Sentences with phrase «stronger than the consensus»

Not exact matches

The ADP and ISM reports suggest a weaker than consensus report, although unemployment claims suggest stronger job growth.
The cruise operator said that earnings growth was stronger than most had expected after posting a 9 % boost to revenue, and guidance for the first quarter and full year in 2017 was better than the consensus forecast among those following the stock.
Fundamentally the consensus is the Euro is stronger than theSwiss Franc.
This pattern of a stronger - than - expected contribution from US consumers was reflected in July's retail sales report, which not only came in well ahead of consensus expectations, but also included significant upward revisions to the weak figures seen in May and June.
Hence the Beijing «consensus», a «soft» document with no binding character on governments or the UN as an intergovernmental body, proves stronger than hard law, which it reinterprets by stealth.
Among strongest consensus bets of year on Ohio, though public loves low - profile weeknight favorites even more than Saturday games
These findings are stronger than those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations group that defines the scientific and diplomatic consensus on global warming.
Quite the opposite in fact — Apple is selling more Macs than ever, and, knock on wood, there's a strong consensus amongst developers that Snow Leopard is going to be the best release of Mac OS X yet.
Results using consensus analyst forecasts rather than lagged earnings to calculate E / P over the 1977 - 2006 subperiod are similar, but not as strong.
And the slightly stronger industrial output, in turn, was driven mainly by the 1.9 % surge in manufacturing output, which is stronger than the +1.7 % consensus and is significantly faster than the 0.6 % rise during the previous month.
There is a much broader consensus on the need for action than there was when President George H.W. Bush negotiated — and the Senate ratified — the Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992 and much stronger support for action than when we completed the Kyoto Protocol in 1997.
Personally I think that recent research (including several studies discussed in the above post, published after the IPCC AR5 cutoff date) make a strong case that internal variability (ocean cycles) are responsible for more of the slowdown in surface warming than changes in external forcings, but there's not a consensus about that yet.
Literature analyses (e.g. Cook et al., 2013; Oreskes et al., 2004) generally find a stronger consensus than opinion surveys such as ours.
These findings are stronger than those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations group that defines the scientific and diplomatic consensus on global warming.
My «belief» (more like general sense of how it works rather than a belief — I think that «belief» is too strong a word) is that absent hard proof otherwise, it isn't irrelevant that a «consensus» of expert opinion says that a certain interpretation is probably correct.
As the lists below show, there is a stronger consensus on global warming than virtually any topic in science.
TSI is increasing and the ENSO appears to be moving back towards a push in extra heating; but that's more of an educated guess than a strong consensus supported prediction.
A recent draft of an international consensus report offers stronger - than - ever evidence that global warming is driven by human activity.
And given the typically low profile of historic skepticism relative to consensus messaging (i.e. veiled or relegated to unofficial channels or graffiti etc.) this may have been stronger than its surviving footprint suggests.
While we found that higher expertise was associated with a greater likelihood of viewing global warming as real and harmful, this relationship was less strong than for political ideology and perceived consensus.
I strongly believe in the law of gravity, but I do not tell anyone they «can not fly» because the law of gravity says (with a much stronger consensus than climate science) that every thing that goes up WILL come back down almost always safely (unless we launch it with enough velocity to escape Earth's gravity).
Rather than a purely technical mechanism, Emergent Consensus is a conviction that all participants in the Bitcoin ecosystem have a strong enough (economic) incentive to find consensus on a single blockchain, even if their software does not do this automatically.
Juanéda also said there was «strong consensus that Centris.ca, whose development is being accelerated, is a superior and more modern tool than Realtor.ca.
The general consensus is that strong demand will push prices up in 2016, but at a more moderate pace than 2015.
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