointment by the new administration will be obsessively scrutinised south of the border.
He insists that he is engaged in "a different way of doing politics" in which all members are scrutinised and donations will be made public.
The 13 and 2013 Ipic-guaranteed bond issues were arranged by Goldman Sachs, whose work on 1MDB is now being scrutinised by several US authorities.
Wanda International's 2024 bonds dropped 3.5 points, after reports that Chinese authorities had clamped down on its lenders, while they scrutinised the company's overseas acquisitions.
Data from trade repositories (TRs) is scrutinised by regulators to see who is behind each trade and whether risks are building up in the system.
But everything else… We didn't know we'd get scrutinised, or hated for wearing a crop top and skirt; we didn't know any of those things.
Their chief executive resigned, protests erupted and the Conservative-dominated council was put under a spotlight, where its glaring failures are still being scrutinised today.
The year-long Royal Commission has received over 9,000 submissions by aggrieved customers and scrutinised a handful of specific cases that have shocked the country.
And that was on top of the relentless articles that scrutinised the size and shape of the girls' bodies (one newspaper nicknamed Geri "Podge Spice").
The 110-page Withdrawal Agreement Bill would typically be scrutinised over weeks and months, but Johnson proposed condensing the timetable to just a few days.
That departure was particularly awkward for a bank that has had multiple money laundering lapses and was being closely scrutinised by regulators because of it.
The remainder with less than 10,000 birds are likely to be shut down soon as local governments favour larger producers that can be more easily scrutinised.
Moves of regional banks like Shengjing have been closely scrutinised by investors and markets after Chinese regulators seized Baoshang Bank last month, citing "severe credit risks".
"The question about the reason for the increased assaults is not something that can be left to debate and must be scrutinised empirically," concludes the paper.
The most successful posts by six Polish fact-checkers scrutinised campaign finance, the murder of a prominent opposition politician and child abuse by the Catholic church.
The takeover of Inmarsat is expected to be closely scrutinised by politicians in Westminster and regulators as the satellite company is seen as a strategic asset.
The trial will be scrutinised by European bankers who have come under pressure from regulators to tighten compliance with money laundering rules since the financial crisis.
The inflation data due out at GMT 0830 will be scrutinised by investors to gauge whether the BoE might tighten monetary policy as early as August.
However, parliament blocked Johnson's bid for a straight approval and withheld their support for the deal until all Brexit-related legislation has been scrutinised and passed.
The watchdog's second review scrutinised three firms that provide fully automated advice, where clients provided fewer details on their circumstances and do not set investment parameters.
The US has increasingly scrutinised the way apps collect and handle personal data, especially in cases where it involves members of the US Military or intelligence services.
Buhari's record on managing the economy is likely to be closely scrutinised if he goes ahead with plans to seek a second term in office next year.
But in the latest clip, we finally see characters old and new saying words which will probably be closely scrutinised by fans for the next 10 days.
It has promised a change in its approach to "the ownership and control of critical infrastructure", to ensure that the implications of foreign ownership are fully scrutinised.
Since the financial crisis, politicians have scrutinised the influence of commercial banks in regional Feds, whose most important function today is to regulate banks in their district.
NSF and Provident operate in the closely scrutinised subprime sector, providing short term loans to low income people who might otherwise struggle to borrow from mainstream banks.
Such infrastructure spending has helped to shore up economic growth but is now being scrutinised more closely after the government pledged to clamp down on financial risks.
Philippe has agreed to seek a way of balancing the pension budget other than by raising the retirement age while the bill is being scrutinised in parliament.
Her diet is constantly scrutinised and food withheld from her; her managers force her to take amphetamines to curb her appetite and barbiturates to help her sleep.
The legislation is now being scrutinised by a parliamentary committee where it has also been criticised by the central bank, which would be handed the new powers.
In the run-up to election time, a politician's every move is scrutinised—even food choices come to symbolise character and a predictor of things to come.
"Our lawyers scrutinised sanctions and did not get excited ... For now, it seems that nothing has changed for us," said the official, who asked not to be named.
A deal involving Total is likely to be closely scrutinised as Algeria which remains wary of investments by French companies given the country's past as a former colony.
U.S. legislators have in recent months scrutinised Google and Facebook over their relationships with the company, while Verizon and AT&T dropped plans to sell its handset devices.
In 2013-14, a government investigation found that half of the EU students scrutinised could not demonstrate they had lived in England long enough to qualify for support.
In March 2017, two women attempting to board a United flight were scrutinised for their sartorial choices, and were deemed "not in compliance" with the airline's dress code.
