Sentences with phrase «see a return rate»

We are very pleased to see a return rate of more than 80 % on our bottles.
I see a return rate of 0.25 % -0.5 % on my books, which are thrillers and mysteries.
I.e. if I vastly overpay my taxes does this mean I will see return rates of 3 - 8 % interest on what I overpaid in?
Samsung's Galaxy Gear is seeing return rates above 30 - percent, leaked internal documentation suggests, with claims the South Korean company is surveying Best Buy Samsung Experience staff to try to figure out how the smartwatch is falling short.

Not exact matches

He says that if you can get only a 2 % return on bonds — rates we're seeing today — and 5.5 % yields on blue - chip stocks like BCE, it makes sense to overweight stocks, no matter what your age.
Programs that provide skills development, mentoring and clear pathways to success from cradle to college and career, can generate benefits that are more than three times their costs, exceeding the rates of return seen in many private sector business investments.
Costs back then were still low by today's standards, but the integrated mining operations were seeing operating costs of $ 12 - 18 / bbl and new projects needed $ U.S. oil prices of $ 20 - $ 30 to generate reasonable rates of return.
In fact, a large enigma remains unresolved, in that the labor force participation rate has been trending lower for a long time and has returned to levels last seen in the 1970s.
«In our business, we saw the worst of it in January, moderating but still soft in February, and then in March and April showing signs of returning to the run rates we saw in [the] fourth quarter and full year 2016.»
A 21 - year - old who invests $ 100 every month in a Roth IRA could see her / his nest egg grow to more than $ 200,000 (assuming a 5 percent annual return and a marginal tax rate of 25 percent) by age 67, according to Bankrate's
If you're talking about a new project with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 - year oil sands project is a lot of risk for less than a 10 % rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
While we used to think of new mines as projects that required WTI prices near $ 100 per barrel to be viable, we can see 10 % rates of return on investment at WTI prices below $ US65 per barrel for a new build.
With interest rates so low, stocks are better than bonds, but the Canadian market, he says, should see mid-single-digit returns.
Using the federal student loan interest rate of 4.6 percent and assuming 2 percent income growth annually and investment returns of 5 percent a year, they could see how much millennials could save.
It's operating from a position of strength and in 2016 saw operating return on equity of 13.3 %, consistent with its performance over the decade despite historically low interest rates.
If you're talking about a new project with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 year oil sands project is a lot of risk for less than a 10 per cent rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
While we used to think of new mines as projects that required WTI prices near $ 100 per barrel to be viable, we can see 10 per cent rates of return on investment at WTI prices below $ US65 per barrel for a new build.
All told, we see another coupon - driven year for high yield with total returns of about 6 % possible as spreads tighten in line with anticipated modest increases in interest rates.
A number of factors — such as rising US interest rates, the recurrence of big fluctuations in global currencies, and the widening dispersion of equity returns across sectors and regions — may have helped to create an increasingly conducive environment for hedge - fund strategies, which have seen a positive turnaround in performance in recent quarters.
Moderate interest rates were associated with a whole range of subsequent returns over the following decade, and we know that those outcomes were 90 % correlated with the level of valuations at the beginning of those periods (on reliable measures such as market cap / GDP, price / revenue, Tobin's Q, the margin - adjusted Shiller P / E, and others we've presented over time - see Ockham's Razor and the Market Cycle).
What we have really seen over the past several years, in terms of the appreciation of markets and the decline of interest rates based on what the Fed has been doing, is a result which has eliminated the possibility of investors in bonds and stocks to earn an adequate return relative to their expected liabilities.
Gross called the rate of return, discovered by Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel, a «historical freak, a mutation likely never to be seen again» in a «New Normal economy» in which GDP growth is «slowing significantly.»
[For mathematically inclined clients, a simplistic, but useful way to see this is to examine the dividend discount model: Price = Dividend / (k - g) where g is the long - term growth rate of dividends and k is the long - term return required by investors, written as the sum of the risk free rate and a risk premium (k = Rf + z).
