Leverage is a typical MBA jargon - in this case, a noun "MBA"ed into a verb - meaning a resource is used in a particular way.
Ex. 1
"One of our main FY 2009 goals is to leverage our accumulated infrastructure investment in IT in the past few years to all our profit centers for maximum bottom line improvement."
Leverage is also used to mean borrowing on assets; hence, firms that borrow heavily are said to be over-leveraged, leading to lopsided debt-asset ratios.
Once a firm becomes overleveraged, if its board/management decides that some kind of a reversal is necessary and gets down to do something about it, it is said to deleverage.
Ex. 2
"The shitty shop headed up by tt250 is clearly overleveraged; if it is to avoid the same fate as its bleeding cohorts have been suffering of late, it had better deleverage, and do it quick!"
痴人梦呓
所有跟帖:
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嗯, 明白了。 are u a Wharton professor, 大吃子?
-戏雨飞鹰-
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01/29/2009 postreply
10:52:56
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Was a wonton processor slavering for sub-minimum wages.
-tt250-
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01/29/2009 postreply
13:39:09
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痴子有意跟"明白"人, 却跟了自己的影子. 唉...
-TT250-
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01/29/2009 postreply
13:43:18