University of the Fraser Valley School of Business English 105-Academic Writing Fall-2013 Important dates Year-2013 - Classes begin - August 31‚2013 - Classes end - November 23‚2013 - Midterm Exam Week - October 7‚ 2013 - October 13‚ 2013 - Final Exam Week - November 25‚ 2013 - December 8‚ 2013 - Holidays - October 2‚ 2013 Faculty Gurmit Singh Sahni Contact gurmithappy@gmail.com Class Timings Saturday‚3pm to 6pm Office Hours After the class or by appointment
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“The Dotcom Gloom”: The Boom and Bust of the Dotcom Industry Money plops down on the counter to pay for a new pair of shoes. Plastic cards swipe through to purchase a side table. Some people argue that society’s obsession with material goods comes from greed and decadence‚ but really it goes deeper than that. It comes from the noble tradition of capitalism. In the 1990s‚ America watched as the traditional face to face interactions of capitalism changed. It was changed through the Internet and is
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are in the technology field. The New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ have both benefitted from the recent technological movement. The NYSE says they "are dedicated to maintaining the most efficient and technologically advanced marketplace in the world." The key to that leadership has been the state-of-the-art technology and systems development. Technology serves to support and enhance the human judgement at point-of-sale. NASDAQ‚ the world’s
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References According to the APA Style‚ 5th edition The APA style consists of rules and conventions for formatting term papers‚ journal articles‚ books‚ etc.‚ in the behavioural and social sciences. This user guide explains how to cite references in APA style‚ both within the text of a paper and in a reference list‚ and gives examples of commonly used types of references. Reference Citations in the Text: Single author: Use the author ’s last name‚ year. (Morse‚ 1996) OR Morse (1996) showed
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In an attempt to integrate real-world investment management experience into the classroom‚ our class was assigned to make and manage a portfolio of different chosen securities. With teams of no larger than two individuals‚ we were given $1‚000‚000 in fantasy money to invest‚ track and write about our results. At the project initiation time‚ we thought it was smart to first purchase some securities that we were already familiar with and have in our personal portfolio’s. This allowed us to purchase
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BUSINESS STUDIES GROUP WORK GROUP 5 GROUP MEMBERS 1. AMBANI EVELYNE NOSSE 077092 2. CHEGE JANET WAMBUI 077191 3. MAINA MARTIN GITHAITI 078781 4. MAUREEN NDUTA MOTURI 077302 5. MICHEKA SAMSON ARITA 077964 6. MWANGI BRIAN NJUGI 078960 7. OKUBO CEDRICK AKALULUA 079023 8. SIRO M JUMA 078117 9. WANJOHI SARAFINA NANEU 077763 10. KINYUA ANDREW NGURE 060260 Table of Contents Group members 1 Table of content 2 Assignment questions 3 Who
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/deviations‚ betas and correlations/ Module: Financial Markets Module leader: Prof. György Komáromi Written by László Földvári Industry Analysis I have choosen five companies from the Capital Goods sector / Autoparts Industry/ Nasdaq. The industry analysis is the essence and first step of getting a clearer view of the market players. We have to know the most important macroeconomical circumstances of industry as well. In the following pages I am going to analyze the industry‚
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important clients a portion of the primary shares as part of their commission. Secondary markets deal with already issued stocks and bonds and are the securities markets that we are most familiar with‚ including the New York Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ market. Security prices are determined in secondary markets by supply and demand. When securities are sold on the primary market‚ the main recipient of funds is the company issuing the securities. When a transaction is made on the secondary market
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E-trade: market‚ customers and Internet. A synonym of E-business. 2- The Internet Bubble The "dot-com bubble" sometimes referred to as the "I.T. bubble" was a speculative bubble covering roughly 1995–2001 with its peak on March 10‚ 2000 with the NASDAQ peaking at 5132.52 during which stock markets in Western countries saw their value increase rapidly from growth in the new Internet sector and related fields. The period was marked by the founding and‚ in many cases‚ spectacular failure of a group
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The dot-com bubble (also referred to as the dot-com boom‚ the Internet bubble and the information technology bubble[1]) was an historic speculative bubble covering roughly 1997–2000 (with a climax on March 10‚ 2000‚ with the NASDAQ peaking at 5‚408.60[2] in intraday trading before closing at 5‚048.62) during which stock markets in industrialized nations saw their equity value rise rapidly from growth in the Internet sector and related fields. While the latter part was a boom and bust cycle‚ the Internet
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