Sentences with phrase «much of an actual risk»

«While our study did not find additive benefits of calorie restriction and exercise on traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease, much of the actual risk of developing cardiovascular disease can not be accounted for by traditional risk factors.
OECD: IMF: Bank of Canada: All those reports point towards a housing related financial risk but how much of an actual risk exists in the market — everyone failed to

Not exact matches

It seems like much of the retirement planning advice out there focuses on distribution rates, the percentage of income to replace, asset allocation changes or a determination of how much risk is suitable for a retiree's portfolio without ever considering actual living expenses or spending needs.
The bankruptcy will be caused by the bank taking too much risks or by mismanagement, the bank run may be completely unrelated to the actual health of the bank.
The participants revised most of their estimates the second time around, but 79 percent of those tested paid much more attention when their actual risk was lower than what they had initially guessed.
Sure enough, they found that reducing protein intake also reduced IGF - 1 and IGFBP - 3 levels — but this doesn't say much about actual risk of cancer, only that animal protein is associated with IGF - 1 levels.
Many have proposed that the settlements the publishers in the case have had to pay out — much of which will again be in the form of compensation to the actual ebook buyers — will be so detrimental that the publishers will have to reduce their operations and not take risks on debut authors until their losses are recovered.
Ross: We're in the business not so much of being contrarians deliberately, but rather we like to take perceived risk instead of actual risk.
Buying an option requires a much smaller outlay of money than purchasing the actual shares of stock and therefore reduces the risk of losing money.
He dismisses the factors of work performed and risks incurred as «irrelevant» and «immeasurable», asking rhetorically «[w] hy should it matter how much actual time was spent by class counsel?
When we point out that the burden really lies upon those who would toss aside centuries of history on short - term, flimsy evidence, who ignore the actual evidence of heavy consolidations with more to follow, who would saddle us with a change that would be irreversible regardless of how much harm it later engendered, who would risk so much of what the legal profession has stood for, who refuse to work anywhere near as hard on real solutions to real problems as they do on this pig - in - a-poke, then we are met with silence or insults.
In the end though it's not so much the actual risk of litigation at issue here as it is the concern that the legal system would provide them some complications as a result of them helping someone.
Although this level of unique records will be much higher in the smaller geographic areas, the actual risk of identification will be much lower because of the limited availability of comparable data in publically available, identified databases, and will be further reduced by the low probability that someone will expend the resources to try to identify records when the chance of success is so small and uncertain.
If your bicycle is damaged due to one of the covered risks of your policy, like theft, for example, you will need to know if your insurance covers replacement cost, or actual cash value in order to know how much money you will get.
They spread risk across a pool of individuals so that when someone has a medical event, their out of pocket cost is much less than the actual cost of services received.
The advantages of level premium are: — As mortality risk increases with the age of the insured the actual premium chargeable at higher age is much more than that chargeable when a person is young.
Requiring a customer to interact with a working, charged and connected smartphone (with actual coverage or logged into a stores wifi) at a point of sale introduces way to much friction into the buying process, and risks the prospect of introducing cart abandonment into physical stores.
Definitional variation over time also means that we are uncertain as to how much of the change in the cumulative risk for confirmed maltreatment is due to actual changes in rates of maltreatment vs changes in definitions of maltreatment.
While there is much literature on individual level variables that affect prenatal care adherence such as age, poverty, low self - esteem, and transportation, there is little practice based research knowledge on diminishing potential birth risks by repairing and building the maternal — infant (fetus) relationship prior to the actual birth of the child.
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