Sentences with phrase «per fiscal year over»

Non-profit — Wrote 24 + grant proposals, and helped raise $ 120,000 per fiscal year over 5 years; organizations included the Gates Foundation.

Not exact matches

Wal - Mart Stores, the retailer's parent that also operates the Sam's Club chain, said it expects profit for fiscal year 2019 to increase about 5 % over the expected adjusted earnings of $ 4.30 to $ 4.40 per share for the current fiscal year.
The parliamentary budget office estimates spending to date has boosted the economy by 0.1 per cent in each fiscal year and added between 9,600 and 11,100 jobs over the last 12 months.
In fiscal year 2012, we had approximately six million unique visitors to neimanmarcus.com per month and over one million unique visitors to bergdorfgoodman.com per month.
For its fiscal year - to - date, Canopy says it has now sold 3,850 kilograms and kilograms equivalent of cannabis at an average price of $ 7.98 per gram, an increase over the 2,153 kilograms the company says it sold at an average price of $ 7.05 per gram for the six months ended September 30, 2016.
A common criticism leveled at your analyses has been that you predicted, if the PRC maintained its current fiscal practices, growth would average around 3 % per year over this decade.
With the Liberal plan, the federal government will have a modest short - term deficit of less than $ 10 billion in each of the next two fiscal years — less than half the average Harper deficit of over $ 20 billion per year.
We believe this advantaged position over Google, the company's only real competitor, justifies our forecasts for revenue and EPS (earnings per share) growth of 25 % and 44 % respectively for FY (fiscal year) 2015.
Revenue through the first three quarters of the fiscal year are up 1.2 % to over $ 1.2 billion, and earnings per share are up 26 % to $ 3.37, thanks to a restructuring plan through which the company has been taking over underperforming, franchised stores.
For the full fiscal year, Mitel's revenues reached $ 1.06 billion compared to $ 987.6 million in 2016 while adjusted earnings were $ 81.1 million (65 cents per share), an improvement over adjusted earnings in 2016 of $ 74.9 million (60 cents per share).
The government is confronting the worst fiscal situation in the U.S. with deficits forecast to remain in the 10 per cent range of GDP, and the debt burden to rise steadily higher, possibly reaching over 100 per cent within 15 years.
Fiscal policy has become more expansionary over the past year, with the recent fiscal package contributing to an estimated federal budget deficit of just over 4 per cent of GDP this year, up from around 1 1/2 per cent inFiscal policy has become more expansionary over the past year, with the recent fiscal package contributing to an estimated federal budget deficit of just over 4 per cent of GDP this year, up from around 1 1/2 per cent infiscal package contributing to an estimated federal budget deficit of just over 4 per cent of GDP this year, up from around 1 1/2 per cent in 2002.
For Apple's fiscal second quarter, revenue and earnings per share increased 16 % and 30 % year over year to $ 61.1 billion and $ 2.73, respectively.
Shockingly, the UK political establishment looks poised to loosen further what already looks like a very lax fiscal regime, at a time not only of straitened public finances and austerity (and a high burden of personal taxation), but also of extraordinarily high petroleum prices (2011 was the first year in history when the international price of crude averaged over 100 dollars per barrel, 2012 was the second, 2013 the third, and 2014 looks dead set to be the fourth).
The figures come just days after a report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) which showed that actual household income - what is left after the effect of inflation is factored in - has fallen by 1.6 per cent over the three years to the end of 2011.
That this House declines to give a Second Reading to the Welfare Benefits Up - rating Bill because it fails to address the reasons why the cost of benefits is exceeding the Government's plans; notes that the Resolution Foundation has calculated that 68 per cent of households affected by these measures are in work and that figures from the Institute for Fiscal Studies show that all the measures announced in the Autumn Statement, including those in the Bill, will mean a single - earner family with children on average will be # 534 worse off by 2015; further notes that the Bill does not include anything to remedy the deficiencies in the Government's work programme or the slipped timetable for universal credit; believes that a comprehensive plan to reduce the benefits bill must include measures to create economic growth and help the 129,400 adults over the age of 25 out of work for 24 months or more, but that the Bill does not do so; further believes that the Bill should introduce a compulsory jobs guarantee, which would give long - term unemployed adults a job they would have to take up or lose benefits, funded by limiting tax relief on pension contributions for people earning over # 150,000 to 20 per cent; and further believes that the proposals in the Bill are unfair when the additional rate of income tax is being reduced, which will result in those earning over a million pounds per year receiving an average tax cut of over # 100,000 a year.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has counselled that spending per pupil in schools in England is likely to fall by eight per cent in real terms over the next five years.
