Management” NIKE Introduction- The company was founded on January 25‚ 1964 as Blue Ribbon Sports by Bill Bowerman and Phil Knight‚ and officially became Nike‚ Inc. on May 30‚ 1978. Nike markets its products under its own brand‚ as well as Nike Golf‚ Nike Pro‚ Nike+‚ Air Jordan‚etc. Nike is the leading maker of athletic shoes‚ equipment and apparel. Nike products cover a broad range of sports including basketball‚ football‚ running and soccer. Sneakers made by Nike are sold for $40-$200
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50219 BBS 3FA CASE SUMMARY & HIGHLIGHTS Formation of Nike In 1958‚ Phil Knight came realised the need of a good American running shoe and started working on his idea. In 1964‚ he along with Bowerman formed an athletic shoe company and called it Blue Ribbon Shoe (BRS) company. In 1971‚ they developed a distinctive trademark and a new brand name and this is how Nike came into existence. Exceptional economic performance Nike grew at an amazingly fast pace with profits growing from $10 million
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Nike Air Nike Air was the first technology Nike put into their shoes. It was a different way to have cushioning in a shoe. It has been put into a lot of the Nike shoes since. It was said it would make you jump higher and run faster. Its been over 20 years since its creation and its still going strong. (Sneakerhead) Nike Max Air/ Air Max Nike Air Max or Max Air provedes maximum cushion. The air pocket in the heel was now used for the mid and front of the foot. The air max 360s have air
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Foreign direct investment (FDI) is direct investment into production or business in a country by a company in another country‚ either by buying a company in the target country or by expanding operations of an existing business in that country. Foreign direct investment is done for many reasons including to take advantage of cheaper wages or for special investment privileges such as tax exemptions offered by the country as an incentive to gain tariff-free access to the markets of the country or the
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A Foreign direct investment (FDI) is a controlling ownership in a business enterprise in one country by an entity based in another country Foreign direct investment is distinguished from Portfolio Foreign Investment‚ a passive investment in the securities of another country such as public stocks and bonds‚ by the element of "control". According to the Financial Times‚ "Standard definitions of control use the internationally agreed 10 per cent threshold of voting shares‚ but this is a g
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LETTER OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2 INTRODUCTION 3 WHAT IS FDI? 3 CLASSIFICATION OF FDI 3 CLASSIFIATION OF A FOREIGN INVESTOR 3 IMPORTANCE OF FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT TO A COUNTRY 3 INCENTIVES OF FDI 4 FDI AND THE CURRENT SITUATION GLOBALLY 5 FDI Flow 6 FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN PAKISTAN 7 TRADE TRENDS IN PAKISTAN 9 FDI IN PAKISTAN (THE CURRNET SITUATION) 9 STRUCTURAL PATTERN OF FDI IN PAKISTAN 13 CONCLUSION AND RECCOMENDATIONS 14 REFERENCES 19 LETTER
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Columbia FDI Profiles Country profiles of inward and outward foreign direct investment issued by the Vale Columbia Center on Sustainable International Investment October 18‚ 2010 Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant Editor: Thomas Jost Associate Editor: Ken Davies Managing Editor: Ana-Maria Poveda-Garces Inward FDI in China and its policy context by Ken Davies∗ After opening its doors to foreign trade and investment in 1978‚ China has become the largest recipient of inward foreign direct investment
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DETERMINANTS OF FDI IN CHINA DETERMINANTS OF FDI IN CHINA Shaukat Ali and Wei Guo1 ABSTRACT Why and how firms take advantage of foreign opportunities‚ especially via foreign direct investment (FDI) has been much documented. China‚ as a major emerging market‚ has attracted significant flows of FDI‚ to become the second largest receipt. This paper briefly examines the literature on FDI and focuses on likely determinants of FDI in China. It then analyses responses from 22 firms operating in
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COURSEWORK FDI in Bulgaria and the Impact of the Global Financial Crisis Sofia‚ February 2012 | Table of Contents Introduction 2 Definitions and registration of FDI 2 Factors determining the attractiveness of Bulgaria for FDI 5 Challenges for foreign investors 10 FDI in Bulgaria before the global financial crisis 10 FDI in Bulgaria during the years of the global financial crisis 13 FDI in Bulgaria in 2009 15 FDI in Bulgaria in 2010 16 Conclusion
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Major issues on FDI in Multi-brand retail 1) Cabinet decision – Distinct Indian Model with Safeguards for domestic stakeholders : FDI up to 51% only through government approval mode. Minimum investment of US $ 100 million of which at least 50% to be invested in backend infrastructure‚ which would include capital expenditure on the entire spectrum of related activities including cold chain infrastructure‚ food processing‚ refrigerated transportation‚ logistics. Retail sales outlets may be set up only
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