The deal, which is being scrutinised by Britain's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), is on track for completion in early 2020 subject to gaining regulatory approval, SSE said.
The bill for settling RBS's legal cases could further stress the bank's capital position, which was scrutinised in the European Banking Authority's (EBA) stress tests on July 31.
By law, Cinda's senior management is scrutinised and approved by the CBRC, which also has significant influence on the entity's business operations through industry and business activity supervision.
But this year, following the fall of one of the festival's most high-profile regulars, Harvey Weinstein, the event's ingrained sexism was scrutinised and criticised more intently than ever.
In the modern era of genomics, they have had their DNA scrutinised down to the level of individual base pairs, the molecular letters in which genetic information is written.
They injected the rodents with the various putative vaccines they had made, then scrutinised them carefully, looking in particular for unusual levels of anxiety and strange patterns of movement.
Duterte has called Rappler a fake news outlet, making no secret of his annoyance at its reporting, which has heavily scrutinised his polices and the accuracy of his statements.
"The flash estimate of Q3 GDP data will be scrutinised in the UK, with markets looking for evidence of any initial Brexit impact," said Madhur Jha at Standard Chartered.
And because of the public nature of all of this, I put myself in such a vulnerable position to be criticised, scrutinised, judged and targeted by (often misinformed) strangers.
All research claims ought to be rigorously and independently scrutinised by experts in the field, but that is often not happening with work on the new coronavirus, Giotis said.
All research claims ought to be rigorously and independently scrutinised by experts in the field, but that is often not happening with work on the new coronavirus, Giotis said.
Back at MIT, Dr Günther has spotted hundreds of flares on M-dwarfs being scrutinised by TESS—some of which made the stars temporarily 30 times brighter than normal.
"The ECB accounts from the overall rather unexciting March meeting will be scrutinised for hints whether or how the ECB may change its wording next time," Commerzbank analysts wrote.
The sale of these cheap and readily available parts, some of which are not subject to government export licences, is far less scrutinised and regulated than the transfer of weapons.
G20 finance ministers and central bankers meet in Germany in March and their communique will be scrutinised for signs of discord between the United States and other members over regulation.
The move to the digital world comes after long months of debate within the agency, which even scrutinised the content of the first tweet for weeks, the Financial Times reported.
It was already being scrutinised by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), America's main stockmarket regulator, for the $6.2bn charge it took this year, as well for other big charges.
It currently allows Huawei's equipment to be used in existing networks, but insists that it be scrutinised by a dedicated body in Oxfordshire, the Huawei Cyber Security Evaluation Centre (HCSEC).
Coming a week after surprisingly tepid U.S. second-quarter growth numbers, the data will be scrutinised by markets eager to gauge the likely timing of the next U.S. rate rise.
Patel, a former executive at energy conglomerate Reliance Industries, will also be scrutinised to see how he follows through on a campaign to make banks clean up their balance sheets.
How Powell stands on the pace of interest rate hikes will be scrutinised after the minutes from the most recent policy meeting indicated the Fed would tighten monetary policy soon.
So next week's data by the Mortgage Bankers Association on home loan applications will be closely scrutinised, after 228-year benchmark borrowing costs leapt to their highest since May 24.
Xavier Gonzalez, the IPC's chief executive, has reiterated the group's dedication to stamping out cheating: 80 cases of queried classifications were scrutinised before this summer's games—with no errors found.
U.S. core inflation figures, which will be closely scrutinised by the Federal Reserve as it looks to push on with its recent run of rate hikes, are also due later.
EU policymakers want to see chunks of clearing in euro-denominated transactions shifted from London to Frankfurt where they can be closely scrutinised, in a proposed move Giancarlo called "Fortress Europe".
Where Powell stands on the pace of interest rate hikes will be scrutinised after minutes from the Fed's most recent policy meeting indicated the central bank would tighten monetary policy soon.
But when a band aligns themselves and their art so closely with queer signifiers, that art is allowed to be scrutinised within that lens, particularly within the context of making money.
On the other hand, the company has long been scrutinised for how it handles its taxes, and in some countries the impact that it is having on local and smaller businesses.
The results of the probe will be scrutinised by investors and the wider financial community, and will also help determine the outcome of current criminal investigations in both Denmark and Estonia.
Some have been closely scrutinised by Rome, worried over the vulnerability of corporate champions such as Telecom Italia , in which CDP took a direct holding after Vivendi built a controlling stake.
"As with any claim of early life, and especially now that these are potentially 'Earth's oldest microfossils', these rocks and thin sections will now be scrutinised in great detail," he says.