The Japan ICU Foundation will provide a dollar per dollar match up to $ 50,000 for donations made for the Study Abroad Scholarship over the next two fiscal years, in the hopes of attracting further investment from alumni and friends for this new initiative.
The Institute of Fiscal Studies estimates that schools in the UK will face up to 12 per cent real term cuts over the next Parliament while forecasts suggest pupil numbers will increase by seven per cent, a result of rising immigration and higher birth rates over the next five years.
Data conducted by the Institute of Fiscal Studies suggests that school budgets are expected to be cut by eight per cent over the next five years.
School budgets are expected to be cut 8 per cent cut in real terms over the next five years, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies.
Spending per pupil in schools in England is likely to fall by 8 % in real terms over the next five years, the Institute for Fiscal Studies warns.
While the DfE's recent announcement to increase school funding by # 1.3 bn over two years will help the financial situation for schools, the Institute for Fiscal Studies argues that schools still face an enormous financial challenge as their budgets will have fallen by 4.6 per cent in real terms between 2015 and 2020.
On the sales expectations of the company this fiscal, Suri said: «In the first quarter, we sold over 1,000 units registering a growth of 45 per cent over the same period last year.
The announcement was made along with the company's sales report for the previous fiscal year, during which the Jaguar Land Rover India saw a growth of over 83 per cent, in India.
For fiscal year 2014 BlackRock is on track to pay $ 7.72 per share in dividends a 14.8 % increase over fiscal year 2013.
Dividends per share have increased at least three times over the last seven fiscal years and have never been decreased.
Earnings per share from continuing operations must have increased over each of the last five fiscal years
The company has increased its earnings and free cash flow per share by 9.1 % and 7.7 % per year, respectively, over its last five fiscal years.
We also require that trailing earnings per share over the last 12 months be greater than or equal to earnings per share for the last fiscal year.
Looking at this on a per - share basis, FFO / share increased from $ 1.83 to $ 2.82 over the last ten fiscal years, which is a CAGR of 4.92 %.
Wrote Susan Dyer Reynolds for Northside SF in September 2009, «In stark contrast to ACC, which runs on a budget of about $ 3 million per year, the SF / SPCA received over $ 23 million in contributions for the 2007 fiscal year.
Here is what you need to know about Income Replacement Benefits (IRB's): • IRB's are calculated at 70 % of your average gross income based on your employment history o Your income is calculated as the higher of either (i) the 52 weeks before the accident OR (ii) the 4 weeks before the accident multiplied by 13 o Self - employed income is calculated as the higher of either (i) the 52 weeks before the accident OR (ii) the last fiscal year o If you are receiving other income replacement assistance, such as short term or long term disability benefits, those amounts are deductable from the amount of your IRB eligibility • IRB's are capped at $ 400 per week • The first 7 days of your disability are not covered by IRB's • IRB's are payable for a 104 week (2 year) period, but you may be eligible to continue receiving this benefit past the 2 years indefinitely, if after the 2 year mark you are unable to do any occupation for which you are reasonably suited by way of your education, training and experience • The age 65 marks changes in IRB's o If you are already over the age of 65, IRB's are payable up to 208 weeks and gradually reduced over that period o If you reach the age 65 while already receiving benefits, the IRB is converted to a lifetime pension at a reduced rate based on an established formula
In the first six months of this fiscal, the insurance industry has already mopped up Rs 1,01,976 crore of premium registering a growth of 18 per cent over the year - ago period.
The gross premium collection rose by over 13 per cent to Rs 1,303 crore during the year as compared to Rs 1,151 crore in the preceding fiscal year.
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