It's quite hard to have both — a world that likes fossil fuel readily gives permission to CCS going forward, but doesn't really
see huge segments of the energy market taken by renewable energy.
Not exact matches
I think if we
see easier lending standards (which the banks are talking about) and a healthy economy, then the
segment can grow, but probably nothing
huge — perhaps in the single digits.
The canned wine and single serve market
segment has been maturing in recent years, but one reason that it has not
seen a
huge number of new brands might be the barriers of entry that make it hard for small and mid-sized brands to test the
segment without a
huge commitment.
The
segment continues to
see unprecedented growth, even with a
huge variety of options already on offer.
As such, what can be said with a fair degree of surety is that we are on the verge of
seeing a
huge influx of tablet devices in the business
segment; and that the majority of them will be the Apple iPad.
So the
huge backing that the Kindle Fire has received can also be
seen as early signs of the tablet
segment beginning to settle down while more are drawn to the tablet toting crowd.
Along those lines, has the following been tried (again, forgive if I'm asking something with an obvious answer published somewhere): 1) pick starting projection dates and subsequent run paths 2) example for (1): start 1980, run forward 5 years; start 1982, run forward 5 years; start 1984 (run to 1989) etc etc 3) at each start we proceed as with the 1979 directive; ie calibrate with several months of starting year data 4) thus the latest such (example) run where we could compare against actual data would be an initialization in 2008 and run forward for 5 years to 2013 5) the advantage of the above (and I recognize that there is a
huge amount of work involved in crunching these simulations) is that we could
see the starting temp and 5 year projections against the historical record for a number of overlapping
segments.
Yes, that's not exactly a
huge number compared to the Leafs and the Model 3s of this world — but given the outsized impact of larger vehicles, I'm excited to
see signs that electrification may be gaining traction in this
segment too.
As they are essentially an «operating
segment» of MetLife, they benefit from the
huge brand name and already have some fantastic official ratings as we will
see below.
The USA experienced
huge upstream investment and growth between 2010 and 2013, so 2014 - 2016 may
see the midstream and downstream
segments play catch - up.