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market letter

American  

noun

  1. a publication containing information concerning market conditions, expectations, etc., especially one produced by a securities brokerage firm or other financial organization.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Did Smith agree with one market letter that said bull markets usually push prices to "ridiculously high levels"?

From Time Magazine Archive

Every stock market letter, every long-range weather report and baseball schedule is a prediction; every garden and every child is an expressed belief in the future.

From Time Magazine Archive

When a speculator walks into our office," says one big broker, "he wants a copy of the market letter.

From Time Magazine Archive

He now runs an investment service, edits the well-known market letter Indicator Digest, grosses $3,000,000 a year�plus $80,000 in song royalties.

From Time Magazine Archive

I wrote the firm a newsy, chatty market letter, saying nothing of doing business together.

From The Romance and Tragedy by Russell, William Ingraham

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