Sentences with phrase «year graph of»

A year - by - year graph of actual renewable production would be more informative in the IPCC release.
In these four years the graph of my career has always taken an upward trend.

Not exact matches

Interest graph targeting takes advantage of the insights that Flipboard has built up in its five years of serving readers, cofounder and CEO Mike McCue said in an interview before the launch.
That's exactly what has happened over the last month, as shown in this graph of the yield on the 10 year US treasury bond for the last year (keep in mind that yields going up means prices going down):
And mortgage refinancing has been one of the most important reasons why the economy has continued to move forward in the last few years, despite the stagnation in real wages, which is what is show in this next graph of average hourly wages divided by consumer prices to give us «real hourly wages»:
Here's a daily graph of the S&P 500 since the beginning of this year:
In fact, in the 10 years previous to the January 2011 cut - off of the graph, Canadian light oil sold (in Edmonton) at a $ 2 per barrel premium to the average cost of U.S. Saudi Light oil imports because of our access to premium - priced markets in the mid-continent.
For example, if you look at a graph of the 10 - year Treasury rate from the height of its peak in 1981, at 15.41 %, to the bottom in June 2016 (during Brexit), at 1.49 %, the chart looks more like a roller - coaster ride versus a simple straight line down.
As you can see in the graph below, from the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, pollen levels have been getting worse each year, for at least the last 20 years, as carbon dioxide levels rise:
The graph below shows the yield of the US government 10 - year bond (white line with shading beneath; right axis) and CORE inflation (light orange line; left axis) during the same period.
While there have been improvements in some labour market indicators, the number of people who have been unemployed for over a year has remained frustratingly high since the end of the recession, as shown in the graph below.
* For graphs of historic Euribor and EONIA swap rates, right click on the links in angle brackets below, and select «Related Graph» 1 week 2 week 3 week 1 month 2 month 3 month 4 month 5 month 6 month 7 month 8 month 9 month 10 month 11 month 1 year
The graph above, supplied by Bloomberg's Tom Orlik on Twitter, reveals the education levels of new investors in China's stock market as of April this year.
«Often in the hands of entrepreneurs or families, small businesses with up to 99 employees are typically more flexible when economic shifts occur but can lack the deep pockets to survive a major decline in the economy,» notes the Index besides a graph showing a sharp decline in wages during the worst years of the economic crisis and a steep increase over the last three quarters of last year.
Because each of the graphs covers years of sales, we can see the ups and downs of seasonality, competition, and market trends.
Your graphs are interesting but at the end of five years they still seem to be tending down.
Non-residential building approvals have increased to be above the levels of recent years and there is a large pipeline of public infrastructure investment to be completed (Graph 4).
Here's a graph of what the value should be at the end of each year, of course the stock market has large swings up and down so this is in a perfect world of 7 % compounding each year.
It's interesting to note that expenditure on US GDP excluding housing construction was still growing at a rate of 3 1/2 per cent through the latest year (Graph 3).
Growth in industrial production picked up during the course of last year, as did export growth, probably a result of rising Chinese demand (Graph 6).
An average of the results from the major surveys shows conditions were moderating in the second half of last year, after a strong first half, but they were still at a high level at the end of the year (Graph 12).
Here is a graph of CIT rates and CIT revenues for OECD countries over the last 30 years (click on the graph to open a larger version in another window):
The latest national accounts are now a bit dated, but they show a high rate of growth, over the year to the September quarter, of just over 4 per cent (Graph 10).
Weak residential construction has also weighed on aggregate demand over the first half of this year, although building approvals and liaison reports point to some stabilisation in the period ahead (Graph 5).
Prices rose in response, with Australia's terms of trade reaching the highest level in at least 150 years (Graph 1).
For those who prefer simpler methods, a third measure, which just takes out volatile food items and petrol, and adjusts for the recent change to the child care rebate, shows essentially the same trend over the past couple of years, though at a slightly lower rate (Graph 15).
