Sentences with phrase «return in a future posting»

Mr. Gramlich was also surprisingly forthright about wind power's continued dependence on federal subsidies, a point to which I'll return in future posts.

Not exact matches

Charlie Bilello, one of my favorite follows on Twitter, analyzed the relationship between market valuation and future returns (over various time horizons) in a recent post Valuation, Timing, and a Range of Outcomes.
Last week he posted himself doing some light running on social media, possibly hinting at a return in the near future.
Meanwhile, after a surprisingly bruising defeat in the Democratic primary, former Liu chief of staff John Choe said he would return to his former post in the near future.
I do hope to return to posting regularly in the near future and will keep everyone updated on the status of that over on our Twitter account.
Restate the conjecture, write it down, name it after the student («Donovan's Conjecture»), and post it in a visible location, so you can return to it in the future.
To adequately summarize the literature would require a series of posts, and I will return to this topic in the future.
Return to this post in the future if you wish to wipe completely your tablet and flash a stock Android OS.
In a prior post, we listed five components of returns that commodities futures can provide.
The extent to which large losses and volatility can limit or even overwhelm the power of compounding returns will be explored in future blog posts in this series.
The examples in the post actually demonstrate how one might use past returns to estimate the uncertainty of future returns.
You can take on more risk by moving into small cap stocks, which have a higher expected return but also are a lot more volatile (more on that in a future post).
I haven't run the dollar - weighted return calculation for the QQQ, but I'll try to run that calculation in a future blog post, and who knows, maybe I will run the calculation for John Hussman's main fund at some future point also.
An examination of the return shows various problems that I will discuss in a future post.
As mentioned in the comments of a prior post, I have discussed in two book chapters, Absolute Returns in Commodity (Natural Resource) Futures Investments in Hedge Fund & Investment Management (Edited by Izzy Nelken) and also in The Long and Short of Commodity Futures Index Investing in Intelligent Commodity Investing (Edited by Hilary Till and Joseph Eagleye,) there are two major opportunities to capture returns in commodities, which are cyclical opportunities and systematic opportuReturns in Commodity (Natural Resource) Futures Investments in Hedge Fund & Investment Management (Edited by Izzy Nelken) and also in The Long and Short of Commodity Futures Index Investing in Intelligent Commodity Investing (Edited by Hilary Till and Joseph Eagleye,) there are two major opportunities to capture returns in commodities, which are cyclical opportunities and systematic opportureturns in commodities, which are cyclical opportunities and systematic opportunities.
The Caisse was badly bruised in 2008 by its oversized position in currency and futures contracts and third - party asset - backed commercial paper holdings, posting a $ 40 - billion loss last year, equal to a return of minus 25 per cent.
In an upcoming blog post on Mason Hawkins I included this quote about selling: «We sell for four primary reasons: when the price reaches our appraised value; when the portfolio's risk / return profile can be significantly improved by selling, for example, a business at 80 % of its worth for an equally attractive one selling at only 40 % of its value; when the future earnings power is impaired by competitive or other threats to the business; or when we were wrong on management and changing the leadership would be too costly or problematic.»
In a future post I'll detail how we're getting to Sydney, and how we're returning from Melbourne.
Just as you compare an individual stock's return vs. the SP 500 to know how it behaved relative to the market; I will be using this baseline seasonality graph in all my future posts.
In fact, they may do so more efficiently than more uniform temperature change; warming one hemisphere with respect to the other is an excellent way of pulling monsoonal circulations and oceanic ITCZs towards the warm hemisphere (the last few years have seen numerous studies of this response, relevant for ice ages and aerosol forcing as well as the response to high latitude internal variability; Chiang and Bitz, 2005 is one of the first to discuss this, in the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic in a future postIn fact, they may do so more efficiently than more uniform temperature change; warming one hemisphere with respect to the other is an excellent way of pulling monsoonal circulations and oceanic ITCZs towards the warm hemisphere (the last few years have seen numerous studies of this response, relevant for ice ages and aerosol forcing as well as the response to high latitude internal variability; Chiang and Bitz, 2005 is one of the first to discuss this, in the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic in a future postin the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic in a future postin a future post.)
I'm still digesting this info and will return to it in a future post.
The result of the UK's advisory referendum on EU membership on 23 June 2016, which returned a slim majority in favour of «Brexit» provoked much discussion on this blog (10 posts so far) and elsewhere about the UK's future relationship with the EU and the future of the EU itself.
As you can see from Google's blog post quote above, a feature similar to the «Automatic» theme option from the Android M preview builds will presumably return in a future update.
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