An impressive performance in midweek at Arsenal didn't gain them any points, but a repeats showing of that ilk could see the progress to the quarter - finals.
Even if the teams ahead of them didn't gain another point on the year they'd be unlikely to pick up the necessary seven points in their remaining six games.
Not exact matches
«It's
not just about pricing either, it's all about the ecosystem and Google ecosystem has just
gained real momentum,» Fisher said,
pointing to software like GSuite, Google Classroom, and its management console.
After it hit 14,000 at the height of the housing bubble in 2007 — less than three months after passing 13,000 — the Dow wouldn't
gain another 1,000
points until six years later, in May 2013.
The wealthy don't depend on their bonuses for their living, continued Mattoon, so they have wide flexibility to realize those
gains when it's most convenient from a taxation
point of view, as happened with the fiscal cliff.
Baumgartner could have pulled his stabilization parachute at this
point, but at the cost of
not gaining enough speed to break the sound barrier.
The old Wall Street cliche «sell in May and go away» hasn't applied in recent years, and futures were
pointing to
gains ahead of the first session of May 2017.
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett's annual letter to shareholders recently
gained a lot of attention when he
pointed out one very important
point about the future of America: don't bet against U.S. innovation.
Reports of earnings
gains surged 11
points in January and hasn't gone down since.
Mr. Rosenberg also
pointed to last October's announcement by Finance Minister Bill Morneau that sales of a principal residence must be reported on one's tax return, whether or
not tax is owed on the
gain.
Other issuers, like Nationwide or
Point Bridge Capital, launched their ETFs so recently that these funds likely did
not have enough time to generate much in the way of capital
gains.
Futures tournaments are a great way for young players to
not only
gain ranking
points early on in their careers, but also
gain valuable experience
Our starting
point has always been that the imposition of the GST should
not have an effect on wages because wage - earners will
gain more from the accompanying fall in income tax rates than they will lose from the introduction of the GST.
Michael Hewson, Senior Market Analyst at CMC Markets in London, says Carney has
gained a lot of «brownie
points» for his handling of the financial crisis, given that Canada was the only G7 country that did
not have to receive a banking bailout during the financial crisis that started in 2008.
Technically, the lines should
not be connected, since they represent the
gains following distinct actions of different central banks, but connecting the
points shows the trend toward less and less effective interventions.
If you are already sitting on a bullish stock with a 30 to 50 %
gain from your entry
point, the decision to hold through earnings isn't that tough.
Underscoring the mixed - to - lower tone that emerged over the course of the day —
not only was the NASDAQ off by nearly 50
points at its nadir — but the small - cap Russell 2000 had turned down by more than a full percentage
points, as well, as losing stocks held a strong lead over
gaining issues throughout.
The extra 1 % is splitting hairs to
gain an extra fraction of a percentage
point here or subtract one there; it's just
not worth my time.
Prof. Patton
pointed out that parking lot owners were
not simply land speculators looking to sell out at a capital
gain.
The tipping
point seems to have been the release of the January jobs report, the highlight of which wasn't the change in nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rate, which they usually are, but the 0.3 % (2.9 % annualized) growth in wages, which was the strongest year - over-year
gain since June 2009.
Why would you contribute to an Traditional IRA and pay taxes on post tax money (since you can
not deduct the contribution at some
point due to income limits) and
not put in a taxable account and be able to pay only capital
gains?
Here is an important detail: The starting
point against which those
gains will be measured isn't the fund's actual net asset value on March 31, but rather the deeply discounted price the new buyers are paying..
While data so far is
pointing in the right direction for imetelstat, investors won't see any
gains from recent levels until Johnson & Johnson agrees to license the drug.
So, here's the weird paradox: If stocks never crashed — or if they
gain the perception that they don't crash — prices would rise to the
point where a new crash was guaranteed.
But sometime last spring, it pulled up lame — at one
point the three - month average of job
gains stalled to 108,000, possibly
not even enough to keep up with population growth.
Add it all up and economists predict prices will rise by a handful of percentage
points this year, although probably
not as much as 2014's approximately 5 %
gain.
In contrast, if they owned taxable mutual funds or other securities, the heirs would
not have to pay taxes on the $ 75,000 in
gains because taxable mutual funds enjoy a «stepped - up» basis at death for tax purposes, Trust
Point noted.
Being generous to
gain more
points with the tyrant is cowardly submission and does
not make you morally superior to people who are
not generous due to a leash.
If we have the Bible, but
not Christ, we will surely miss the
point because eternal life does
not spring from Scripture (Jn 5:39 - 40), instead, the Life Himself must be known (Jn 17:3) in order to
gain knowledge and wisdom (Col 2:2 - 3) as it should be.