Excluding China, for which we do not have comparable quarterly accounts, the region in aggregate has recorded positive growth since the September quarter of last year (Graph 5).
Over the past decade there has been little growth in manufacturing output and the level of employment has declined, particularly over the past couple of years (Graph 3).
Based on these developments, we expect Australia's terms of trade to rise by another 5 per cent or so this year, but to fall gradually thereafter (Graph 9).
Given the large number of borrowers switching to P&I loans, it's not surprising that scheduled housing loan repayments have increased over the past year (Graph 3).
Graph 8 shows the net result of the linkage: a 1 per cent increase in the real cash rate, lasting for two years, would raise the exchange rate by around 3 per cent and would trim 0.3 per cent off inflation, with a lag which reaches its peak effect in ten quarters.
This will lead GDP to be higher than otherwise by between about 1/2 and 3/4 of a percentage point over the course of two years (Graph 1).
That said, the equation fits the cycle pretty well (see Graph 5)[8] and Graph 6 shows the impact on GDP growth of a 1 per cent increase in the real cash rate, maintained for two years.
As a share of total household sector disposable income, the cash flow effect in this scenario is estimated be less than 0.2 per cent on average per annum over each of the next three years (Graph 7).
[1] The graph only goes back to 2008 because SKX only reported the share of its top four suppliers in the years prior.
This has been particularly important in bringing about the sharp convergence of bond yields that we have seen around the world over the past few years (Graphs 3 and 4).
Currently, business investment is equivalent to around 16 per cent of GDP — not far below its peak level in the past four decades — and is expected to rise a little further over the next couple of years (Graph 2).
Of the $ 50 billion increase in the past couple of years in total non-government bond outstandings (offshore plus local issuance), almost two - thirds has been within the local market (Graph 7Of the $ 50 billion increase in the past couple of years in total non-government bond outstandings (offshore plus local issuance), almost two - thirds has been within the local market (Graph 7of years in total non-government bond outstandings (offshore plus local issuance), almost two - thirds has been within the local market (Graph 7).
For turnover in FX derivatives, several things stand out (Graph 4): (i) activity has generally risen over the past decade even when scaled by a measure of cross-border transactions; (ii) developed Asian markets stand out as having a high degree of turnover; (iii) there was a particularly strong increase in turnover in these markets between 2013 and 2016; and (iv) FX derivatives turnover in emerging Asian economies has also increased significantly in the past few years, but remains a small part of the global market.
A further comparison in the graph below of distributions as a percentage of net asset value shows that venture capital distributions have averaged nearly 14 % per year since 1980 which compares quite favorably to average annual buyout distributions of about 15 % over the same period.
It will show a graph of most website's organic search engine traffic over a period of the last 30 days, year, two years, or all time.
You can see from the graph that if the financial system melts down before the end of the year, and I believe this event is quite possible, HYG could plunge.
Graph 2 shows the estimate of profit growth in the coming year for the 10 years from 1987/88 to 1996/97.
This initiated a further decline in 10 - year government bond yields, which fell to all - time lows for nine large euro area countries including France, Ireland and Spain by 26 November, the end of the period under review (Graph 5, right - hand panel).
Structured finance thus boosted the investor base for these loans, which accounted for approximately 40 % of syndicated lending in recent years (Graph A, second panel).
Securitisation markets have also shown signs of a revival in recent years, especially in the United States (Graph A, third panel).
The MOVE index suggested that US Treasury volatility was expected to be very low, while the flat swaption skew for the 10 - year Treasury note denoted a low demand to hedge higher interest rate risks, even on the eve of the inception of the Fed's balance sheet normalization (Graph 9, right - hand panel).
The line graph below shows average mortgage rates assigned to home loans in three different categories, over the last year or so (at time of publication).
The terms of trade rose by 2.3 per cent in the September quarter 2004, to reach a 30 - year high, and are likely to have increased again in the December quarter (Graph 35).
The yield on 10 - year bonds was 6.60 per cent in early November, a rise of 1.1 percentage points over the past six months (Graph 30).
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