P.S. — just for the record, Lennar's real earnings yesterday were substantially
worse than the headline GAAP - manipulated EPS that ignited the rally in the homebuilder sector.
Not exact matches
The
headlines and the actual numbers have been at odds for a solid year, as month - over-month declines from 2016's torrid pace have made the overall market look far
worse than it is.
Average hourly earnings rose more
than expected, at 2.2 %, which helped lessen the blow of a
worse than expected
headline number and the July number was revised to 2.0 % from 1.9 %; average weekly hours increased to 34.5 from 34.4; and manufacturing added 14,000 workers after a revised 16,000 loss in July.
This means that, over holding periods longer
than a day, actual fund returns will be different from the
headline 1.25 x due to compounding effects, for better or
worse.
Today's
headline number of -56.60 B was
worse than the Investing.com forecast of -52.60 B.
When asked about a massacre,
headline of the day, Jesus said «those people were no
worse than you, repent or you will all perish just like them»
During the years from 2007 - 2012 we had players that were even
worse than the current squad even if we exclude the two guys making the
headlines, and still somehow managed to make the top 4.
maybe you don't understand that Wenger's words are simply an attempt to recover some of the market value that was lost due to the way they have mishandled his contract negotiations, which means that everyone, once again, knows that we have little to no leverage when it comes to negotiating a transfer... much like we did with RVP, when we sold the EPL trophy to ManU for less
than $ 25 million... any reputable team with a sporting director would never have allowed this situation to occur again and if they had heads would roll... if handled correctly the
worst case scenario would have seen us get a minimum of $ 65 million for a player of his ilk in the present economic climate and we could have used those funds to purchase the best available striker in the early days of the transfer window... just imagine what outsiders must think about the state of our team if all you did was read the
headlines... sadly, things might just might be
worse than they think
I know this Icee - plus - cookies combo is no
worse than much of the junk food out there, but somehow that
headline, «Milk is... [Continue reading]
On all these counts, Greece is in a
worse position
than the USA, so it is even
worse off
than the
headline figure would indicate.
«There's a local paper rolled up in a rubber band One more sad story's one more
than I can stand Just once, how I'd like to see the
headline say Not much to print today can't find nothing
bad to say
There are a few
bad apples, with any occurrence of transgressions making
headline news, but «the Hollywood version of this is much more interesting
than the reality,» he says.
2011 was a year where the
worst comedies made more
headlines than the best (* ahem * Bucky Larson).
Couple the tabloid
headlines with Pelliano's wire - tapping and all of Garry's «paranoias about show business turned out to be way
worse than his paranoid fantasies» said Apatow.
The gangsta rapper turned actor, in the news this week for taking his MTV Movie Awards loss to Paul Walker far
worse than he should, enjoys something of a rebound on this vehicle, the first hit he's
headlined since Are Were There Yet?
In May, the paper reported (in an article given the
headline «Principals Younger and Freer, but Raise Doubts in the Schools») that «schools with academy graduates were less
than half as likely to earn A's and almost twice as likely to earn C's or
worse» as other city schools.
Excuse the
bad pun — especially since Auel's name is pronounced more like «owl»
than «all» — but there's no time to dither over
headlines when one has breaking news to report.
That makes
headline earnings look
worse than they are.
The world has some rough customers and often offers some depressing
headlines in the news, and but when you start looking at all of the ways you could help vulnerable people or animals, simply by donating your points and miles or cash back, and start thinking about what effort and energy it took to start these worthy causes in the first place, you might be reminded that there's still far more good in this world
than bad.
AS THE LAWRENCE WEINER RETROSPECTIVE at the Whitney Museum fades to white under multiple coats of Kilz and latex paint, and his various exuberant ephemera take up residence at LA MoCA before wending their way back to their rightful property owners; as Tate Modern and the ICA London emerge from momentary spells of whispered
headlines, random sketching, streams of consciousness, and face slapping; as New York's New Museum concludes its vestigial assault on the Work of Art, not to mention the etiquette of proper spacing, and as visitors to the new building experience the
worst case of buyer's remorse since the reopening of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; as the Metropolitan Museum's Dutch paintings readjust to the staid organizing principles of artist's name, date, and genre rather
than hanging according to who bought what from whom (on whose advice) and resold it to so - and - so, who then donated it to the Met; and as the scent of modesty - prosaic, charcoal filtered, crystalline - emanates from the 2008 Whitney Biennial, now is as good a time as any to talk about money.
Part of the confusion stems form the Duke University press release which used the
headline «Global Warming More Moderate
Than Worst - Case Models».
But what really got my goat was their prominent link from that article to an article from the day before, with the sensationally
bad - sounding
headline, «NASA Data
Worse Than Climate-Gate Data, Space Agency Admits.»
The only problem is how it gets
headlined, and the emphasis on «is
worse than we thought» model projections from this point forward.
Not to disappoint,
headlines from the first major climate change story of the new year claim «Climate change models underestimate likely temperature rise, report shows,» and it's clearly
Worse Than We Thought.
You could do
worse than learn from the Chinese transition that's now taking shape, albeit away from the
headlines.
Wise Law Blog 140 Law — Legal
Headlines for Friday, September 6, 2013 Here are the leading legal
headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Friday, September 6, 2013: · Tim Hortons coin thrower found guilty of assault · Japan's Fukushima region fishery products banned in South Korea · More law profs respond to Obama's call to make law school two years · Recent Publications From the Canadian Judicial Council on Court Management ·
Worse than PRISM: the NSA's war against Internet encryption...
In a somewhat hyperbolic
headline, WebMD described a fractured hip as a «fate
worse than death».
In spite of big
headline life insurance challenges like Heath Ledger and David Carradine, the truth is that life insurance companies would rather pay a death benefit
than fight legal battles and get bowled over by
bad press.
On the other hand, there isn't any
bad news (other
than some pessimistic comments by billionaire investors), and after the seemingly never - ending stream of negative
headlines over the past few weeks, an absence of
bad news could be enough to fuel a mild rebound like this.
Stockton is a waaaaaay harder sell
than any other normal city its size due to its recent
bad history and tendency to make
headlines for all the wrong reasons.