If one can
not escape death's gateway, what are the
points to which our livelihoods should be
gained upon and found referenced towards?
The real
point is that the moving of these holydays of obligation to the following Sunday has had possibly unintended but nevertheless damaging consequences, which outweigh any conceivable
gain (I accept that for a very small number of people it does mean that they will be able to celebrate these feasts — in however reduced a way — when previously they couldn't).
Whitehead's own use of the term «metaphysics» is
not systematic, as is well - known,» so
not much is
gained by
pointing out that Whitehead speaks of Creativity as «the ultimate metaphysical principle» (PR 32; my italics).
One frequently cited bar graph has been used to suggest, for the decade 1965 - 75, a severe diminution of seven mainline Protestant bodies by contrast both with their
gains in the preceding ten years and with the continuing growth of selected conservative churches (see Jackson W. Carroll et al., Religion in America, 1950 to the Present [Harper & Row, 19791, p. 15) The gap in growth rates for 1965 - 75, as shown on that graph, is more than 29 percentage
points (an average loss in the oldline denominations of 8.9 per cent against average
gains among the conservatives of 20.5 per cent) This is indeed a substantial difference, but it does
not approach the difference in growth rates recorded for the same religious groups in the 1930s, when the discrepancy amounted to 62 percentage
points.
From Whitehead's
point of view, that is
not a
gain.
From the
point of view of Buddhism and Christianity, this is
not a
gain.
- nope, there's standards and boundaries there, but we haven't gotten to the
point to discuss them, we're still setting the terms of the conversation; of which our starting assumptions keep us from
gaining any ground since I think we're playing chess and you think we're playing monopoly.
Seriously, isn't that the
point of war... to
gain a tactical advantage and win regardless of the sacrifice of human life?
Anyway, when I
gained access to my books, I looked it up, and found it that the word is «ayin» which, as Peter Kirk
pointed out above, does
not mean «No, God.»
I am
not saying disappointment on your article, my only
point is that its faith, and only God can judge the correctness... The word of God cultivates the mind, and the seed of faith should bloom in its natural way, urging anything to study by words and its meaning is in - vain because the use of that will
not gain you anything from God, but yes maybe in politics and people like you.
I don't find it hard to believe that a man named Jesus existed at one
point and
gained a number of followers.
The students at these levels may
not master the finer
points of Aristotelian philosophy, but they at least
gain an introduction to the history and greatest books of western civilization --- which is to say, they're receiving a better liberal arts education than most of today's college students.
It should be clear at this
point that these
gains are
not «liberal theology» or «liberalism» but deep, underlying ways of reflecting on history, man and nature which include both methodologies (e.g., historical criticism, phenomenology) and content (e.g., man as a self - transcending being who resists all heteronomous authority).
People have been doing all kinds of religions, christianity, and islam for over 2000 years, praying to strange gods,
not known to Abraham, Isaac, nor Jacob, all from the first generation of Adam, and of the covenant of the 10 commandments, and statues, ordinances, and judgments that are perpetual by YHWH, and the world has
not gotten any better, since before the 8th century, this has happened, and at some
point one must realize that this religion thing obviously is
not working for us, the reality check is to «awaken'to the truth, and righteousness, of YHWH Our Righteousness, in Jeremiah 23:1 - 8, and
not pagan religions, man - made, and all controlled for selfish
gain.
Maybe you don't see his
point, but some people are able to
gain a persepective from stepping outside the forest (i.e. worldy view).
So fruitful that, according to John Paul II, it
points to the agency of Divine Providence: «In engaging great cultures for the first time, the Church can
not abandon what she has
gained from her inculturation in the world of Greco - Latin thought.
Force has at times been used to correct wrongs, but force will
not gain the kind of cooperation St. Paul
points to; it takes something else for that.
The
point is
not that traditional religions ever suppressed the pursuit of personal
gain.
The key
point, however, is that if the secularized academic community can
not on its own terms sustain moral standards,
gain epistemological assurance or avoid the virtual deification of the human, then far more than fairness and open - mindedness is at stake in its relationship with Christians.
As Samuel and King
pointed out, the courts have recognised competition, by its very nature, is deliberate and ruthless, and so their examples of conduct (such as a corporation
gaining an advantage through R&D and innovation, or as a result of economies of scale) would
not be regarded by the ACCC or the courts as a lessening of competition, even if the conduct caused competitors harm or forced them to exit the market.
I'm
not saying our players can't handle having the finger
pointed at them, but in a world where millions are spent on incremental
gains, it would be churlish
not to take the above into account.»