Use "exposures" in a sentence
exposures example sentences
exposures
1. But the exposures and privations at Caney had left their mark
2. I ran the camera, and have six or seven exposures
3. The sweet aroma of the freshly cut flowers, mostly orange and pink roses, filled his nostrils as he inhaled and filled him with a sense of security and innocence, despite the story he had just been told about what had happened in here at the approximate time of the murder; the quiet room’s involvement in the sordid affair was difficult to visualize, given the bright light from the small crystal chandelier above the table and the sconces by each of the two doors to the ocean front suites and those two with western exposures, but forced Feltus to maintain his objectivity when considering the finer points of the ledge theory
4. Marguerite Higgins, using high sensitivity films and long exposures, took numerous photos of that battle from one of the machine gun bunkers positioned along the north side of her hilltop
5. At the present exposure rate, our least protected ships, our troop transports, will receive lethal radiation exposures in less than nine ergos
6. cancers are linked to chemical exposures in the environment
7. exposures you could have had when you were a
8. by pulling out heavy metals that were previously deposited due to environmental exposures and heavy metals
9. in place options, shoring up their risk exposures and staying on top of
10. Lead and other heavy-metal exposures have been linked to ADHD
11. These exposures should be avoided to allow the cells of the bronchi to recover from chronic irritation and to decrease the burden on the immune
12. exposures occur in the American Great Plains and in
13. On average, your visitor will need 7-13 exposures to your message before getting that click
14. exposures from food and the environment
15. My father finally declared thus: “that meeting, which took place in far away Manchester, England, twenty five years ago gave birth to this gathering, and I am proud to mention that despite her exposures, both during her undergraduate days and in her activities as a beauty queen, she married me a virgin
16. He had found so few things in humanity that seemed beautiful, and his pictures had been pictures of resentments--impish and wonderful exposures by a master of the littleness at the back of brave shows
17. How could two separate exposures have integrated so perfectly, just by chance? Plus, it just didn’t look like a double exposure
18. The semantic meanings of words are unconscious-subconscious exposures and disclosures of all the hidden truths, all the hidden evil of these undead, unseen shit-filth
19. "I have no doubt of it," returned the barber; "but I do not wonder so much at the madness of the knight as at the simplicity of the squire, who has such a firm belief in all that about the island, that I suppose all the exposures that could be imagined would not get it out of his head
20. This is the kind of question that must be decided in advance, and your trading plan should encompass all the possibilities for managing existing positions as well as initiating new exposures
21. A diversified portfolio such as this one helps reduce the overall volatility of your market exposures
22. • Keep Normal Photo saves a normal photo when an HDR (High Dynamic Range) series of photos is taken that blends the best parts of three separate exposures
23. studies support the notion that multiple drug exposures lead to an altered function
24. notion that sensitization occurs during initial drug exposures, and once sensitiza-
25. Lett BT (1989) Repeated exposures intensify rather than diminish the rewarding effects of
26. The reasons were manifold: timing was not easy (being right too early often equals being wrong, with substantial career risk); the directional bet is highly concentrated (unlike security selection that at least benefits from diversified exposures); and cash holdings miss out the equity premium (which was seen to be especially high before the 2000s’ experience)
27. ):• One way to identify risk factors is to examine which factors are effective at explaining realized return variation over time and then to determine empirically if these factors are cross-sectionally “priced”; that is, if assets with high exposures to the candidate factor have significantly different average returns from assets with low exposures to that factor
28. • Although it may seem even more ad hoc to use asset characteristics instead of factor sensitivities, the former are directly observable and might be less noisy measures of true factor risk exposures than historically estimated factor sensitivities
29. Demand effects may play a key role in explaining time-varying risk premia, given the lack of substitutes for market risk exposures
30. Each asset is a bundle of characteristics or systematic factor exposures that largely determine its expected returns
31. In contrast, I refer to active portfolios that vary their risk exposures based on the current market environment, with relatively high turnover (e
32. Still, the last decade’s experience has, rightly, made many investors reconsider the wisdom of static market exposures
33. Equities share some long-term real risk with long-dated Treasuries but they have different exposures to inflation risk, different effective durations, and very different safe haven characteristics; it follows that many drivers of BRP have no impact on equities’ expected returns
34. The value of any option depends crucially on the volatility level of the underlying asset (as well as time horizon and leverage, where leverage is the difference between the current value of the firm’s assets and the value of its debt):• While all corporate stakeholders tend to benefit from rising equity prices, a key difference between the exposures of equity-holders and bondholders is that the former benefit from rising volatility while the latter are hurt by it
35. HF replicators try to identify HFs’ aggregate exposures to relevant rewarded systematic factors, often identifying them with the help of multi-factor regression models
36. Initial factor models explained HF returns using only static linear exposures to major asset classes
37. Such approaches with static asset classes could only capture, in the rearview mirror, HFs’ recent average exposures
38. To better proxy HFs’ current exposures, some studies broadened the menu of factors to include nonlinear exposures (such as synthetic lookback options) and/or dynamic trading strategies (such as a trend-following proxy, merger arbitrage proxy, convertible arbitrage proxy)
39. Such analyses show that, as a group, HFs often have significant risk exposures (albeit time varying) to equities, the small-cap premium, interest rates, and credits
40. Lerner–Schoar–Wongsunwai (2007) present intriguing findings of heterogeneous investor success in this field: PE funds with endowments as limited partners outperform the average fund by nearly 14% (and this can only partly be explained by their earlier exposures)
41. In contrast, the next four chapters focus on popular dynamic strategies that involve dynamic asset weights (changing over time) but static exposures to a given factor or characteristic such as equity value or currency carry
42. (Moreover, even a buy-and-hold portfolio may leave the asset contents relatively unchanged over time—the weights will change due to ordinary price movements, and the names will occasionally change due to corporate actions—but portfolio characteristics and risk exposures will be quite unstable
43. Lakonishok has argued that under any but a metaphysical definition of risk, value stocks’ outperformance cannot be attributed to risk exposures
44. Data for estimating such underlying exposures do not arrive disentangled, but need to be extracted from asset market data with the help of statistical cross-sectional or time series analysis:• These underlying characteristics may be priced inconsistently across assets, leading to an opportunity to “arbitrage” them in cross-asset long–short trades, especially for HFs that can isolate, hedge, lever, and/or short exposures
45. My description of the nature of the four exposures is thus deliberately ambiguous
46. Agarwal–Bakshi–Huij (2007) sort hedge funds based on their exposure to higher moments (changing variance, skewness, and kurtosis) and estimate significant risk prices for these exposures
47. Given typical fund exposures, hedge funds can earn 4%, 1%, and 2% per annum, respectively, from these premia
48. The spectrum of exposures to credit is so wide that it cannot be briefly described
49. If the model is taken at face value, it gives the expected returns of each asset as a function of the asset’s factor exposures or characteristics and estimated expected factor premia
50. However, these estimates are subject to measurement errors (even if we ignore likely time variation in these premia, many factor exposures are estimated with noise), and to specification errors (the model may omit important factors, the assumption of linear relations may be faulty, etc