That would be impossible to know at any given moment in time.
"The headquarters of Sainsburys' customer support is in London, England. Sainsburys' auto insurance in very well-know and well-liked in the United Kingdom and other European countries."
yes but i don't know how yes ok dont get angry
More deals, we all know asda is cheaper but that's because the quility is worse than sainsburys!! More deals would make it the best store in Britain from my point of view do you know you are right if they did more deals then they would be the best
you can tell by seeing something as a loss or a profit. example - you bought a Mobile Phone @ £102 - then you sold it at £130 that would be a profit a loss would be to sell something for under the price you bought it at for example - chocolate bar 79P you sold it for 40P.
i dont know around maybe 6pm or 7pm just guessing but i think
i really don't know.
They may be looking for ways to increase the profits on it. They may need to know how much they can afford to spend on things like raw materials or wages, and make a profit on an item.
i dont know what does profit affect microeconomics
How else would you know what costs really were and where they were incurred, and hence how to charge a price that produced a profit?
They would do this because they know human nature. People will come into the store for something on sale, feel good about it, and most times will also buy something else. The something else will provide profit.
If the profit is 5800 in year one and 6500 in the next year what is the percentage of profit? Does this actually mean "what is the increase in profit from year one to year two"? Otherwise I would need to know more information as to the percentage of profit with regards to: cost, the company average, or the variable that is to be compared, so personally I think the question should be rephrased.