The first quarter contraction marks the tenth straight quarter that tablets have experienced
a decline over the same quarter a year earlier, with the previous five quarters recording double - digit drops.
Not exact matches
The U.S. added 1.3 million owner households
over the last year and lost 286,000 renter households, the fourth consecutive
quarter in which the number of renter households
declined from the
same quarter a year earlier.
The Oakmark International Fund
declined 0.5 % for the
quarter ended December 31, 2014, outperforming the MSCI World ex U.S. Index, which
declined 4 %
over the
same period.
From a peak of
over 5 per cent in private - sector increases, reached in mid 1996, the rate of increase specified in new agreements has
declined to 4 per cent in the March
quarter 1998, and is likely to have been around the
same in the June
quarter.
That means Twitter's business
declined roughly 8 percent
over the
same quarter last year, but that's still better than Wall Street was expecting.
Barnes and Noble has experienced a 6.6 % first
quarter sales
decline over the
same period in fiscal 2017 and the bookseller wants to open up more retail stores in 2018.
You may wonder why the government finds the need to pursue such action since 1) U.S. carbon dioxide emissions have already topped out and have generally been on the
decline for the past 7 - 8 years or so (from technological advances in natural gas extraction and a slow economy more so than from already - enacted government regulations and subsidies); 2) greenhouse gases from the rest of the world (primarily driven by China) have been sky - rocketing
over the
same period, which lessens any impacts that our emissions reduction have); and 3) even in their totality, U.S. carbon dioxide emissions have a negligible influence on local / regional / global climate change (even a immediate and permanent cessation of all our carbon dioxide emissions would likely result in a mitigation of global temperature rise of less than one -
quarter of a degree C by the end of the century).
The average transaction cap rate for all properties
over $ 2.5 million
declined to 7.0 percent during the fourth
quarter of 2011, 30 basis points lower than the
same period one year ago.
Overall,
same - store sales during the
quarter declined 0.8 percent — an improvement
over the 1.3 percent
decline registered during the
same period last year.
While vacancy rates were on the
decline over the past year (from 5.60 per cent in the fourth
quarter of 2007 to 4.50 per cent in 2008) and rents continued to escalate ($ 21.36 to $ 22.90 per sq. ft. for the
same period), softening demand due to weak economic conditions and the expected supply of several million square feet of new office space will pose challenges for some of the prestigious towers in Toronto's financial district during 2009 and 2010.