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Sentence The phrase "risk on" is not a complete sentence and is not grammatically correct in written English.
However, it can be used as an idiom meaning to take a risk or to increase risk in a situation. For example, "The firm decided to risk on the investment and buy the property."
Exact(55)
Yet Trump had piled one risk on top of another.
They really took a risk on me.
"It's a big risk on their part.
Now most companies put the risk on the homeowner.
It was a big risk on our part".
The financial risk on Broadway, to be sure, is bigger.
Similar(5)
"Risk on-Risk off" If the market is perceived to be low-risk, traders go into risk-on mode.
"It is definitely a risk-on day," he said.
You got it: The risk-on herd.
People are either "risk on" or "risk off," and we're beginning to back off from full-throttle risk-on environment.
The likely upshot is continued volatility underpinned by alternating periods of risk-on and risk-off.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com