Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The report could help him deal with a risk-averse Congress.
Women have also been shown to be more risk-averse than men.
Studies show that women are generally more risk-averse than men.
In general, women are known to be more risk-averse than men when it comes to financial decision making.
Yet 15 percent may be too high for some risk-averse investors.
Are leaders too risk-averse in their efforts to bring the economy back on track?
Boards have good people on them and they are risk-averse.
Here the picture is clear: since the credit crisis began, they have become more risk-averse.
"That's very difficult to do when you have to be risk-averse in this situation."
There's a culture there that is perhaps a bit risk-averse.
The truth is that they are the most risk-averse crowd around.
I think people are little bit risk-averse, selling first and asking questions later.
Government grants can do that but are often rather risk-averse.
The result has been a government that is risk-averse to a fault.
But the risk-averse can still stay the course, while trying to squeeze out a bit more money.
Q. So, are you looking now for companies with more risk-averse management?
They’ve been risk-averse for five years now and that isn’t going to change anytime soon.
Something people are risk-averse to trying has to be free to explore and to try it.
"They become more risk-averse in times when the economy is not good.
If anything, corporate executives are more risk-averse than a few months ago.
We live in a risk-averse society, but the danger from trees is tiny.
Some of the challenges, though, are that today, we're a much more risk-averse industry.
I am risk-averse, but this frankly was not a risk.
If we’re too risk-averse on the early, little things, we won’t get better.
States actually become more risk-averse once they acquire nuclear weapons.