If the Fed returned Fed Funds to its lower bound level in the context of a recession, I would expect to see 10 year rates fall substantially perhaps to 1 percent without any QE or forward guidance.
How about us retirees with conservative portfolios, e.g., 60 % bonds, 30 % stocks, 10 % cash, what kind of expected returns do you see during rising interest rates?
Seeing as how the stock market returns around 9 % on average, why would it be so hard to maintain a 4 - 6 % withdrawal rate?
In this blog, we continue the analysis to see if there is a relationship between the magnitude of interest rate change and magnitude of active return of the low volatility index relative to the S&P Read more -LSB-...]
You would think that returns would start going up with a rise in interest rates, but I'm not really seeing this yet.
As it turned out, we raised interest rates weeks before the commitment expired because we saw signs that inflation was returning to its target more rapidly than we anticipated.
I have had some business leaders tell me that they have been surprised to see, for example, companies in Asia pursuing investments with implicit returns of around 3 to 4 per cent, well below most companies» hurdle rates.
Thus, if we look at bonds from a historical perspective, interest rates are very low — which is great for those borrowing money — but not so great for those that wish to see higher rates of interest, and return, on their money.
If you have bonds mixed in with your stocks you'll see a different average rate of return.
Lastly, we look to see if there is a great history of reinvestment of the free cash - flow as well as a significant opportunity to reinvest free cash - flow and earn above average rates of return.
But See's is a rare business, and as Buffett points out, companies that can reinvest capital at high rates of return are still attractive businesses to own:
You can easily see the impact of retirement withdrawals, rates of return, different levels of spending and income and more...
Borrowing rates will rise for governments, home buyers and other long - term borrowers, while savers will see more returns on conservative holdings such as savings accounts and it should become easier to fund pension savings.
We've seen you'll need to make an average net return of at least your mortgage rate for investing to be more profitable than paying off your mortgage.
He also noted that it is a very poor time to buy corporate bonds (high yield bond index yield 4.93 %) and Gundlach sees a negative return for the S&P in 2018 as the rates rout eventually gives the equity market the yips.
Canadian venture capitalists were seen as requiring higher rates of return or lower risk than their U.S. and Chinese counterparts, and there was a perceived talent gap between the quality of Canadian and American venture capitalists.
Short term interest rates remain near zero, 10 - year bond yields have declined below 2 %, and our estimate of 10 - year S&P 500 total returns has declined to just 1.4 % (see Ockham's Razor and the Market Cycle for the arithmetic behind these historically - reliable estimates).
2017 could see rates return to slightly higher, but still very affordable mortgage rates:
I won't have that so I see a third option as maintaining a permanent - ish portfolio, then diversifying into property at or near retirement by paying off a buy to let mortgage (unless rising interest rates — or poor returns — have already made this cost effective).
With PPC rates skyrocketing, most companies don't even see returns right away and have to count on repeat customers or referrals.
We see future returns driven primarily by income in fixed income and earnings growth in equities, rather than by a re-rating spurred by a decline in rates and risk.
We see the Federal Reserve's (Fed's) interest rate hikes being put on hold for now amid lackluster growth and economic uncertainty, while the European Central Bank (ECB) looks to be running into diminishing returns from negative rates.
One application that has seen immediate return for companies adopting machine learning capable AI is Multi-Echelon Inventory Optimization (MEIO), which has been shown to reduce inventories by 30 % while maintaining or improving customer fill rates.
It's clear to see that both lending platforms have refined the process and found a formula for success, investors are enjoying consistent returns and borrowers are getting great rates.
Despite the recent decline, further significant falls in loan approvals will be required to return the rate of housing credit growth to a level that is sustainable in the medium term (see «Box C» for further details).
In particular, Russo mentioned that Nestle can invest large amounts of money in emerging markets and see high rates of return.
That's good news to economists, who want to see the labor force participation rate return to pre-recession levels of about 66 percent.
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