Of course, it's going to get you shunned and banned by all right
thinking lockstep rubber stamp «journalists».
Not exact matches
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.
We
think wealth management firms will also move in
lockstep when it comes to bolstering their ability to show how their advisers fulfill fiduciary duties
Many Atheist
think of all Christians as «
lockstep» where as you can barely get Christians to agree on everything within a single denomination, so explain how do you figure this grand Christian theocracy would come into being?
You do, however, ooze contempt for anyone who isn't
lockstep with your
thoughts and opinions, evidenced by your posts to me above.
My dad used to
think that all whites were
lockstep in
thinking as well.
(Just remember, children don't develop in
lockstep; there's always a lot of room for «normal development,» so don't
think the ages guidelines are hard and fast.)
I believe inflation is understated in the US, and I
think that the idea is growing in the populace, while Ph.D. economists stay in
lockstep with the guild, and deny it.
Indeed, seemingly unrelated assets moved in
lockstep, and portfolios once
thought to be diversified did not weather the storm.
Different sectors of the global economy don't move in perfect
lockstep, so natively the return drivers of the assets are 60 - 90 % correlated (the asset side of correlation,
think of how the cost of capital moves in a correlated way across companies).
These don't move in perfect
lockstep, so natively the return drivers of the risky components of the assets are 60 - 90 % correlated over the long run (the asset side of correlation,
think of how the cost of capital moves in a correlated way across companies).
The ideal should not be scientists who
think in
lockstep, but those in the proud mold of the skeptic, who takes a hard look at the data and proves conventional wisdom wrong.
Climatologists have generally
thought that the various part of the spectrum would vary in
lockstep with changes in total solar irradiance.
Energy and economic growth always grew in
lockstep, went the conventional argument, and to
think otherwise was dangerously naive.