Sentences with phrase «speculate on broad»

They allow average people to speculate on broad trends, without telling most of them that they are noise traders, and are getting taken for a ride.

Not exact matches

Others have speculated that broader tax changes will be held off until a later date, but the warning from Mr. Rosenberg, who is well - connected on Bay Street, is not a light one.
Still, even in an environment where the market trades in a range of high valuation, it is appropriate to hedge exposure to risk at points where conditions are overvalued, overbought, and overbullish, and to establish more constructive exposure when conditions are overvalued, but oversold on a short - term basis (provided that the broad tone of market action still indicates a general willingness of investors to speculate).
Put simply, when valuation measures are steeply elevated but investors remain inclined to speculate, as evidenced by very broad uniformity of market action and the absence of internal divergences, rich valuations often have little effect on market outcomes.
An administration official said it is premature to speculate on the program, noting that Obama's team has repeatedly announced the broad outlines of its financial rescue initiatives and then worked out the details later.
Based on the new findings, Cimpian and Sutherland speculated that kids might be less likely to revise information about broad categories.
In addition, her talents are thought to be alarmingly broad: She writes novels and short stories, paints, sings in bands, directs movies and documentaries, wins Italian versions of the Oscar, embraces full - frontal nudity in print and onscreen, and can speculate with more than coffeehouse intelligence on excess, God and redemption.
Nearly 15 years ago I wrote a story for MONEY Magazine in which index investing pioneer and Vanguard founder John Bogle worried that the industry's slicing and dicing of broad indexes into ever smaller and specialized slivers was turning the concept of indexing on its head, making it more about speculating which area of the market will outperform than harnessing the power of the broad market in a low - cost efficient way.
MarketingSherpa speculates that the reason for broader testing is that «tweaking» elements based on testing can produce dramatic improvements in campaign results and has proven to be well worth the time and effort required.
What follows is a longer than usual blog post in which I speculate in very broad terms about what might be going on with the lack of law as a label for things that matter.
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