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Dictionary
melt up
verb
Of the price of a security, to increase to an unexpected degree
Exact(12)
Clark said his field could melt up to three inches of snow as it was falling.
I never wore them as they seemed like the devil's business and that they'd melt up into my bum and I'd get some awful infection.
She studies the way glaciers melt up at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
A recent experimental study suggested that the Si-O coordination state in molten basalt is roughly consistent with that in SiO2 glass and melt up to 60 GPa (Sanloup et al. 2013).
During the lengthy interview where we covered everything from DoubleLine and Shiller's new no load mutual fund, the DoubleLine Gundlach Enhanced CAPE fund (DSEEX), to the possibility of a Treasury bond "melt up" and how he is now playing the mortgage-backed securities market.
In the short term however, I believe that we have a unique market condition that plays out well for SQ – that is if the Fed keeps interest rates lower for longer, the market should continue to melt up and SQ will benefit from it, and if the Fed starts to raise interest rates, SQ and all other financials will benefit from the expected increased profit potential of higher rates.
Similar(48)
Satellite images taken by nasa showed that snow had melted up to an elevation of sixty-five hundred feet.
Some mountain glaciers are melting up to 100 times faster than at any time in the past 350 years.
The search company plans a 600,000-square-foot office building with a roof that melts up into soft peaks, kind of like a meringue.
The system was designed for measurement of the spectra of glasses and melts up to temperatures over 1000 °C with high signal to noise ratio.
Pressure-volume-temperature (P-V-T) relationships were determined for polymer liquid crystal (PLC) solids and melts up to 400°C and 240 J cm−3.
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