They will be scrutinised to see how much appetite there is for further rate hikes or for signs of more concern among policymakers about a downturn in U.S. inflation and growth.
Where he stands on the pace of interest rate hikes will be scrutinised after minutes from the Fed's most recent policy meeting indicated the central bank would tighten monetary policy soon.
People who know that their details can be scrutinised by friends and associates will report their income more meticulously, and hesitate before using convoluted schemes to minimise the taxes they pay.
U.S. non-farm payrolls data on Friday will be scrutinised for clues on economic strength, two days after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates for the first time in a decade.
"Vitol will get the tender if all other papers submitted by them fulfil terms and condition set out by the tender," one source said, adding that other documents were being scrutinised.
"The ECB accounts from the overall rather unexciting March meeting will be scrutinised for hints whether or how the ECB may change its wording next time," Commerzbank analysts wrote in a note.
Ireland's two main lenders, Allied Irish Banks and Bank of Ireland, fared second and fourth worst respectively among 51 banks scrutinised over their ability to withstand a three-year theoretical economic shock.
At least the warrants on which such raids are legally based should be scrutinised, approved and issued by a judge of a superior court, in this case the Federal Court of Australia.
The creators must have known their work would be scrutinised there: Between the memes, the pop feminism, and the thinkpiece-bait plotlines, it's as if they designed the show with Tumblr in mind.
Jeremy Corbyn, Labour's left-wing leader, has inspired political engagement among thousands of people who might never before have contemplated a career in mainstream politics, nor how their online posts might be scrutinised.
The U.S. government has since scrutinised state-owned Qatar Airways' minority ownership of Air Italy over allegations the investment breaches agreements between Qatar and the U.S.. Qatar Airways says the stake is compliant.
However, Caspar said standard contractual clauses would also have to be scrutinised to decide if they give sufficient protection to Europeans' data, leaving open the possibility that regulators will restrict their use too.
Important data on the British economy due this week, including inflation and gross domestic product, will be scrutinised by investors to gauge whether the BoE might tighten monetary policy as early as August.
The country's two main lenders, Allied Irish Banks and Bank of Ireland, fared second and fourth worst respectively among 215.9 banks scrutinised over their ability to withstand a three-year theoretical economic shock.
Indeed, that is part of the point why intrusion software has been labelled as a "dual-use technology" and is scrutinised for export; it can be used in both strongly positive and negative ways.
The bank has also been implicated in a string of financial scandals in recent years and its dealings with U.S. President Donald Trump are being scrutinised by politicians and the New York Attorney General.
But given the financial and industrial logic in a stagnant market, the Fiat-Peugeot playbook will be scrutinised heavily in Stuttgart and Munich, where Daimler and BMW are respectively based, in the year ahead.
But no review will be triggered by passive investments in companies that do not come with board seats or access to material, non-public information, so lots of investments in startups will not be scrutinised.
Mr Trump's proposed cabinet is being scrutinised for signs of how he will govern, but no one yet knows whether the president-elect will let his team run their fiefs or take all the decisions himself.
On March 26th, the Supreme Court scrutinised North Carolina's map and another brazen gerrymander that turned a reliably Republican district in Maryland Democratic, boosting Democrats' share of the state's eight congressional seats from six to seven.
Lenders will make the provisions with quarterly results that will be scrutinised for the impact of Brexit on the economy, while the weakening pound and heightened market activity will also have an affect on results. bit.
But when it comes to treating people differently on the basis of their race, gender, religion or national origin, the courts have long held that discriminatory laws or government actions should be scrutinised with particular care.
Every word and gesture will be scrutinised by geopolitical analysts as they try to judge if this really is a re-emerging detente between the two nations, not to mention the reaction from Trump's twitter account.
Every storm that rolls in from the Atlantic this summer will thus be trailed by planes, punctured and scanned by dropsondes and drones, scrutinised from space by satellites, and monitored from the depths by floats like ALAMO.
In a study published in 2014, Mr Webster and others scrutinised what happened after Missouri scrapped its permit-to-purchase law, which required all handgun purchasers to obtain a licence confirming they had passed a background check.
But in order to cultivate open and free discussion in the jury room, both state and federal courts have protected the secrecy of deliberations and have not permitted jurors' comments to be scrutinised after the verdict is delivered.
Judge Paul Niemeyer, an angry dissenter from the Fourth Circuit's ruling, wrote the justices "surely will shudder" at the idea that "a candidate's various campaign statements" can be scrutinised for ill-will and transformed "into a constitutional violation".
