Sentences with phrase «per cent yield»

So if the 10 - year Canada bond stays flat, you're losing out on the 3.5 per cent yield of the underlying bond (minus CIB's fees of just over 0.5 per cent).
A four per cent yield is better than three per cent.
Until the super rice proves itself in commercial use, however, some experts fear that Murphy's Law may whittle down the 25 per cent yield increase the IRRI is claiming.
This oxidised the quinic acid to benzoquinone in a 40 per cent yield.
The PBL found that «this statement is not directly a statement of climate change, but of climate variability: in individual years, drought can cause up to 50 per cent yield reductions».
The limited downside is offset by the 6 per cent yield and the prospect of a turnaround, the analysts say, which could see shares rally 9 per cent.
An investment in the stock a decade ago has generated virtually no capital gain and a 4 per cent yield.
«We expect in the current market that quality peri-urban assets such as these with rezoning potential and multiples titles will remain popular, particularly investment assets with reliable tenants that generate 7 to 8 per cent yields to investors,» Mr Forrest said.

Not exact matches

On Wednesday afternoon, the benchmark U.S. 10 - year bond was yielding 2.35 per cent, up 15 basis points from before the Fed statement and up sharply from about 1.6 per cent at the beginning of May.
At the same time, Canadian Tire Corp. has a valuation of $ 11.5 billion and earns $ 10 a share — and pays a dividend yield of 2.14 per cent.
Without increasing the tax share of output, 1 per cent real growth over the next 40 years will yield an inflation - adjusted increase in tax revenue per capita of about 50 per cent.
The report says the federation of maple syrup producers in Quebec sets bulk prices and has a monopoly on bulk sales of the product, or 85 per cent of the province's annual yield.
If we assume the average federal tax rate on capital income is 25 per cent (most capital income is taxed in the higher 22 per cent, 26 per cent and 29 per cent tax brackets), this yields a revenue cost of $ 6.6 - billion, or 7 per cent of federal income tax revenues.
That will be tricky given that 10 - year Treasuries currently yield below 2.20 per cent and this would decline precipitously with a recession and any move to cut Fed funds.
«We believe that the currency movements since the start of 2018 have reflected the changing GDP growth dynamics between the US and Europe, and the corresponding lift in the US 10 - year bond yield to 3.0 per cent,» he says.
At its centre is the prospect that bond yields go significantly higher than 4 per cent.
At the same time, some 70 per cent of government - issued bonds are yielding 1 per cent or less, and when you combine the equity / bond value of the 15 largest global markets they've never been more expensive.
These benefits would (i) largely go to developers and contractors for infrastructure projects like new pipelines that would happen even without new incentives and so be highly regressive; (ii) raise costs by failing to reach the tax - free pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and international investors that are the most plausible sources of incremental infrastructure finance; (iii) not encourage at all the highest return maintenance projects like fixing potholes that do not yield a pecuniary return for investors; and (iv) by offering credits at an unprecedented 82 per cent rate, invite all kinds of tax - shelter abuse.
The average bid / ask spread was 29 cents (per $ 100 par value) for both investment - grade and high - yield bonds, and the average daily trading volume was $ 2.2 million ($ 2.5 million) for investment - grade (high - yield) corporate bonds.
Passenger yields of the airline fell over 5 per cent.
The 10 - year US bond yield breaking through the 3 per cent danger level worries India, as it does every emerging market.
The reason: a surge in yields on US Ten Year Government Treasury Bonds, which hit a four - year high of 2.86 per cent.
Enterprise agreements, which cover around one - third of employees, continue to yield annualised wage increases in the 3 1/2 to 4 per cent range.
In contrast, medium - term inflation expectations implied by financial market prices, which are calculated as the difference between nominal and indexed bond yields, have been broadly stable at around 2.6 per cent over the past nine months.
From around 5.4 per cent at the time of the previous Statement, yields on 10 - year bonds fell to a low of 5.1 per cent in mid December, but have since risen back to near 5.4 per cent.
The yield on 10 - year bonds was 6.60 per cent in early November, a rise of 1.1 percentage points over the past six months (Graph 30).
In Australia, the peak in the 10 - year yield was 7.25 per cent, and the current level is 6.1 per cent.
The main exception to this global pattern has been Japan, where 10 - year bond yields have remained remarkably stable, generally trading in the range between 1.7 per cent and 1.8 per cent so far this year (Graph 8).
Yields on 10 - year bonds fell by around 40 basis points, to 5.3 per cent, by early March but are now around 5.9 per cent — a net rise of 25 basis points since the time of the last Statement.
By the time of the Bank's early August policy announcement, markets had priced into short - term yields about a 50 per cent probability of a change in policy that month, and close to 100 per cent by the following month.
The yield on the German 10 - year bond has fallen from around 5.45 per cent to 5.20 per cent.
As of early August, the yield on 90 - day bank bills was 6.4 per cent.
The average rental yield during the first quarter of 2014 remained 5.34 per cent for Dubai apartments and 4.58 per cent for Dubai villas.
Enterprise bargaining outcomes in the early part of the year also suggested little change in the rate of wage growth; new federal enterprise agreements in the March quarter yielded an average annualised increase of 3.4 per cent, unchanged from the previous quarter.
The average rental yields recorded during the first quarter of 2014 were 5.47 per cent and 4.55 per cent for apartments and villas, respectively.
Medium - term inflation expectations of financial market participants, as implied by the difference between nominal and indexed bond yields, have risen to around 3 per cent in October, from less than 2 per cent at the beginning of the year.
Australian dividend yields have continued to average just below 4 per cent (Graph 58).
The market expects a tightening of 75 basis points by year end, and the yield curve indicates that the implied cash rate in a couple of years» time will still be under 4 per cent.
The Wage Cost Index continues to record wages growth at an annual rate of around 3 1/4 per cent, and there has been little change in the wage increases being negotiated under enterprise bargaining, which continue to yield average annualised increases in the 3 1/2 to 4 per cent range.
This saw yields on Japanese government debt rise steadily in March and April to around 1.5 per cent, 30 basis points above their mid-February low.
The yield on 180 - day bills was 5.60 per cent (Graph 29).
Yields on 10 - year US government bonds have remained within a relatively narrow range around 4.2 per cent over the past three months.
In line with this, yields on 90 - day bank bills are trading at 5.6 per cent and those on 180 - day bills are at 5.7 per cent.
Yields on inflation - linked bonds have moved in a similar pattern and are now around 3.4 per cent (Graph 52).
The yield on 90 - day bank bills had risen to 5.40 per cent in early November, 0.65 of a percentage point above the previous cash rate target of 4.75 per cent.
Notwithstanding this rise, bond yields in Japan remain at historically low levels, with 10 - year yields at 1.8 per cent.
Still, passenger revenues climbed in the first quarter from $ 3.1 billion last year to $ 3.5 billion this year, driven by traffic growth of 11.4 per cent and yield improvement of 0.4 per cent.
Benchmark 10 - year Treasury notes were yielding 2.37 per cent in mid-afternoon trading on Monday, down from 2.43 per cent on Friday.
Longer - term rates are falling too: The yield on five - year government bonds has fallen from 1.9 per cent to 1.72 per cent in the past 10 days.
Britain's 10 - year yield rose three basis points to 1.6 per cent.
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