International Trade and Finance ECO/372 January 28‚ 2013 Week 5 individual assigment International Trade and Finance Hello Ladies and Gentlemen of the press. I am Samantha Jones‚ Speaker of the House. Today I will address several issues concerning the current state of the United States macro-economy (in terms of its international aspects) and how it affects these areas. I know economics can be hard to understand for many people‚ myself included at times. So I will try to explain everything
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Linda Luc Duong International Trade and Finance ECO/372 August 27‚ 2012 Matthew J. Angner International Trade and Finance When there is a surplus of imports brought into the United States it means that the price of the products will drop. Companies in the United States are competing with the Chinese made products will suffer from price drops on goods. Lower prices on goods will benefit consumers. Large screen Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) and High Definition Television (HDTV) is a good example
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International Finance (AF4323) 2010/2011 Semester Two Time & Venue: Tue 13:30-16:20‚ N116 Course Description: This course introduces students to various international financial markets and instruments‚ and examines their implications for the financial management of firms and investors. We first examine the foreign exchange market and the different exchange rate systems that different countries adopt‚ paying special attention to currency board system. Although we study various approaches
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International Trade and Finance October 15‚ 2012 International Trade and Finance Since the beginning of the current recession in 2008‚ the economy of the United States (U.S.) has been the spotlight of the media‚ government intervention‚ and the American public. In order to gain better understanding of the current health of the U.S. macroeconomy‚ one must review several areas of the economy including surplus of imports‚ effects of international trade‚ tariffs and quotas‚ and the restriction
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Introduction In some ways the United States and Japanese are the biggest competitors in the international trade because both countries are producing many of the same goods. For example‚ Toshiba’s biggest competitor in the personal computer is Dell. After the emergence of world trade organization the volume of the international trade has increased too large and countries are actively participating in the trade to push their gross domestic product. This active participation in the trade allows
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“INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE FINANCE” “Where is This Slide From”? • Most of the slides we use in this unit are provided by the Publisher of the required text “…as down-loaded from Connect…” • Sometimes we modify slides by adding or removing content. Other times we use slides from other sources. Occasionally we ‘make’ slides. • Note that lecture slides are not numbered sequentially. • Slides are identified in the lower RHS corner. • Identifier “1-3” refers to text chapter 1 slide 3. •
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International Trade Finance Answer 1 Negotiations on Documentary Collections and Factoring of Export Debts. TTL has always followed straight documentary collection - documents against payment‚ however with credit being expensive in most global markets‚ TTL providing its overseas customers with alternative payment solutions would give its company a strong edge‚ in the competitive footwear business. Documentary collection‚ credit pros with an intermediate level of risk‚ there are two types
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Question 1 (1 mark) The methods that a firm can use to evaluate a potential investment: 1) ‘Discounting’ Methods: Net Present Value (NPV): the present value of the future after-tax cash flow minus the investment outlay made initially. The decision rule for the NPV as follows: invest if NPV> 0‚ do not invest if NPV< 0 Internal Rate of Return (IRR): calculates the interest rate that equates the present value of the future after-tax cash flows equal that investment outlay;
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1. Calculate TRUST’s company after-tax WACC. The risk-free rate was 4.21%‚ the market risk premium was 6% and the company tax rate was 30%. The WACC should be rounded to four decimal places. After-tax WACC = rD (1-Tc) D/V + rE E/V rE = rf + βequity(rm – rf) rE = 0.0421 + 0.81(0.06) rE = 0.0907 E = number of outstanding shares x current share price E = 60 million x $3.43 E = $205.8 million D = $44 million bank loans + $1.2 million short-term hire purchase commitments D = $45.2 million
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CORPORATE FINANCE EXERCISE 2012-2013 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------CHAPTER 4. ASSETS IN A COMPANY EXERCISE 1 In order to run the business effectively‚ Enterprise X purchased a set of 4 computers by the beginning of Year N+1. Its purchasing price is 15 million VND per item (excluding VAT). The total transportation and testing cost is 5 million VND. Their estimated useful life is 5 years. Required:
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