Trump's interactions with the Russian leader at the summit in Germany were scrutinised closely because of allegations that Moscow tried to meddle in the 2016 U.S. presidential election to help Trump win the White House, something Russia denies.
Nwankwo said the most important lesson, irrespective of the verdict, was for allegations to be scrutinised in open court, unlike the military tribunals that characterised Buhari's first stint in power, as a military ruler, in the early 1980s.
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen was due to give her semi-annual testimony to lawmakers, and her speech will be scrutinised for hints about the timing of prospective rate hikes by the world's most influential central bank.
Italian authorities should also examine the asset quality of smaller banks that are not scrutinised by the European Central Bank and monitor that lenders meet ambitious targets set for the reduction of their bad loans, the fund said.
But the very fact that the leader of Israel's ruling right-wing coalition is being scrutinised by prosecutors will likely affect the political calculations of his supporters, rivals and opponents within his own coalition, and across the political spectrum.
European politicians, generals and diplomats have scrutinised Mr Trump's interviews and speeches and concluded that, by instinct at least, should they ever hold America back, he sees allies as potential burdens fit to be thrown, wailing, into the void.
BERLIN, April 24 (Reuters) - Amazon Chief Executive Jeff Bezos said on Tuesday that it was right that big companies are scrutinised and said his firm would respond to any new regulations by finding new ways to please its customers.
Other currencies were locked in tight ranges ahead of U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's speech at Jackson Hole on Friday, which will be closely scrutinised after an inversion in the Treasury yield curve highlighted the risk of a U.S. recession.
MODEL SCRUTINISED Disarray at WeWork, which is scrambling for cash following a flopped IPO attempt, comes as SoftBank founder and CEO Masayoshi Son struggles to raise money for a successor to his $100 billion Vision Fund, sources told Reuters this month.
This will include being able to keep lists of attributes, names and numbers that are scrutinised, and to check against them with analytics also created by Stripe to help identify trending issues, and to plan anti-fraud activities going forward.
Once the constitution is amended, which still requires the approval of half of India's state legislatures, parliament must pass the Goods and Services Tax bill with more details, now being scrutinised by business groups, of how the tax system will work.
Last year, Latitude deferred a planned IPO that would have valued the business at about A$5 billion due to market conditions and a management change, while the country's financial industry was also being scrutinised by a national misconduct inquiry.
"On more than 570 occasions over the last nine-and-a-half years, I have seen fit to grant urgent questions ... so that the government can be legitimately questioned, probed, scrutinised, challenged and held to account," he said on Monday.
A source on the panel said that while Facebook had acknowledged that it doesn't "always get it right" when it comes to moderating content, the panel got the sense that the company was "unwilling to be properly scrutinised and transparent".
The applications are also being scrutinised by the European Securities and Markets Authority or ESMA, an EU regulator, to check they have sufficient "substance" or number and seniority of staff to avoid them becoming a "letter box" or empty shell.
If Mr Trump ploughs ahead with plans to ban immigration from parts of the world he deems dangerous, and also to crack down on illegal foreign workers, one side-effect could be longer queues at airports as travellers' documents are more closely scrutinised.
The results will be scrutinised even more closely than usual after eyewear entrepreneur Leonardo Del Vecchio snapped up a stake of nearly 7% in the bank last month and called for growth through M&A, putting pressure on Chief Executive Alberto Nagel.
The remit of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS), a multi-agency body charged with screening deals that affect national security, should be expanded so that minority investments in AI, say, can be scrutinised as well as outright acquisitions.
Both parties were heavily criticised by MMA's often overly-rabid fan base—with the UFC accused of cheapening their product for a quick buck, while CM Punk was scrutinised for cutting in line and earning a UFC contract without having fought before.
Intensely scrutinised U.S. jobs data on Friday showed that U.S. employment growth eased for the third straight month in September and the jobless rate rose, but the slowdown was not expected to prevent the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates later this year.
While Saudi Arabia does usually pump out more oil in the summer to sate domestic demand, the record production level is likely to be scrutinised because oil prices are still about 55% lower than they were at their most recent peak, in June 2014.
Hence his talk of using a parliamentary vote on Article 50 to "put grit in the machine" and his concern that the government's Great Repeal Bill, which will transfer EU laws wholesale to the British statute book, may not be sufficiently scrutinised in Parliament.
"When governments believe that something on the Internet violates their laws, they may contact [us]...when we receive such a request, it is scrutinised to determine if the specified content does indeed violate local laws," a Facebook spokesperson told news outlet the Bangkok Post.
It is unclear whether the show has had an impact on company sales, but it has drawn apologies from Volkswagen, whose engine defects in the Touareg SUV it criticised last year, as well as from Apple, whose China after-sales service it scrutinised in 2013.
While policy is widely anticipated to remain unchanged, the Federal Reserve's updated economic forecasts and Chair Janet Yellen's post-meeting press conference will be scrutinised for signals about the near-term policy outlook and the desire of the Committee to get rates higher again.
In study results likely to be closely scrutinised by health specialists worldwide, British scientists found that cigarette smokers who switched to nicotine-containing vapes saw a marked boost to their vascular function - a change that could lead to a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular disease.
LONDON, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Third-quarter growth figures from the United States and Britain will be scrutinised by financial markets in the week, and a business survey will provide the first evidence on how the euro zone has fared going into the fourth quarter.
Given that background and the Fed's promise to be "highly data-dependent" while setting interest rates, flash Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) readings are likely to be closely scrutinised -- a strong number would tip the balance in favour of the hawks on the Fed board.
The incident serves her inner circle as a house parable showing the perfidy of civil servants (who talked Mr Johnson into the idea), the folly of ill-scrutinised decisions, the danger of informal structures and the comeuppance of those who do not do things Mrs May's way.
Hundreds of scientists like Mr Pearce and Mr Baden are uploading their plans for instruments to the internet, where they are scrutinised by citizen scientists hoping to improve the tools they are using, and thus the things they can study, monitor and make a fuss about.
I tell him that I can't begin to imagine being in a band like One Direction, who have sold 7.6 million albums around the world, whose five faces are burned onto the retina of pop culture forever, whose every move was – and is – scrutinised from every angle.
The U.S. investment bank maintains that derivatives contracts signed with Italy's Treasury that led to losses should be scrutinised by a civil court, not by the Court of Accounts, which rules on abuses of public funds, the sources said ahead of the first hearing in Rome.
It is unclear whether the show has made an impact on company sales, but past shows have drawn apologies from Volkswagen , whose engine defects in the Touareg SUV it criticised last year, as well as from Apple, whose China after-sales service it scrutinised in 2013.
But if you look at how Google is being scrutinised (and heavily fined by regulators) over how its dominance in search ads has impacted vertical search in the travel sector, you can see why Airbnb might be interested in building up its own talent and technology in this area.
"The government needs to publish its Brexit plan by mid-February at the latest, including its position on membership of the single market and the customs union, so that it can be scrutinised by parliament and the public," said opposition Labour lawmaker Hilary Benn, chair of the committee.
The data relationship between WhatsApp and Facebook is also being scrutinised at the European level, and has rubbed many users the wrong way, coming as it does after numerous assurances from Facebook, when it acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion, that it would run it as a completely independent business.
That left 303 candidates whose sequences and medical records were scrutinised to ensure that the individuals concerned were healthy and that the mutations they carried had been identified in the scientific literature as giving rise to a disease that would be likely to prevent them surviving to adulthood.
"Such queries mean the deal is being closely scrutinised and could face potential delays, but it can eventually sail through if no antitrust concerns are found," said Karan Singh Chandhiok, an antitrust partner at Indian law firm Chandhiok & Mahajan who is not involved in the proposed stake purchase.
Germany also starts to debate its 313 budget in parliament later in the day, where Finance Minister Olaf Scholz's speech will be scrutinised after Reuters reported Berlin was looking into creating a "shadow budget" to boost public investment and effectively circumvent limits set by its national debt rules.
"Wallarah 2 has been one of the most scrutinised mining projects in NSW history, subjected to repeated assessment over a ridiculous 16-year period, including by independent scientific experts, the Department of Planning, and the Independent Planning Commission, before receiving a positive determination last year," Galilee said in a statement.
"For the most part, IED components are commercial goods that are not subject to government export licences and whose transfer is far less scrutinised and regulated than the transfer of weapons," said a February report from the London-based Conflict Armament Research group, which traced the origins of more than 700 components recovered from ISIS bomb factories.
"For the most part, IED components are commercial goods that are not subject to government export licences and whose transfer is far less scrutinised and regulated than the transfer of weapons," said a February report from the London-based Conflict Armament Research group, which traced the origins of more than 21993 components recovered from ISIS bomb factories.
Plus, in a climate where social networks are now getting increasingly scrutinised by governments for their role in aiding and abetting the bad actors, it also helps Twitter (and others that also identify and remove accounts, like Facebook) demonstrate that it is self-policing, making an effort and producing results, before states step in and do the policing for them.

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