Your recent Continuing 30 - Year Withdrawal
Rate analysis suggests somewhere between a withdrawal rate of 4.4 % and 8 % with some caveats (you may have less buying power in year 20 or you may only have 50 % balance at year 30).
Not exact matches
In the presence of debt finance, textbook
analysis would
suggest that a cut in the corporate tax
rate would raise the cost of capital because interest deductions would no longer be as valuable and thus discourage investment.
When the DXY hit 103 in December of last year, an
analysis based on purchasing power parity and real effective exchange
rates suggested that it was roughly 10 % to 15 % overvalued.
An
Analysis of the Economic Circumstances of Canadian Seniors, authored by statistician Richard Shillington of Tristat Resources and released by the Broadbent Institute, also shows the Old Age Security (OAS) and Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) guarantee levels are falling behind and trends in income sources for seniors
suggest that high poverty
rates among seniors will further increase.
Their
analysis suggested «a delinquency
rate of 27.3 percent for borrowers with loans in repayment.»
In addition, previous NAHB
analysis suggests that the change in
rates over a short period of time matters for new home sales.
Treasuries remain effective diversifiers if risky assets take a hit, but our
analysis suggests other ways to diversify in a rising interest
rate environment.
However, our
analysis suggests it's the macroeconomic fundamentals driving interest
rates, not the rise itself, that are most important.
But, as it turns out, the early naysayers might have had it right all along: Westley, Coeytaux and Wells now acknowledge that two recent
analyses suggest that emergency contraception is «not as effective in reducing unwanted pregnancy
rates at a population level as we once hoped».
«While we wouldn't rule out competitive tension, given our
analysis suggests the internal
rate of return would be less than 10 per cent at a price of $ 5.20 per share, we believe it is a low probability.
«Our
analysis suggests a move to award penalty
rates could reduce Domino's Australian system profitability by around 24 per cent,» Mr Simotas says in the research.
For instance, it has been
suggested that the physical restraint associated with swaddling may prevent infants placed supine from rolling to the prone position.299 One study's results
suggested a decrease in SIDS
rate with swaddling if the infant was supine, 182 but it was notable that there was an increased risk of SIDS if the infant was swaddled and placed in the prone position.182 Although a recent study found a 31-fold increase in SIDS risk with swaddling, the
analysis was not stratified according to sleep position.171 Although it may be more likely that parents will initially place a swaddled infant supine, this protective effect may be offset by the 12-fold increased risk of SIDS if the infant is either placed or rolls to the prone position when swaddled.182, 300 Moreover, there is no evidence that swaddling reduces bed - sharing or use of unsafe sleep surfaces, promotes breastfeeding, or reduces maternal cigarette smoking.
One thing that surprised me about the Horton
analysis is that it didn't even
suggest the most obvious way to make the LD policy more redistributive, which is to lower the threshold for the higher
rate of income tax by the same amount personal allowance is raised.
Its
analysis suggests a full - time worker on the government's «national living wage» would gain up to # 250 a year from Hammond's 2p reduction in the taper
rate, rising to around # 500 a year for a family earning # 30,000.
Determining whether individual mutations are deleterious, or even adaptive, would require functional
analysis; however, the
rate of nonsynonymous mutations
suggests that continued progression of this epidemic could afford an opportunity for viral adaptation (Fig. 4H), underscoring the need for rapid containment.
But careful
analysis of ancient remains as well as better understanding of the causes of cancer
suggests that, tobacco - related cancers aside, prehistoric peoples suffered from cancer at about the same
rates as we do today.
«Although the share of children in immigrant families did affect the child poverty
rate in the
analyses, the findings
suggest that media coverage and public discussion on the effects of immigration on child poverty do not seem to correspond with the empirical evidence and are likely to overstate the issue.»
Analyses conducted over the last decade in the U.S., Canada, England, the Netherlands, Sweden and Denmark
suggest that «a 75 - to 85 - year - old has a lower risk of having Alzheimer's today than 15 or 20 years ago,» says Langa, who discussed the research on falling dementia
rates in a 2015 Alzheimer's Research & Therapy commentary (pdf).
Despite large temperature increases in Alaska in recent decades, a new
analysis of NASA airborne data finds that methane is not being released from Alaskan soils into the atmosphere at unusually high
rates, as recent modeling and experimental studies have
suggested.
Data
analysis and modelling
suggest that varying uplift
rates along subduction margins are mainly a short - term phenomenon.
«However, the present
analysis suggests the exact opposite, with both absolute
rates as well as racial disparities in adverse birth outcomes being greatest in southern states.»
Overall, though,
analysis suggested that the dark matter idea would be more likely to produce the observed patterns in crater frequency than an even
rate of cratering.
An
analysis that included information from more than 57,000 screening colonoscopies
suggests that higher adenoma detection
rates may be associated with up to 50 percent to 60 percent lower lifetime colorectal cancer incidence and death without higher overall costs, despite a higher number of colonoscopies and potential complications, according to a study in the June 16 issue of JAMA.
«The data also
suggest that the revascularization
rate in the Penumbra 3D plus aspiration device arm and the aspiration device - only arm — 83.9 and 74.1 percent, respectively — compare favorably to the 71 percent revascularization
rate published in the HERMES meta -
analysis of five major randomized controlled trials in acute ischemic stroke.»
