Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It was the first time in nearly three years that no stock reached a new high.
In all of last year, it reached a new high 44 times on its way to a 26 percent gain.
It had reached a new high of 38 1/8 during the session.
Divorce rates also reached a new high during this period.
Others close to the campaign say public interest in Tibet is reaching a new high.
Attendance in 2009 reached a new high with over 400 people attending.
Cement production reached a new high of almost 1,500,000 tons.
It was the fourth straight month that the deficit reached a new high.
The show's gossip factor reached a new high with the final two episodes of the season.
The market's index rose 81.49 points - 4.17 percent - to reach a new high of 2,035.
The bellwether stock also reached a new high during the session of 119 7/8.
The double standards and hypocrisy of Western nations has reached a new high.
This move resulted in the morale of the troops reaching a new high.
Political partisanship over the selection of federal judges reached a new high, or low, last week.
Only 6 reached a new high while 248 fell to new lows.
Participation also reached a new high that year, as over 30,000 runners competed in the mass race.
Personal bankruptcies in the United States reached a new high of 1.6 million recently.
The Russell 2,000, another market barometer, reached a new high of 207.82, up 1.95.
During the war years, passenger numbers increased continuously, and in 1945, with 265,473 people transported, reached a new high point.
Enrollment reached a new high in 1949 when 1,452 students, including 289 in the nursing school.
"Each time this year that the Dow has reached a new high, the market has sold off."
Youth unemployment reached a new high of 64.2% in February 2013.
He also concluded that if both indexes reached a new high, it signaled a bull market was under way.
Competition for this type of business traveler has reached a new high, according to city convention planners and trade associations.
The dry spell in 2005 came even as spending on research by the industry reached a new high, passing $38 billion.