Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
However, within a very short time, most banks were making losses.
Now, in most reports, we read that companies make losses.
But the company, a subsidiary of Ford, is still making losses.
However, the company has been making losses for years.
At that time the company was still making losses.
Things went badly at first and she made losses.
It used to employ 1300 workers before it started to make losses.
Both titles have since made losses, despite a circulation of 145,000 between them in the greater Dublin area.
It corresponds to the maximum amount a farmer could pay for using the land, without making losses.
In 2007 the company made losses of £17.4 million.
Sage's were so affected by the depression that they made losses for four years running and did not pay a dividend again until 1936.
It was making losses of £2 million p.a.in the late 90s.
The franchise fee will determine the point D, below which the retailer would make losses.
You cannot force private firms to make losses.
The school continued to make losses and so on 19 June 1929, Council decided that it was to be closed.
So when a downturn comes, liquidity dries up quickly, making losses worse.
But some analysts expect Euro Disney to make losses until 1996.
Year by year, the company made losses until 1936 when it made a profit.
Last month Wimpey decided to hold its dividend despite making losses in 1991.
But in the first qurter of 2004, the Company made losses trading options.
Thus, the discount houses may be making losses on the loans they are repaying to the commercial banks.
The distinction between making losses and subtracting value is crucial for exchange-rate policy.
Since they all do this, they all make losses.
Just as leverage magnifies gains, so, too, can it make losses more painful when rates start to rise.
The new rule made losses show up more prominently on the books, a change Sir David said he thought was necessary to protect investors.