1. In the excel worksheet‚ we combined the 12% non-callable bond maturing in May 05 and the zero coupon STRIPS with the same maturity to get a synthetic bond with semiannual interest payments of $4.125 per $100 par value. The ask and bid prices of the synthetic bond are calculated to be $98.78 and $98.53. Alternatively‚ we combined the non-callable bond maturing in 2000 and the STRIPS 00 to get a synthetic bond to match the callable bond if it was called at the first possible date. The ask and
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definition of cost and the difference between absorption costing vs. variable costing‚ and also if overproducing is an ethical practice or not. Also I will be showing some calculations and data to explain a get a better idea of this entire situation and how we can resolve some problems in management accountant. Cost is the monetary value of goods and services expended to obtain current or future benefits. The way that a cost will be used defines the way it should be computed. When we talk about cost we need
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Global Variables This writing assignment will focus on global variables. A global variable is a variable every module in a program can see‚ meaning that the entire program is its scope (Gaddis‚ 2010). There are both advantages and disadvantages to using global variables and it is my intention to explore some of them here‚ starting with the disadvantages. There seems to be a lot to be said about the disadvantages of using global variables. First and foremost the scope itself can be a disadvantage
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Group Assignment (Groups of five) a) Come up with a research topic b) From the topic indicate the following 1) The dependent variable 2) The independent variable 3) The extraneous variable 4) The Moderating variable 5) The Intervening Variable Research Topic Impact of a tattoo on a helping request‚ Strohmetz‚ D. B.‚ & Moore‚ M. P. (2003‚ March) A psychologist wondered how people would respond to people with tattoos‚ so he studied
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Two Variable Inequality Katherine Courtney MAT221 Phil Le August 25‚ 2013 Inequalities are equations that can be used to determine not just what something could equal but what something cannot equal. It tells us what the relative size is of two values and if they are big or small‚ too much or not enough. Inequalities could make it easier to determine how much someone might need of something in order to make a certain amount of something‚ while also determining
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Plan coffee shop «Coffee Time» Entrepreneurship & New Venture Creation by German Zaripov Business plan coffee «COFFEE-TIME» Content: Introduction 1. Summary of coffee 2. Characteristics of the industry and type of activities 3. Description of products 4. Competitor analysis 5. The marketing plan 6. Production plan 7. Organizational Plan 8. Risk assessment 9. Break-even analysis Conclusion Introduction Restaurants in Spain is one of the riskiest - high costs‚ competition
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Use of Dummy Variables in Testing for Equality Between Sets of Coefficients in Linear Regressions: A Generalization Author(s): Damodar Gujarati Source: The American Statistician‚ Vol. 24‚ No. 5 (Dec.‚ 1970)‚ pp. 18-22 Published by: American Statistical Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2682446 . Accessed: 09/07/2013 18:34 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms
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extraneous variables by using random assignment to experimental conditions and sometimes also by incorporating direct control and/or blocking into the design of the experiment. Each of these strategies—random assignment‚ direct control‚ and blocking—is described as follows; A researcher can directly control some extraneous variables. In the calculus test example‚ the textbook used is an extraneous variable because part of the differences in test results might be attributed to this variable. We could
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descrip DESCRIPTIVES VARIABLES=StudentPreparationSP GPA FBT /STATISTICS=MEAN STDDEV MIN MAX KURTOSIS SKEWNESS. Descriptives Notes | Output Created | 14-NOV-2012 14:18:38 | Comments | | Input | Active Dataset | DataSet1 | | Filter | <none> | | Weight | <none> | | Split File | <none> | | N of Rows in Working Data File | 764 | Missing Value Handling | Definition of Missing | User defined missing values are treated as missing. | | Cases Used | All
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3 Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis Learning Objectives 1. Explain the features of cost-volumeprofit (CVP) analysis 2. Determine the breakeven point and output level needed to achieve a target operating income 3. Understand how income taxes affect CVP analysis 4. Explain how managers use CVP analysis in decision making 5. Explain how sensitivity analysis helps managers cope with uncertainty 6. Use CVP analysis to plan variable and fixed costs 7. Apply CVP analysis to a company producing multiple
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