The new
analysis suggests no discernable decrease in the
rate of warming between the second half of the 20th century, a period marked by manmade warming, and the first fifteen years of the 21st century, a period dubbed a global warming
While the successful public health campaign to improve infant sleep environments has long been associated with declines in sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), an
analysis of 30 years of data by researchers from Boston Children's Hospital and Dana - Farber Cancer Institute
suggests that Back - to - Sleep is one of several trends that explain the reduced
rates of SIDS.
Bayesian
analysis suggested an
S. argenteus ST2250 substitution
rate of 4.66 (95 % confidence interval [CI], 3.12 to 6.38) mutations per genome per year, which was comparable to the
S. aureus ST121 substitution
rate of 4.07 (95 % CI, 2.61 to 5.55).
A brief
analysis of 10 European countries published today — the first to use government data on suicide
rates from the past few years —
suggests that the ongoing economic downturn may have had a larger impact on suicide
rates than expected.
While identifying the precise importance of these factors is difficult, a variety of
analyses suggest that such market differences could be very important explanations for differences in growth
rates.
According to CAP's
analysis, the gap in full - time employment
rates between mothers of elementary - school - age children and mothers of middle - and high - school - age children
suggests that more than 1 million fewer mothers of elementary - school - age children are working full time, forfeiting an annual median wage of $ 35,000.
A new
analysis suggests that tenure reform in Louisiana increased the overall exit
rate for teachers, especially those with the most experience.
Their
analysis suggested «a delinquency
rate of 27.3 percent for borrowers with loans in repayment.»
Here's a few reasons (in my opinion) that paying off the account with the smallest balance first is better than tackling the account with the highest interest
rate as our financial
analysis suggests.
My
analysis suggests that the forward earnings yield of the market has roughly paralleled the
rates of lower - grade bonds.
Go to a retirement income calculator that uses Monte Carl0
analysis to make projections, plug in such information as your age, salary, savings
rate, the amount, if any, you already have stashed in retirement accounts, the stocks - bonds mix you arrived at in step 2, the age at which you intend to retire, the percentage of pre-retirement income you'll require in retirement (80 % or so is a decent estimate) and how many years you expect to live in retirement (I
suggest to age 95 to be on the conservative side)... and voila!
The bank pushed back in two ways,
suggesting that my discount
rate was too high,
suggesting that I use 10 % (price $ 65), and they trotted out another
analysis from one of the subsidiaries of the
rating agencies that was incredibly lightweight,
suggesting a price of $ 85.
In fact, some
analyses suggest that negative announcement effects on REITs associated with rising interest
rates have become more pronounced since 2013.
However, because of the current interest
rate environment, the
analysis of stocks vs. bonds in Articles 6.1 and 6.2
suggest that stocks (and now we can more specifically say «stock funds») are a better choice in the long run if you are seeking higher returns and are willing to accept somewhat higher risks.
An
analysis of GISS global tempertures shows an increase of the linear
rate of warming since 1980 up to 2007 (see red trace on graphic here — usually 2 clicks to download your attachment) which strongly
suggests a global slowdown can not have begin before that time.
While the above
analysis yields good results for by tying past climate change to increases in human CO2 emissions, it should be cautioned that the
suggested exponential time relation is not suitable for projecting the future over longer time periods, because of possible changes in human population growth
rates and absolute limitations on carbon available in remaining fossil fuels.
From an OSU press release: CORVALLIS, Ore. — An
analysis of 35 headwater basins in the United States and Canada found that the impact of warmer air temperatures on streamflow
rates was less than expected in many locations,
suggesting that some ecosystems may be resilient to certain aspects of climate change.
The same
analysis suggests that the
rate 1985 - 2004 warming was enhanced by ENSO variations.
Analyses of model simulations
suggest that for each 1.8 °F increase in tropical sea surface temperatures, rainfall
rates will increase by 6 to 18 percent.
Evidence from recent
analyses suggests that scientists, particularly acting in the context of large assessments, may have underestimated the magnitude and
rate of expected impacts of anthropogenic climate change.
Event attribution
analysis suggests that human induced greenhouse gas increases may also have contributed by causing evapotranspiration
rates to be higher than they would have been under pre-industrial conditions.
What it means Although some regions have recently experienced much greater
rates of sea level rise, such as the Arctic (3.6 mm / yr) and Antarctic (4.1 mm / yr), with the mid-1980s even exhibiting a
rate of 5.3 mm / yr (Holgate, 2007), this newest
analysis of the most comprehensive data set available
suggests that there has been no dramatic increase — or any increase, for that matter — in the mean
rate of global sea level rise due to the historical increase in the atmosphere's CO2 concentration.
But some
analyses suggest that if greenhouse gas emissions continue to grow at current
rates then warming of as much as 5C could be in store.
[23] An 2015
analysis by US government scientists in the journal Nature and Climate Change
suggested that if temporary natural fluctuations were ignored then world was probably now warming at a
rate of about 0.2 °C per decade — higher than the IPCC's longer - term average.
«However, a greater
rate of rise in the early part of the record is consistent with previous
analyses of tide gauge records which
suggested a general deceleration in sea level rise during the 20th century [Woodworth, 1990; Douglas, 1992; Jevrejeva et al., 2006].»
Nevertheless, as The Guardian reports,
analysis by the Government's own waste watchdog, Wrap,
suggests that a return to weekly collections for trash will lead to both a sharp drop in recycling
rates and an increase in costs as councils are forced to keep more collection vehicles on the road: