Future expectations for the mentioned items are as follows-
- Gold- The price would appreciate in the times to come
- Oil- The price would be at floor bottom in coming times with minor upticks at intervals
- Japanese Yen- The currency would depriciate with respect to USD
Explanation:
Given the Corona epidemic, ensuing US-China trade wars, US-Iran fiasco and dampening global growth prospects, the global economy is going through a phase of slowdown, if not recession.
Hence the general future expectation for the commodities are as follows-
- Gold- With global growths deepening and share markets crashing, investors would probably store their wealth in the form of gold. This would lead to appreciation in the gold prices. The prices have spiralled upwards in the last few months and would continue doing so in times ahead.
- Oil- Lack of demand, forced lockdowns of the economy, disrupted global growth has reduced the demand of the oil. Hence the demand graph has fallen and consequentially the prices of oil which is a floor value. It would continue to remain doing do so in times ahead.
- Japanese Yen- Yen would depreciate during this time due to the strengthening of the US dollar. This depreciation would continue.
The answer is d scarcity! This is because economics is the overall study of the economy, supply is the product or service sold in economics, and demand is the want for certain products or services. Scarcity is when there is few of certain items so people want more than they can get.
Answer: Delegation
Explanation:
Delegation is one of the beauty of leadership. When a leader leads and wants to do everything, those under him would find it growing or come out of their shells but delegation would bring them out of those shell, expose them and expose or display the leader in them.
Another thing delegation does while making people lead is that it makes them value the products, job or organization than how they saw it previously.
As an executive director, I would love to delegate so they take those tough roles important
Answer:
C) Yes, because the direct rates differ in all markets
Explanation:
₤1 buys €1.50 in NY, Tokyo, and London -> ₤1 = €1.50
₤1 buys ¥150 in NY, Tokyo, and London -> ₤1 = ¥150
⇔ €1.50 = ¥150
⇔ ¥100 = €1.50/1,5 = €1
$1 buys ¥100 in NY, Tokyo, and London - > $1 = ¥100
Tt clearly that €1 is different with $1.0 (as Reuter quoted today, $1.00 = €0.9030), so there’re opportunity for two-point arbitrage
.