Entry Conditions. Notwithstanding paragraph 9.03(a), entry is conditioned upon Landlord:
Entry Conditions. Notwithstanding Sections 14,1, 14.2 or 14.3, entry is conditioned on Landlord using reasonable efforts to cause the least practical interference to Tenant’s business. Landlord shall be liable for any damage caused by the gross negligence or willful misconduct of Landlord or any of the Landlord Group (as hereinafter defined) in exercising the rights under this Article 14, and not otherwise covered by Tenant’s insurance or the insurance Tenant is required to carry under this Lease. Landlord acknowledges that Tenant’s business operations involve the use of highly sensitive, confidential, and proprietary information, and that it is imperative that Landlord and its agents, consultants, contractors or any prospective tenant or broker (collectively, the “Landlord Group”) be accompanied by an authorized agent of Tenant during any entry onto the Premises by the Landlord Group, except in an emergency. Because of the sensitive nature of Tenant’s business operations, it may not be possible to provide ready access to the Landlord Group to every part of the Premises at any given time. Landlord shall cooperate with all reasonable requests of Tenant in entering the Premises.
Entry Conditions. Any person wishing to enter any Commonwealth establishment (Establishment) must comply with all relevant Commonwealth Requirements and other relevant local rules and regulations relating to the entry to and conditions upon remaining within the Establishment. Without limiting paragraph (a), the Consultant must comply with all relevant security induction procedures and Commonwealth access pass requirements applicable to the Establishment.
Entry Conditions a) Each country that is a member organisation of the WDC is entitled to send two couples to compete (rule 3.2.3).
Entry Conditions. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section ---------------- 10.4, each of XXX and SRP may from time to time by notice to the other specify additional entry conditions or requirements arising out of a relationship with a particular Right of Way or Building Entrance grantor or Hub Site lessor, including, without limitation: (a) the need to give prior notice to such grantor or lessor; (b) the requirement that no entry be made unless accompanied by personnel of the party that has the relationship with such grantor or lessor; and (c) the requirement that entry be made only through a specified route. In addition, XXX shall not make any physical contact with the towers, cables or other elements of the SRP power transmission system (except as required to access the Telecommunications Services transmission system utilizing procedures approved by SRP). Further, each of XXX and SRP shall indemnify the other with respect to such entry as provided in Article XVII. Each notice given as provided in Section 10.4 shall disclose the scope and estimated duration of the entry. If such scope or duration changes, additional notice shall be given. Any required telephonic notice shall be given at the telephone numbers specified in Section 20.4 (or at such other number or relevant local office number that XXX and SRP may from time to time specify).
Entry Conditions. Setting the Entry Conditions Defining relates to customizing the price pattern required for the trade signal. This includes setting the following parameters: • Min Consecutive Bars – This defines how many consecutive bars must have a higher low or a lower high before a potential trade signal is allowed • Entry Offset (Ticks) – This sets the distance (in ticks) that price must move beyond the breakout point before the entry is allowed • Allow Equal Highs/Lows – This instructs the software how to handle equal highs or lows The fact that all these settings can be optimized makes it possible to fine tune the algo for the instrument you are trading and also facilitates adjustments to changing market conditions. What follows is a more detailed explanation of each component. Minimum Consecutive Bars The Minimum Consecutive Bars setting defines how many consecutive bars must have higher lows (Shorts) or Lower Highs (Longs) before a trade signal is allowed. Increasing the required number of consecutive bars will reduce the number of trades taken. Decreasing the required number will result in a larger number of trades but will almost certainly reduce expectancy. Setting this parameter comes down to a tradeoff between trade frequency and expectancy. Entry Offset (Ticks) The Trade Entry logic for this strategy is to enter immediately when price breaks the previous bar high (Longs) or low (Shorts). However, sometimes false breakouts can happen. To mitigate this, the software includes an Offset from the breakout point as a way to require that price travels a certain distance past the break line before a trade can be entered. The choice of Offset value essentially comes down to a tradeoff between choosing to enter early to capture more of the profits versus waiting longer to avoid false breakouts (which of course will reduce potential profits). Here is a picture illustrating the Entry Offset feature: In this example, the Entry Offset is set to 4 ticks. The signal bar breaks the high of the previous bar (Break Level) but the Long trade is not entered until price has moved up 4 ticks past the Break Level. In this case, entering earlier would have generated more profit but would also increase the chance of entering on a false breakout.
Entry Conditions. 1.1 The Natural Gas made available, or caused to be made available, by the Storage User at the Entry Point shall comply with the relevant quality requirements and operating conditions specified in Annex F-1 (the “Specification”).
Entry Conditions. 12 2.13 Cooperation.......................................................................12 2.14 Disclaimer........................................................................12 2.15
Entry Conditions. 13. Entry of new RTE cereal producers into the relevant markets is difficult, and would not be timely, likely or sufficient to prevent anticompetitive effects.
Entry Conditions. 9. Entry into the chelant market would not be timely, likely, or sufficient to deter or offset the adverse effects of the proposed acquisition on competition. A new entrant would have to build both a chelant production plant and a plant to produce hydrogen cyanide ("HCN"), a key input in the production of chelants, which would take over two years and entail large fixed, and mostly sunk, costs. In addition to the time to construct these facilities, a new firm must secure the environmental permits to produce HCN, a toxic substance. In order to recoup its investment, a new entrant would need to obtain a market share at least as large as that held by any of the current domestic producers, which would be difficult because of the significant amount of chelant sales that are subject to long term supply agreements. All these factors make entry into the U.S. chelant market unlikely.