Sentences with phrase «next chart»

The phrase "next chart" means the upcoming or following graph or diagram. It refers to the visual representation of information that comes after the current one. Full definition
The next chart from Charles Schwab's Jeffrey Kleintop shows that stocks followed similar trajectories after the Cuban Missile Crisis (left hand side) and the Invasion of Iraq in 2003 (right hand side).
Everything we've talked about so far is captured nicely in this next chart from JP Morgan Asset Management's David Kelly, which is on a log scale and includes annotations of major world events.
The next chart of 3M adds capital gains to dividends:
The next chart skips capital losses to show only the cumulated dividend of AT&T.
The next chart shows the subsequent breakout action after identifying this stock as a Trend Reversal buy setup:
For example, if the weekly chart is showing a share price gain of 30 - 40 % or more over the past 4 to 5 weeks, and the price has not touched the 10 - week moving average during that same time period, you should forget about buying now and move to the next chart.
Evidence that the central banks have been too easy can be seen in the next chart.
As the next chart shows, QE has bloated central banks» balance sheets so much that they now hold the equivalent of 33 percent of all sovereign debt worldwide, up from roughly 15 percent pre-crisis.
As confirmed in the next chart, our model correctly identified equity risk as being the likely primary driver of returns for both 2015 and 2016.
This next chart simply shows how unloved this bull market has been by individual investors.
The next chart shows our Margin - Adjusted CAPE, in data since the 1920's, which is also easily at the most extreme level in history.
In the next chart, we see the complete series, which dates from May 1960.
The next chart is an overlay of the General Activity Index and the Future General Activity Index — the outlook six months ahead.
You can also see this in the next chart, which visualizes news app installs by debate type (Republican or Democratic).
The next chart shows V — G annual total return by size category and year over the available sample period.
The next chart summarizes Pearson correlations for various lead - lag relationships between monthly S&P 500 Index return and monthly change in Consumer Sentiment Index over the sample period, ranging from stock market return leads change in consumer sentiment by six months -LRB--6) to change in consumer sentiment leads stock market return by six months (6).
The next chart tracks rolling 36 - month Pearson correlation between next - month S&P 500 Index return and monthly change in Consumer Sentiment Index.
The next chart summarizes average next - month S&P 500 Index returns by ranked fifth (quintile) of monthly changes in NYSE margin debt over the full sample period (140 - 141 observations per quintile) and since the beginning of 2000 (only 42 - 43 observations per quintile).
This next chart is the weekly combo chart we've also been following which has the all important 30 week ema on it.
The next chart, also from the paper, relates the actual relative investing performance of respondents to their estimated relative performance based on responses to: «What percentage of customers of your discount brokerage house had higher returns than you in the four - year period from January 1997 to December 2000?
The next chart plots aggregated value minus growth (V — G) monthly total returns over the available sample period.
The next chart reveals that more than 50 % of Philadelphia area manufacturers expect to raise prices during the next 6 months, highlighting their own cost pressures but also their perceived capability to pass these costs on to their clients.
Moreover, the next chart shows this inverse relationship has been developing over the past 14 months... and appears both trends may be ready to reverse (ie Stocks to begin falling, while gold starts to rise).
The 38.2 % level also coincides closely with a key resistance level (shown on the next chart):
This next chart is a daily combo chart we've been following for some of the US stock market indexes which is showing some interesting price action.
To put the state of the bubble market into the historical context of what a non-bubble driven housing market looks like, our next chart expands the time frame of the first chart back to 1967, which corresponds to the oldest data directly published by the U.S. Census Bureau's on the median income earned by all U.S. households.
Leverage The next chart is an attempt to illustrate where the so - called leverage «bubbles» are.
Furthermore, the next chart shows that money flows to equity mutual funds and exchange traded funds have rarely, if ever, been more persistently negative than they have been during the past two years.
As you can see from the next chart, Grainger has gone from operating with almost no debt 10 years ago to a high debt load now.
So we are certainly building up the view and evidence that there has been at least some clean - out in sentiment - the next chart also adds to the case.
As illustrated by the next chart, the year - over-year rate of growth in commercial bank credit was slightly above 8 % at around the time of the Presidential election in late - 2016 and is now about 3 %.
Moving to economic data, the next chart presents what I've called the «order surplus» indication from regional Fed and purchasing managers surveys: new orders + order backlogs - inventories.
The next chart illustrates the extreme valuation swings investors can «safely» exploit, «buying low» and «selling high» using trailing data, discipline and patience.
The next chart is a blow up of the previous graph — showing the two key trendlines superimposed on a daily chart.
The next chart compares gross cumulative values of $ 1 initial investments in each of SPY, IVE, IVW and Top 1 since July 2002.
This next chart shows the % protein versus the % target intake on average for each of the 20 groups of people.
The next chart will list some of the major dating services.
The next chart takes the proportion of twelfth graders testing at the college - prepared level in reading and divides it by the proportion of that class of students immediately enrolling in college.
When five minutes have passed, each group will rotate to the next chart / poster and fill in their block Continue rotating students at five - minute intervals until each group has visited and filled in their assigned block on each paintings paper / poster.
So our next chart tooks at total expenditures per pupil and student achievement:
The next chart adds an extra trend line to the one above: the number of public school employees divided by the number of students enrolled.
So for the purposes of this next chart, I will apply the same 10 - point value system to all four self publishing review sources to give each source equal weight and therefore arrive at a more accurate total:
So for the purposes of this next chart, I will apply a 10 - point value system to each of the four sources to give each source equal weight and therefore arrive at a more accurate total:
Also, you can see the occasional «(ser 1)» notation for Marvel books (MUCH more so on the next chart), that's because Marvel released more than one «issue # 1» this year for certain series, creating a wicked amount of market confusion.
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