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risk-averse
[ risk-uh-vurs ]
adverb
- reluctant to take risks; tending to avoid risks as much as possible:
risk-averse entrepreneurs.
- of or noting a person who invests in stocks, bonds, etc., with lower risks and generally lower rates of return so as to minimize the possibility of financial loss:
risk-averse investors who stick with government bonds.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of risk-averse1
Example Sentences
De Luca and Abdy have bet on big budget projects by auteur directors not based on tested intellectual property, the kinds of movies that make risk-averse studio chiefs sweat bullets.
The near-collapse of the property market has also made Chinese consumers more risk-averse, leading them to cut back on spending.
This is what poll-driven, fear-based, irrationally risk-averse messaging looks like.
That’s why being a good, risk-averse lawyer — where, by definition, you take the law as a given — is an incredibly risky strategy in a presidential campaign, particularly one where both sides have ratcheted up the stakes to existential levels.
"Avoid cryptocurrency if your risk-averse history has shown that it might not be the best place for you at the moment"
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