Hello. Welcome to the fixed income session of the Bloomberg Essential Online Training Program. My name is Kyle Ashworth‚ and today we’ll be discussing the analytics and data monitors that we have available within fixed income on the Bloomberg terminal. The first tool that we want to use to look at news‚ news for fixed income. So what we’ll do is we’ll navigate down to the bottom of the menu‚ and we’ll click on 14 NBOND for bond news. Clicking that‚ it’ll load a very familiar page for you.
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The Bathtub Curve and Product Failure Behavior Part One - The Bathtub Curve‚ Infant Mortality and Burn-in by Dennis J. Wilkins Retired Hewlett-Packard Senior Reliability Specialist‚ currently a ReliaSoft Reliability Field Consultant This paper is adapted with permission from work done while at Hewlett-Packard. Reliability specialists often describe the lifetime of a population of products using a graphical representation called the bathtub curve. The bathtub curve consists of three periods: an
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We already know that following are the important cost concepts related to the production process of a firm: • Fixed Cost • Varibale Cost • Average Cost • Marginal Cost please refer to following page Introduction to Cost Concepts to understand various cost concepts in detail. Here we will briefly state again the meaning of above stated cost concepts for better understanding of the module on short run cost analysis. Fixed Cost is that cost which does not change (that is either goes up or
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Turning the Supply Chain into a Revenue Chain Turning the Supply Chain into a Revenue Chain by Gérard P. Cachon and Martin A. Lariviere • Print • Email • Purchase Article FEATURED PRODUCTS [pic] Guide to Getting a Job by Gill Corkindale‚ Daisy Dowling‚ David Silverman‚ et al. $19.95 Buy it now » [pic] Management Tips: From Harvard Business Review by Harvard Business Review $18.00 Buy it now » [pic] Lords of Strategy: The Secret Intellectual History of the New Corporate
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market but provides interesting thoughts for further research. TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION Error! Bookmark not defined. MARKET STRUCTURE/COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS Error! Bookmark not defined. Supply and demand analysis 5 Income factor 6 Demand factor 7 BEHAVIOUR OF FIRMS IN THE MARKET 8 A monopoly’s revenue 8 MARKET EFFICIENCY AND ISSUE 9 Market efficiency 9 ASTRO profit maximisation (monopoly) 11 The welfare cost of monopoly 12 The deadweight loss 13 Is monopoly
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Behind the Curve Behind the Curve Globalization and International Terrorism Audrey Kurth Cronin he coincidence between the evolving changes of globalization‚ the inherent weaknesses of the Arab region‚ and the inadequate American response to both ensures that terrorism will continue to be the most serious threat to U.S. and Western interests in the twenty-ªrst century. There has been little creative thinking‚ however‚ about how to confront the growing terrorist backlash that has been unleashed
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Limitations of the Lorenz Curve The Lorenz Curve illustrates the degree of equality (or inequality) of distribution of income in an economy. It plots the cumulative percentage of income received by cumulative shares of the population and includes a straight line to illustrate perfect income equality. Thus‚ the closer the Lorenz curve is to the straight line‚ the greater the equality in income distribution‚ while‚ the further away it is from the straight line‚ the more unequal the distribution
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the price of a elasticity of demand for its products‚ it will be able to determine the market’s responsiveness‚ or sensitivity‚ to changes in price for a specific product and will allow the firm to more accurately forecast the effects on total revenue. Knowledge of elasticity can help a firm to project big-picture effects of raising or lowering products’ prices by predicting changes in market price on total industry sales and total consumer expenditures in the industry. For example‚ if a sunglasses
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consumer demand for a good when prices increase. As the price of a good rises‚ consumers will usually demand a lower quantity of that good‚ perhaps by consuming less‚ substituting other goods‚ and so on and the demand of complementary product will also be less. The greater the extent to which demand falls as price rises‚ the greater the price elasticity of demand. Conversely‚ as the price of a good falls‚ consumers will usually demand a greater quantity of that good‚ by consuming more‚ the demand of complementary
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experienced many hardships from the British‚ and at multiple times were let down from what they estimated they were deserving of. The “J curve” is known as a diagram indicating the climbing up and the sudden down of any idea‚ or action. The “J curve” is an accurate representation of the colonist’s expectations at the time of the “oppressive” British. The “J curve” seems to center around two main points for the colonists. The first was the wars they fought‚ the outcomes‚ and the government and the
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