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    Use "canadian dollar" in a sentence

    canadian dollar example sentences

    canadian dollar


    1. I have doubled the reward to two hundred thousand Canadian dollars in cash and no questions asked for information leading to the apprehension of this cat thief


    2. Finally, the reward has drastically been increased, reaching one and a half million Canadian dollars


    3. Canadian dollars! A perfect heist! I’ve had my eyes on this


    4. “Girls, it’ll cost you ten thousand Canadian dollars for a


    5. we’d have to pay ten thousand Canadian dollars his eyes became


    6. spurt out Canadian dollars


    7. When I wrote that other book, the Canadian dollar was worth less than the American, but as of the beginning of November 2007, the former was equal to about one dollar and three cents American


    8. several million Canadian dollars


    9. “Cynthia, I’ve picked up the scent of Canadian dollars


    10. I punched in for one million Canadian dollars and a flash

    11. If the Canadian dollar becomes worth more than the U


    12. Canadian Dollars and a nice meal


    13. Canadian dollars tax free! As per what the prime minister said,


    14. � She had to ask Jennifer to find the current exchange rate of the Canadian dollar before she could price correctly her GPS receiver, her cellular telephone and her radar detector


    15. dollar), and they are as follows: the euro (EC/6E), the Australian dollar (AD/6A), the Canadian dollar (CD/6C), the British pound (BP/6B), the Swiss franc (SF/6S), and the Japanese yen (JY/6J)


    16. If you wish to buy a US ETF directly to avoid that you'll have to convert your Canadian dollars to US dollars – more on that process later – which adds costs that may offset your savings


    17. In Step 4b: Investing with TD Direct Investing I just mentioned four TD e-series funds, but you may notice that on the complete list of e-series funds on TD’s website that for US and international equity funds there are at least two versions: one denominated in Canadian dollars, and another one also in Canadian dollars but called “currency neutral


    18. These currency neutral funds attempt to eliminate the change in valuation between the Canadian dollar and the US dollar (or, for the international fund, the Canadian dollar and a basket of foreign currencies like the pound, euro, yen, and Australian dollar)


    19. Those changes in the value of the Canadian dollar relative to other currencies don’t only affect the price you pay for goods, but also for stocks


    20. If the US S&P 500 index goes nowhere for a year, but the Canadian dollar goes up by 5%, then your investment in US stocks would actually be worth 5% less if you had to sell

    21. Vice-versa, if the Canadian dollar goes down that would increase your returns


    22. The currency neutral investment would only give you (in theory) whatever the S&P 500 returned, without the added effect of the changing Canadian dollar


    23. ” Because currency fluctuations are usually manageable in the long term, and because one direction of currency fluctuations (the Canadian dollar weakening) is good for your foreign investments, it’s usually recommended that long-term investors not bother with currency neutral funds


    24. There is a cost to convert your Canadian dollars: TD charges roughly 1


    25. To avoid that, you could buy something that's easy to sell for a universal value on either side of the border – a gold coin, or a share of stock – with your Canadian dollars, walk across the bridge to Detroit, and sell it to get American dollars at the fair exchange rate, avoiding the bank's fees


    26. Listed on the TSX, DLR can be purchased in (or sold for) Canadian dollars, at a price that is very close to the current fair exchange rate


    27. In brief, you will buy DLR with your Canadian dollars, which can be converted into DLR


    28. It’s even been rumored that China is looking to buy Canadian dollars in an attempt to shield the world’s largest currency reserves from a decline in the greenback


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