Sentences with phrase «think headline numbers»

«I don't think headline numbers that give a sense of precision we don't have are either necessary or helpful.

Not exact matches

In fact, it is thinking of lowering the 6.5 % threshold for a short - term rate hike because it believes the headline number still gives too optimistic a picture of the situation in the labour market.
«The $ 100 million, obviously — we don't have enough cash on hand, I don't think anybody does, in order to deal with an outcome as extreme as him picking a number out of the air without any particular basis, doing one of those headline - grabbing lawsuits,» Denton told Capital.
I also think they'll see the numbers that Holloway was putting up on social media / Youtube / promotion and they love having a couple superfights to headline MSG.
Your not wrong, I remember a good number of years back we would give our say on Stokes footballing abilities leading up to a game and I remember thinking that they will use those headlines hanging on locker room wall against us and then we would get bulldozed during the game.
A number of... I thought of my friend when Toby Young started making headlines... of tweets and articles, some dating back over a decade, were cobbled together to present Read More...
With hurricane Arthur headlining the news as throwing a possible wet blanket on 4th of July fireworks shows along the Northeast coast and with a new record being set each passing day for the longest period between major (Category 3 or greater) hurricane landfalls anywhere in the U.S. (3,173 days and counting), we thought that now would be a good time to discuss a new paper which makes a tentative forecast as to what we can expect in terms of the number of Atlantic hurricanes in the near future (next 3 - 5 years).
Yes, it's true that the latest numbers are an improvement over a similar survey four years ago (which was also roughly in line with Gallup at the time, showing that 52 percent of respondents agree that humans are at least half - responsible for climate change), but the headline result these reports picked up on — that 96 percent of respondents think climate change is happening — is moot.
Aaannnddd: I'm still the only contributor to this thread who has read Lewis (to the extent of working out where he is getting his numbers from, rather than simply reading the headline and thinking «hmm, I like that conclusion, I'll take it».
One of my lines in a column — in which a number of people thought I was insulting them personally — was that if Bush said the Earth was flat, the mainstream media would have stories with the headline: «Shape of Earth — Views Differ.»
These numbers reflect an appetite for the weekly dose of thought - provoking, insightful journalism practiced by the fifth, which often makes headlines and influences public policy.
The ABA said of our blog articles, «It's hard to resist the infectious numbered - list headlines that keep us reading their chatty, first - person posts answering questions we hadn't yet thought to ask.»
I audibly wish, just about every day, that people would get past the cash flow headline number and start thinking IRR.
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