English language

How to pronounce arbitrageur in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms arb, arbitrager
Type of businessman, man of affairs

Examples of arbitrageur

arbitrageur
So the stock market is a great arbitrageur between the present and the future.
From the forbes.com
Your father William is both a poet and a multimillionaire arbitrageur.
From the time.com
Ivan Boesky served two years in prison when the high-flying arbitrageur got caught using inside info.
From the newsweek.com
He will be an arbitrageur, buying ads in bulk, slicing them up for niche audiences, and reselling them at a premium.
From the businessweek.com
The arbitrageur, who profited from betting on corporate takeovers, was fined $100 million and served two years in prison.
From the newsobserver.com
Ivan Boesky was a Wall Street arbitrageur who had amassed a fortune of about $200 million by betting on corporate takeovers.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The arbitrageur ultimately paid a $100 million fine for trading on information from a Drexel Burnham Lambert banker and served 22 months in prison.
From the online.wsj.com
The other is the Mephistophelean financier and arbitrageur Gordon Gekko, he of the power braces and the shark-like half-smile, half-snarl.
From the guardian.co.uk
A credible deficit reduction plan would please the bond market, the former arbitrageur argued, and that would translate into lower long-term interest rates.
From the time.com
More examples
  • Someone who engages in arbitrage (who purchases securities in one market for immediate resale in another in the hope of profiting from the price differential)
  • In economics and finance, arbitrage is the practice of taking advantage of a price difference between two or more markets: striking a combination of matching deals that capitalize upon the imbalance, the profit being the difference between the market prices. ...
  • One who engages in arbitrage, such as a financial broker or an investment bank
  • One who profits from the differences in price when the same, or extremely similar, security, currency, or commodity is traded on two or more markets. ...
  • An individual or company that takes advantage of momentary disparities in prices between markets which enables them to lock in profits because the selling price is higher than the buying price.
  • A type of investor who attempts to profit from price inefficiencies in the market by making simultaneous trades that offset each other and capture risk-free profits.
  • A person who takes advantage of a temporary geographic difference in the exchange rate or securities or commodities prices, by simultaneously purchasing in one market and selling in another market.
  • Person, or organisation that makes a profit from identifying where the market has got its pricing of currencies and stocks wrong.
  • Person who uses arbitrage as a trading strategy to make immediate (risk free) profits.