Sentences with phrase «much less margin»

Not exact matches

Even if you keep income needs the same i only pay an average federal rate of 14 % right now which is much less then my margin.
Of course, given that Shiller's raw CAPE is also much less reliable than our margin - adjusted variant, a decline in the Shiller CAPE, driven by a statistical artifact of its own construction, will not make stocks any less hypervalued.
The anchoring of investor expectations to a period of rich valuations and unusually wide profit margins may not be reasonable, but it prevents any ability to «forecast» a significant near term decline, much less a sustained downtrend.
But just as religiously committed Evangelical and Mainline Protestants were much more likely to vote Republican than their nominally religious brethren, regularly attending white Catholics gave Bush a narrow plurality over Clinton (41 percent to 39 percent), while less - observant Catholics gave Clinton a bigger margin (44 percent to 33 percent).
In the daily grind of life, it's challenging to find margin to make a delicious healthy meal, much less make the time to sit down and enjoy it.
Not easy to land, and his margin for error (he has less money than the top three clubs in England) is much less.
Less than two weeks before Election Day, the parties don't agree on much — except these House races will be decided by the slimmest of margins.
It is a secondary way that Earth loses heat, much less important in this regard than is heat loss at plate margins.
As it is, educational books don't have much of a profit margin and could be even less lucrative for the authors if the Indian government's plea is accepted.
But when you throw a POD platform into the mix, the pie gets sliced further, so booksellers get closer to 40 % or even as low as 25 % — which is a much less attractive purchase for them, if even feasible with their slim margins.
Academic revenues are more predictable and have lower related costs of sale with resulting higher margins, and are much less reliant on retail bookshop sales.
Academic and professional revenues are more predictable and have lower related costs of sale with higher margins and are much less reliant on retail bookshop sales.
Getting the data, scrubbing it, running the cash flows, calculating the asset price functions, implied margin on borrowing, etc., would be pretty tough for angels to do, much less mere men.
Here's where the advantage of futures come in for that kind of structure: the margin on the longs and shorts can offset each other, forcing the farmer to have to put up much less of one's own money to hedge.
Less margin: because of the lower volatility, the exchanges set margin requirements for many futures trading spreads that can be much less than an outright futures positLess margin: because of the lower volatility, the exchanges set margin requirements for many futures trading spreads that can be much less than an outright futures positless than an outright futures position.
All of this also has a way of reducing one's risk, due to the margin of safety that's present when one pays much less than that which a stock is deemed to be worth.
This means you should borrow much less than the maximum amount the lender offers you and never mortgage your home to invest in a margin loan.
A bunch of fundamentally solid funds have been hammered by their absolute value orientation; that is, their refusal to buy stocks when they believe that the stock's valuations and the underlying corporation's prospects simply do not offer a sufficient margin of safety for the risks they're taking, much less compelling opportunities.
A person thinking that many years out will likely value the relationships with his or her suppliers, customers, employees and communities much more highly — making this year's margin or next year's growth rate less important.
That does not make for a very good breeding operation, much less a profit margin!
In the long run, much of the economic growth of developed economies is likely to involve less energy - intensive sectors because of demand - side factors such as 1) the amount of stuff people can physically manage is limited (even with rented storage space), 2) migration to areas where the weather is more moderate will continue, 3) increased urbanization and population density reduces energy consumption per capita, 4) there is a lot of running room to decrease the energy consumption of our electronic devices (e.g., switching to clockless microprocessors, not that I'm predicting that specific innovation), 5) telecommunication will substitute for transportation on the margin, 6) cheaper and better data acquisition and processing will enable less wasteful routing and warehousing of material goods, and 7) aging populations will eventually reduce the total amount (local plus distant) of travel per person per year.
You may have a point if it scales so that 3/300 is much less than 7.5 / 700, which would mean more heat is coming up from the depths than diffusing downward, but actually 3/300 = 0.01 ~ 7.5 / 700 = 0.00107 which is a 7 % margin of error, which I don't think they can get much better considering the quality of the data.
Would you rather spend less money and accumulate more homes or build slowly and buy in higher priced areas with less margins but much more responsible tenants.
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