0 used to describe a product, service, or business that does not make a profit: --
The money-losing periodical is now for sale.
The arena is constantly struggling with financial problems since the day of opening and has been a money-losing business since then due to the lack of enough regular events.
This might be acceptable except for the extent to which those items are money-losing propositions for the business, bleeding red ink.
Diageo eventually decided to divest itself of the money-losing chain and put the company up for sale in 2000.
Desperate to close its money-losing commuter service, the railroad's trustees offered its commuters $1,000 each to stop using the trains.
The media magnate was known to buy and merge money-losing dailies to create profit.
Price wars drove the consumer electronics companies from the market, as they could no longer sustain development of what had become, for them, money-losing projects.
By 1925, the money-losing lines represented an annual drain of $1.5 million on the provincial budget.
In 1991, the city sold its interest in the money-losing railroad to private owners.