A 0.20 -
point rise probably makes little difference in your payments.
Not exact matches
On all the available information, resources sector investment will
probably rise by another 2 percentage
points or more of annual GDP over the next couple of years.
I think as long as interest rates
rise on a measured basis, that's
probably priced into the market at this
point.
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.
If anything, they should
probably bring in another
point guard (ideally a George Hill / Patrick Beverley type) who can play alongside
Rose and possibly replace him eventually.
Using computer modeling to interpret images from NASA's Galileo satellite, Pappalardo and Barr demonstrated that acnelike markings on Europa's surface are
probably bits of ice containing minerals such as chloride salts and sulfuric acid, which lower the melting
point so the material can
rise from deep below.
Indeed, such
rises in sea level as have already occurred would
probably not have been detected without a rock - steady network of extragalactic reference
points.
If the time horizons on sea level
rise and glacial melt are potentially very long, and polar bears
probably aren't in immediate danger from climate change, what is the very simple rallying
point that is both scientifically defensible and that can be used to get people's attention and pull their heartstrings?
So at some
point in the very near future we can
probably expect surface temperatures to gather up a head of steam, and begin
rising at a rapid rate.
Humans are
probably responsible for most of the CO2
rise based on the observations of the CO2 we are emitting, but to make the claim that Fred has made would require the ability to make accurate measurements of total CO2 at any
point in time and then to accurately determine what percentage of that total CO2 is of human origin.
In fact, as Jeremy Symons of the National Wildlife Federation
pointed out in testimony to Congress last month, their own documents show that the pipeline will
probably cause the price at the pump to
rise across the midwest.
It's
probably no great secret to TreeHugger readers at this
point that part of the reason carbon emissions in developing nations are rapidly
rising is partially because manufacturing of goods for export to the developed world.
Which is connected to the next
point, which is that in a lot of cases writing exams by word processing has
probably led to a loss of structure in answers where students just tend to write everything they can think of, and type, in the time allotted rather than construct a well thought out answer, in short there was been a
rise of quantity but not necessarily a
rise in quality of the answers.
As Pimco's Dan Ivascyn notes, «It's
probably one and done» — meaning one more 25 - basis -
point rise in short - term rates.