Sentences with phrase «higher than its historical average»

Very simply, I strongly believe that stocks should currently be priced with a risk premium that is somewhat higher than the historical average.
This estimate is conservative in terms of considering today's labor market, as average unemployment duration today is much higher than its historical average.
Today, that number is roughly 3.36 times higher, 50 percent higher than the historical average
Interest rates rise much higher than their historical average and reach previous highs (this would be a worse case scenario for variable rate student loan borrowers)
Or, if that output is still higher than a historical average, will it still drive temperatures higher?
That summer, he says, unusually warm and dry air drove VPD about 20 percent higher than the historical average.
This is significantly higher than the historical average of 2.77 %.
So the forecast for the Salem, Oregon housing market is still higher than historical averages.

Not exact matches

We simulate failure rates if today's bond rates return to their historical average after either 5 or 10 years and find that failure rates are much higher (18 % and 32 %, respectively for a 50 % stock allocation) than many retirees may be willing to accept.
In January, Deutsche Bank's top economists offered an even more alarming figure, saying that, relative to historical averages, houses are selling for 60 per cent more than they're worth — the highest overvaluation in the world.
Moreover, the yield, as shown above, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
And the stock's yield, as noted earlier, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
One can relate this directly to a 10 - year prospective return by recalling that historical tendency for market cycles to establish normal prospective returns — if even briefly as in 2009 — at their troughs (and it's typical for troughs to reach below average valuations and much higher prospective returns than the 10 % historical norm).
The idea is that a stock with a higher yield than its historical average, all else equal, might be undervalued.
Historical returns have ranged between 9 % — 15 %, much higher than the average stock market return.
Using our historical database, I found the average total at domed stadiums has been roughly three points higher than it has been in outdoor stadiums.
As I understand it, European Jewish culture also places a higher than average emphasis on education due to historical reasons.
If the interest rates on your other debt - car or student loan or mortgage - is higher than what you could earn by saving or investing (consider that the average annual inflation - adjusted historical return of the U.S. stock market is just over 6 %), you'd be wise to pay that down first too.
The historical evidence here is ambiguous; since 1991, the average return for the S&P 500 has been higher in months when interest rates rose than in months when rates fell.
And the yield, as discussed earlier, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
And the yield, as noted earlier, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
And the stock's yield, as noted earlier, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
Moreover, the yield, as shown above, is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
The idea is that a stock with a higher yield than its historical average, all else equal, might be undervalued.
As I pointed out with the historical figures tallied by the Bank Of Canada, the average mortgage rate is usually higher than the prime rate.
And as noted earlier, the yield is higher than its own recent historical average.
With 7 % upside on top of a yield that's higher than its recent historical average, this dividend growth stock deserves a good look here.
And the yield is significantly higher than its recent historical average.
A thirty year mortgage is a great thing at these rates (I wish I could get a 50 year mortgage), especially if inflation returns to its historical averages of 3 — 4 % or higher, and if you can invest the difference between the monthly payments for the 15 and 30 year mortgage and earn more than 3.88 % on that money you will be much better off than if you'd gotten a 15 year mortgage.
Since the current payout ratios are slightly higher than the company's historical average, investors should probably expect annual dividend growth that's slightly less than EPS and FCF growth, along the lines of 6 % to 8 % a year.
Under a high emissions scenario, Blaine County can expect a 40 % decline in the number of days at or below freezing by late century, falling from a historical annual average of more than 200 days to about 120.
The steady increase in global temperatures, including average temperatures in Australia, means that even when rainfall is at or near the historical average, conditions are drier than before because evaporation rates are higher.
As the chart reveals, today's per century trends are dominated by cooling for the different time periods; today's trends are multiple times below prior period, historical highs; the 5, 8 and 10 - year trends are definitely below the average modern trend (1950 through 2013); and all the trends are significantly less than those reached 15 years ago (see black dotted lines for year - end 1998 trend levels).
Today, despite being the historical timber - basket of the U.S., Oregon now credits high - tech manufacturing with producing 10 per cent of its economic output — more than eight times the national average.
org, US reductions need to be much greater than average reduction levels required of the entire world as a matter of equity because the United States emissions are among the world's highest in terms of per capita and historical emissions and there is precious little atmospheric space remaining for additional ghg emissions if the world is serious about avoiding dangerous climate change.
NAR expects the rate on a 30 - year fixed rate mortgage to average 6.5 percent in 2006, about one percentage point higher than in 2003 and 2004, but not much above the expected average for 2005 of 5.9 percent — all extremely low by historical standards.
Even through property prices are very high — and cap rates are very low — by historical standards, average cap rates are still significantly higher than the interest rates available for financing.
At the end of 2012, the market share of such construction stands at 5 %, which is noticeably higher than the 20 - year historical average of 2.7 %.
While this was no record - breaking month, sales were still 4.4 per cent higher than the same month last year and 27.1 per cent higher than the historical 10 - year average.
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