As you can see, the month of June was
a somewhat average month.
Not exact matches
Even with the 0.3 percent
average hourly earnings gain, consensus is
somewhat tainted by the downward revision to the prior
month from 0.2 percent to 0.1 percent, leaving the year - over-year gain at 2.5 percent.
The financial aggregates are likely to become
somewhat more volatile in coming
months, due to a change to reporting arrangements that will remove some of the smoothing effect generated by
averaging data within individual
months.
While we believe payrolls and
average hourly earnings are both likely to miss consensus estimates, we think the employment report may be
somewhat less important than usual for the monetary policy outlook, because 1) recent data have been firm so we have some room for a miss, 2) the August seasonal issue is now well known so even a
somewhat larger miss may not significantly alter the staff view, and 3) there are several
months between now and December to make up for any weakness in tomorrow's report.
Average hourly earnings remained
somewhat sluggish, up 0.2 % from the previous
month, although that rise was enough to push the annual figure back up, from 2.5 % to 2.8 %.
The balance of opinion on investment receded closer to its historical
average, indicating that plans to increase spending over the next 12
months are
somewhat less widespread than in the previous two surveys (Chart 3).
January through August of 1998 are all in the 14 warmest
months in the satellite record, and that El Niño started when global temperatures were
somewhat chilled; the global
average temperature in May 1997 was 0.14 C (about 0.25 degrees F) cooler than the long - term seasonal norm for May.
Rents
average about $ 995 a
month, making the rent vs. buy calculation
somewhat difficult in some situations.
In the
average 12
month period, value outperforms the equal - weighted market return by 5.6 % (and its
somewhat consistent: value has a 76 % win rate).
Three out of 10 households bring in at least $ 100,000 a
month,
average weekly pay is $ 922, and the economy is growing — if
somewhat modestly.
Skinny: Though this is the third of four
months averaging over 80 on the metascore, the tastes are
somewhat acquired.
Rather than define a
somewhat arbitrary threshold for a La Niña / El Niño year (i.e. based on the size of the index and number of
months exceeding a certain threshold) or limiting the analysis to one ENSO index, I first took the
average of the three indices mentioned above (ONI, MEI, and SOI, accounting for the fact that positive SOI indicates La Niña conditions while the opposite is true for ONI and MEI).
I think i see it:
Average monthly temp is a double integral over time (
month) and space on a manifold (earth) of a
somewhat nasty function (http://www.eol.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/weather.cgi?site=fl&fields=tdry&site=fl&units=metric&period=monthly e.g. for the time varying part).
While the potential remains for 2017 keeping warm enough to pip 2016 to warmest - calender - year on record (2016
averaged +0.99 ºC), the model predictions for ENSO thro» the rest of the year which last
month were suggesting an increasing likelihood of an El Nino ahead, these have reversed
somewhat with more neutral conditions being predicted.
April was the first
month for over a year with above
average precipitation in this region,
somewhat relieving the generally dry situation.
Statewide, New Jersey drivers are taking a look at an annual
average of about $ 2400 a year for car insurance, or about $ 200 per
month; this is
somewhat greater than the national
average of $ 1440 per year.
Of course, every company will vary
somewhat in their unique charges but the
average 70 - year old male that does not smoke would probably pay between $ 100 - $ 150 per
month (if the policy was worth $ 10,000).
In fact, though the numbers fluctuated
somewhat month to
month in 2013, each quarter
averaged a higher job count than the previous one.