Sentences with phrase «think going rate»

Hey Peter, yes I would require Property Management companies for this rental, I think going rate is 10 % of gross monthly rent?

Not exact matches

This point — and again this goes back to Evans this morning — can best be grasped by thinking about the»70s inflation, when rates were high.
«We are now in a meaningful uptrend in terms of interest rates, and I think that's just going to be a huge headwind for this entire sector.»
The members of the Bank of Canada's policy committee, like plenty of others, thought they were going to cut interest rates in January.
«Observers seem to think that go - getters exert less effort than slackers, even when they're working on the same task, and even though they themselves rated the assignment as equally difficult.
«I thought, if I buy now, this is probably the lowest interest rate that is probably going to be around for the foreseeable future.»
But if you think interest rates are going to stay low, it's a move in the wrong direction.
«There are thoughts there is going to be rate - lock selling.
«Whenever interest rates go up, most likely we see some softening of prices, but we don't think it will be bad enough to hurt the economy in a meaningful way.»
«So I think each of us is going to be taking the developments since the December meeting into account and writing down our new rate paths as we go into the March meeting, and I wouldn't want to prejudge that,» he said, in comments before the House Financial Services Commitee.
«We think it would be very mild, and we think if you compare the States with other advanced economies around the world, we still think the States is going to be in quite a good position to take the appropriate monetary action and cut interest rates,» he added.
The 2.9 % rise in December average hourly earnings «might put a little bit more pressure on the Fed to accelerate the path [of interest rate hikes], but I really don't think it's going to be that significant a push,» said Dan North, chief economist at Euler Hermes North America.
I think that the answer is yes [it's a buy], unless you think interest rates are going to skyrocket, and I don't.»
If the Fed raises rates this year, as most of his colleagues expect, «things could go okay, but you are creating a risk of further declines in where market - based inflation expectations are, basically to the credibility of our inflation target, and I think you are creating downside risks our pursuit of our employment mandate.»
«If I just set politics aside for a minute, I would be thinking about the interest rates, which are now going down for Russia,» he said.
«I think you're going to see higher interest rates, I think you're going to see higher growth rates from GDP, that's going to benefit Goldman in a lot of ways, one of which is M&A activity should be picking up, particularly as cash gets repatriated from abroad and companies use that cash to purchase other companies,» he argued.
«I don't think those are challenges that are going to keep young households permanently out of the housing market, but it may keep their homeownership rate near historic lows for likely the indefinite future,» Ralph McLaughlin, Trulia's chief economist, told the Wall Street Journal.
Dominion Bond Rating Service (DBRS), which Hunter thinks should go the way of Enron's accounting firm, will probably always have a hard time justifying its rating of non-bankRating Service (DBRS), which Hunter thinks should go the way of Enron's accounting firm, will probably always have a hard time justifying its rating of non-bankrating of non-bank ABCP.
«Look, if you think we can have zero interest rates forever, maybe it won't matter, but in my view one of two things is going to happen with all that debt.
There is a «mental model of what people think rates will go to, and for a lot of people it is 5 %,» says Russ Koesterich, head of asset allocation for the Global Allocation team at investing giant BlackRock (blk).
But we knew, people like Richard and others, knew we had cut interest rates to as low as we thought, then, they could go.
SARA EISEN: Stan, do you think this is gonna be a tricky task in normalizing raising interest rates, now that we are starting to really see inflation take hold?
While most economists thought short - term interest rates would end 2016 at 1.2 %, we said rates would go much higher than that, perhaps as high as 2.6 %.
«We think we're buying this asset at the right time and with the combined teams... we're going to have a stronger story in the marketplace and I think we could put the Coveris Americas assets back onto the growth rate,» Olivier told analysts.
Once, again, we think interest rates will go up faster than that.
And now that our careers are going, we're looking at maxing out two traditional 401Ks and two Roth IRAs this year, and we see the Roth IRA portion as a small hedge against rising future tax rates (or what I think is a bit more likely to happen — tax brackets that don't keep pace with inflation, so keep sucking in more and more people to higher brackets).
«If we get another month were jobs are over 200,000 and the employment rate slips, that's enough for me to think they go in September.»
GRIFFETH: Before you go, let me push back a little bit on your thought on interest rates and their impact on the stock market.
I have gone into this scenario into some detail because I think it is extremely unlikely that China can maintain current growth rates except under very implausible assumptions.
-- > The value of investing in relationships for the long - haul — > Investing in your health and longevity as a way to increase your lifetime earnings — > Why longer life expectancies should change the way you think about investing — > The shockingly low rate of personal savings and investment in the US — > My favorite part of the interview: whether we can reasonably expect the US markets to keep going up at their long - term average 7 % per year after inflation, or whether that was a unique period of US expansion which won't be repeated again.
«I think they're fair now, so I wouldn't want to see them go much higher, but I'm not concerned about interest rates,» she said.
Apparently, the drive to «normalize» rates is stronger than the drive to boost prices, which Chair Yellen thinks is going to happen on its own, just around the next corner.
Policy is implemented through the cash rate, but no one thinks this goes directly into cost - of - capital or similar calculations.
WILLIAM DUDLEY, NEW YORK FEDERAL RESERVE PRESIDENT: I do n`t think we know exactly how many more rate hikes we «re going to do this year.
I could definitely figure out how to funnel expenses through a part time business... I think I keep thinking along the lines that I'm going to be paying the same tax rate after retirement, but reality is you could get pretty lean and mean if one focused on it.
Yet the first thing you discuss in your post is that you don't think rates are going to rise....
«If rates go up — and I don't think they will — then the increase in yields would hurt metals and mining company prices as money left these assets and moved into fixed income.»
Nevertheless, barring significant trend shifts in key variables, the Fed's going to continue to slowly raise, for reasons that aren't so clear to me but I think amount to: rates have been very low for very long, and as the economy gets back to normal, rates should too.
The thinking goes that if rates go up, stock prices tend to go down.
Think about it, if you have a 60 % win rate over the last year, do you ever know which trade is going to fall into the 60 % winner column and which will fall into the 40 % loser column?
You would think that returns would start going up with a rise in interest rates, but I'm not really seeing this yet.
«I think we're moving back to an environment where there is going to be more volatility, more sector rotation, and higher rates will definitely change what works.»
I don't think rates are going too much higher over the next 2 years, but they will eventually go up.
But when you think about some of the major things that you guys have put behind you, and even the industry, when we think about the run rate going forward, are the majority of those items behind you?
You'd think that corporate debt would grow in proportion to total sales, as this additional debt is used to fund investments in productive activities that create more sales and contribute to the economy, and that higher sales, and presumably higher earnings would create a proportionate increase in the value of the company, and thus in its stock price, and that they all go up together, not in lockstep but over time more or less at the same rate.
Think what happens to property prices if rates go too high.
But going back to your hypothetical question: if you cut back your consulting hours and put 11 hours into Uber instead, do you think you'd be making effectively the same hourly rate?
«If you have a company that is growing earnings and interest rates are going up, I don't think it's a bad thing,» Liu said.
Tell that to commenter Earlyretired above who thinks we might go back to Jimmy Carter 10 % + interest rates!
WESSEL: I think he's going to continue to raise interest rates.
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