Not exact matches
An IMF report leaked to Reuters shows that Greece's public debt is likely to
peak at 200 % of its national income within the next two
years, with the risk that the
actual outcome could be even worse.
Count forward 12
years, and you'll find the major valuation
peaks of 2000, 2007 and today that were responsible for the overshoot of
actual returns.
This substantially exceeded the 10 -
year return of about 14 % which would have been achieved had the 2000 bull market
peak been held to a P / E of 20 (the market's
actual price /
peak - earnings ratio moved over 32 during the bubble).
At the market's
actual 2000
peak, valuations were so high that even a future price /
peak earnings ratio of 20 could have been expected to result in a nearly zero annualized returns over the following 10
years.
According to a new study co-authored by Allen and published Thursday in Nature Climate Change, the eventual
peak level of warming that the planet will see from greenhouse gas emissions is going up at 2 percent per
year, much faster than
actual temperatures are increasing.
In almost every instance, the
actual peak of shelter killing in the jurisdiction was reached many
years and sometimes decades earlier.
If you have a global heat record in an ENSO neutral
year (like 2017), that record is likely close to the
actual underlying temperature trend (just like 2014)-- while the heat record of 2016 (El Niño dominated) is a
peak superimposed on that trend.
Now, my question to you (speaking to the CAGW community at large): Does the 2000 - 2010 represent the
peak of the Modern Warming Period, or will the
actual peak be 60
years later in 2060 - 2070, followed by a 400
year long, deadly decline into the Future Ice Age of 2400?
The chart increases are based on the
year - end that the
peak temperatures took place; the increases used in the text are based on the
actual month /
year the 12 - month mean
peak happened.
Map out your projected income for the
year and do a 12 - month cash flow to see where your
actual peaks and valleys in income are, said Pamela Capalad, certified financial planner and founder of Brunch & Budget.