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单词 underprice
释义

Definition of underprice in English:

underprice

verbʌndəˈprʌɪsˌəndərˈpraɪs
[with object]
  • 1Sell or offer at too low a price.

    water shares were underpriced
    Example sentencesExamples
    • However, now more than half of the original insiders seem to think the shares are somewhat underpriced in the $85 to $95 range.
    • Bargain-hunters use book value to measure how underpriced a stock is, relative to its assets.
    • Watercolours are not understood and are therefore incredibly underpriced.
    • Mortgage securities are being issued in record quantities, home prices are rising smartly, and the pricing of underlying credit risk is again being severely underpriced.
    • It may be that such a company has underpriced its products, leaving it insufficient margin to cover its fixed costs.
    • Many companies deliberately underpriced policies to boost market share.
    • Various studies have come to the conclusion that gold is severely underpriced.
    • The company is also expressly forbidden by legislation from underpricing its services to gain market share.
    • The food was solid, if unimaginative, and was certainly not underpriced.
    • Too many new entrepreneurs harm their own prospects by underpricing their goods and services.
    • By the late 1980s, the company had lost significant market share and had to underprice its products to keep them viable.
    • People have underpriced stocks because of what they see on television.
    • When carriers underpriced their workers' compensation product to gain market share in the late 1990s, some carriers became insolvent.
    • ‘What we've had to do up to now is overprice things at the beginning, to compensate for underpricing at the end of the season,’ he explains.
    • The fundamental problem is that for most people (that is, other than the genuinely poor or those facing catastrophic illness), especially the well-paid, medical services are underpriced.
    • His logic is simple: ‘Most consumer magazines are, in my view, way underpriced.’
    • We also increased the prices at the top level after doing some research which showed that we were underpriced in comparison with other big events.
    • The less informed investor is just as likely to bid on a ‘properly’ priced offering as an underpriced one.
    • Some say insurers had underpriced their policies to build market share and then, in 2002, raised rates in hopes of recouping their losses.
    • And then he comes at me by saying, ‘Well, but there are some stocks that are underpriced.’
    1. 1.1 Sell or offer something at a lower price than (the competition)
      Wal-Mart has underpriced its traditional competitors
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The magnitude of underpricing increased during the first month of aftermarket trading before being eliminated.
      • I hadn't studied my competition and I didn't know what they were charging, so I underpriced.
      • Firms with poor prospects are reluctant to underprice because they are not likely to have the opportunity to make this up on a second offering of equity.
      • Well, from a competitive strategy standpoint, the reader is absolutely correct; the pharma companies will not underprice themselves in the Canadian market if it threatens their US profits.

Rhymes

advice, bice, Brice, choc ice, concise, dice, entice, gneiss, ice, imprecise, lice, mice, nice, precise, price, rice, sice, slice, speiss, spice, splice, suffice, syce, thrice, top-slice, trice, twice, vice, Zeiss
 
 

Definition of underprice in US English:

underprice

verbˌəndərˈprīsˌəndərˈpraɪs
[with object]
  • 1Sell or offer (something) at too low a price.

    we try not to underprice our books, while making sure they are still a good buy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The food was solid, if unimaginative, and was certainly not underpriced.
    • However, now more than half of the original insiders seem to think the shares are somewhat underpriced in the $85 to $95 range.
    • And then he comes at me by saying, ‘Well, but there are some stocks that are underpriced.’
    • Many companies deliberately underpriced policies to boost market share.
    • People have underpriced stocks because of what they see on television.
    • ‘What we've had to do up to now is overprice things at the beginning, to compensate for underpricing at the end of the season,’ he explains.
    • By the late 1980s, the company had lost significant market share and had to underprice its products to keep them viable.
    • It may be that such a company has underpriced its products, leaving it insufficient margin to cover its fixed costs.
    • Some say insurers had underpriced their policies to build market share and then, in 2002, raised rates in hopes of recouping their losses.
    • Bargain-hunters use book value to measure how underpriced a stock is, relative to its assets.
    • The less informed investor is just as likely to bid on a ‘properly’ priced offering as an underpriced one.
    • Too many new entrepreneurs harm their own prospects by underpricing their goods and services.
    • Watercolours are not understood and are therefore incredibly underpriced.
    • The company is also expressly forbidden by legislation from underpricing its services to gain market share.
    • Mortgage securities are being issued in record quantities, home prices are rising smartly, and the pricing of underlying credit risk is again being severely underpriced.
    • Various studies have come to the conclusion that gold is severely underpriced.
    • The fundamental problem is that for most people (that is, other than the genuinely poor or those facing catastrophic illness), especially the well-paid, medical services are underpriced.
    • When carriers underpriced their workers' compensation product to gain market share in the late 1990s, some carriers became insolvent.
    • His logic is simple: ‘Most consumer magazines are, in my view, way underpriced.’
    • We also increased the prices at the top level after doing some research which showed that we were underpriced in comparison with other big events.
    1. 1.1 Sell or offer something at a lower price than (the competition)
      Wal-Mart has underpriced its traditional competitors
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I hadn't studied my competition and I didn't know what they were charging, so I underpriced.
      • Well, from a competitive strategy standpoint, the reader is absolutely correct; the pharma companies will not underprice themselves in the Canadian market if it threatens their US profits.
      • Firms with poor prospects are reluctant to underprice because they are not likely to have the opportunity to make this up on a second offering of equity.
      • The magnitude of underpricing increased during the first month of aftermarket trading before being eliminated.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/20 17:50:30