No. "Broker" is a highly specific term. Her alleged or actual support, endorsement, approval or hope of any type of any deal of anyone and Exxon does not count as "brokering" a deal.
Her book deal and her new job at Fox News should have made her and her family quite comfortable.
* Yes Sarah Palin was on the news with red spiked shoes with ankle straps and is noted for spending a great deal of (hopefully her money) on special designer shoes. Shoes don't make the person and has nothing to do with politics so what Sarah Palin wears shouldn't be of any concern to anyone else unless it's out of the campaign money.
The major competition that Exxon Mobile has to deal with is ROYAL DUTCH SHELL PLC, CHEVRON CORP NEW, and BP PLC.
noun or a verb depending on usage. A broker is a person (noun) but you can also broker a deal (action i.e.=verb)
A commercial broker is a person who handles transactions between corporations. Much like a real estate broker, it's just that they deal with companies instead of individuals.
If you need a broker deal but can't do it yourself you can get yourself an independent broker dealer. You can visit this site for more information on finding one: www.summitbrokerage.com.
Buy low, sell high and stay out of the middle.
To help readers see what he sees
Generally speaking, a gold broker, or in fact any type of financial broker is the individual who matches buyers to sellers. A gold broker would find buyers and sellers of gold and therefore help create a deal among the two parties.
That is the correct spelling of "negotiate" (to broker a deal).
it depends on the size of a certain deal...lets say a broker is involved in a 1000,000 million bbls of crude oil deal and say he gets paid a dollar..so it sums up to $1000000.anyways its not as easy as it looks
Someone might need a medical insurance broker if they wish to get medical insurance but are not sure which policy is the best deal. The broker can search more efficiently and often has access to policies that normal people do not get to find out about.