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The yield gap or yield ratio is the ratio of the dividend yield of an equity and the yield of a long-term government bond. Typically equities have a higher yield (as a percentage of the market price of the equity) thus reflecting the higher risk of holding an equity. [1] [2]
History of money; Monetary reform; ... Australia – Superannuation in Australia; ... Dividend yield. Yield gap; Return on equity. DuPont analysis;
The place is important in demonstrating the course, or pattern, of cultural or natural history in New South Wales. The Mullumbimby Hydro-electric Power Station, Lavertys Gap Weir and Water Races meet this criterion at State level as the fourth hydro-electric power station complex to be built in NSW and the fifth in mainland Australia.
The yield gap between 10-year Treasuries and equivalent German bunds - recently around 160 basis points - has shrunk in recent months but remains around its five-year average of 167 basis points.
It is likely that this site retains archaeological evidence of a seminal, ephemeral, and colourful event in Australia’s history. It may constitute rare evidence of an inter-town police station, an integral part of the main goldrush roads. As the Bendigo railway beyond Sunbury opened in stages from 1859, The Gap’s fortunes declined dramatically.
Yield mapping or yield monitoring is a technique in agriculture of using GPS data to analyze variables such as crop yield and moisture content in a given field. It was developed in the 1990s and uses a combination of GPS technology and physical sensors, such as speedometers , to track crop yields, grain elevator speed, and combine speed.
Australian government debt does not take into account government funds held in reserve within statutory authorities such as the Australian Government Future Fund, which at 30 September 2016 was valued at $122.8 billion, [5] and the Reserve Bank of Australia. Nor is the net income of these statutory authorities taken into account.
A series of major bushfires following severe drought conditions in the state of Victoria in Australia, occurred during the summer of 1943–44. It was the driest summer ever recorded in Melbourne until 2002 with just 46 millimetres or 1.81 inches falling, a third of the long-term average. [1]