Sentences with phrase «rising at a consistent rate»

Are the prior - period earnings looking maybe a little too perfect rising at a consistent rate over time?
The Bitcoin market has already endured the major correction and in the upcoming days, the bitcoin price would likely rise at a consistent rate.

Not exact matches

Over the period 1980 to 2012, unemployment rose from just 6.4 % to 27.4 % in spite of consistent GDP growth rate averaging more than 7.5 % and by 2016, 33.6 % (using NBS old measure); Human Development Index (HDI) has risen only modestly between 1990 (0.411) and 2014 (0.514); and average life expectancy in spite of our enormous resources remains stuck at 52.9 years in 2015 while the equivalent figure in the developed world averages over 70 years.
Among other findings, the report also revealed that while the total number of County residents on Medicaid has risen due to fuller implementation of the Affordable Care Act («ACA»), Erie County's portion of Medicaid costs is projected to drop by more than $ 6.4 million from 2013 due to the Act's implementation and the state's Medicaid cap, and is approximately $ 340,000 less than 2012; the biggest increase in Medicaid recipients was seen among whites age 18 - 64, while other demographics remained consistent; and that the number of persons on Medicaid continues to grow at an average rate of more than 4 % each year, a trend noted by the Medicaid Inspector General's office in his September 2013 report.
Using the Great Barrier Reef as their study case, they estimated the evolution of the region over the last 14,000 years and showed that (1) high sediment loads from catchments erosion prevented coral growth during the early phase of sea level rise and favoured deep offshore sediment deposition; (2) how the fine balance between climate, sea level, and margin physiography enabled coral reefs to thrive under limited shelf sedimentation rates at 6,000 years before present; and, (3) how over the last 3,000 years, the decrease of accommodation space led to the lateral extension of coral reefs consistent with available observational data.
There are clearly some problems in comparing tide gauge and satellite data, and of course, satellites can have their problems (cf. MSU data), but the quoted numbers don't support the actual statement at all — though it would be fairer to say that the satellites are consistent with a recent rise in the rate, rather than a proof that it is occurring.
«The global mean sea level for the period January 1900 to December 2006 is estimated to rise at a rate of 1.56 ± 0.25 mm / yr which is reasonably consistent with earlier estimates, but we do not find significant acceleration»
That shows an 18 year record of consistent and steady rise at a rate of about 3 mm a year.
«Key findings are that at the 95 % confidence level, no consistent or compelling evidence (yet) exists that recent rates of rise are higher or abnormal in the context of the historical records available across Europe, nor is there any evidence that geocentric rates of rise are above the global average.
The concentration held steady in 2008, meaning at least that interannual variability is important in the methane cycle, and making it hard to say if the long - term average emission rate is rising in a way that would be consistent with a new carbon feedback.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v517/n7535/full/nature14093.html «Here we revisit estimates of twentieth - century GMSL rise using probabilistic techniques9, 10 and find a rate of GMSL rise from 1901 to 1990 of 1.2 ± 0.2 millimetres per year (90 % confidence interval)... also indicates that GMSL rose at a rate of 3.0 ± 0.7 millimetres per year between 1993 and 2010, consistent with prior estimates from tide gauge records»
«Values are continuing to rise at a steady, consistent pace and new inventory is slowly coming to market as more and more long - time owners are coming off the fence to sell in an environment where interest rates are at all - time lows, demand is unrelenting and looming tax increases are on the horizon,» said Ken Uranowitz, managing director.
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