Other sources (I suppose I shall have to relocate these) have reported that solar generation in the US doubled from end of 2009 to end of 2010 (projected), as did manufacturing capacity; that's a one -
time yearly growth rate of 100 %.
Not exact matches
A 31 %
yearly growth rate is less than the 42 % we calculated last
time.
In Boston, the average
yearly academic
growth for charter school students was more than four
times that of their traditional school peers in reading.
Obviously we would desire the highest possible income
growth, but even a 7 %
yearly portfolio «salary raise» should be more than sufficient to outpace inflation over
time.
I spent a lot of
times on my laptop learning about dividend
growth investing, reading the blogs of my fellow bloggers, building a 35k portfolio yielding more than 1000 $ of
yearly dividend income, I went through a restructuring and ended up keeping my job, my wife was pregnant but had a miscarriage... phew... So many things can happen in a year!
The national results show a mild 0.1 % gain, which is the first
time the U.S. has seen
yearly gains since September of 2010, when price
growth was fueled by the first -
time home buyer tax credit in place at the
time.