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Nana76 [90]
1 year ago
9

Your body uses minerals for many different jobs, including __________. (select all that apply.)

Business
1 answer:
yan [13]1 year ago
7 0

Your body uses minerals for many different jobs, including building bones

making hormones regulating your heartbeat

Hormones are molecules that are created and released by specific glands to regulate and govern the functioning of particular cells and organs. The term "endocrine glands" refers to these specific glands.

Hormones are chemicals that, as was already mentioned, effectively serve as the body's messengers. Specialized glands called endocrine glands release these substances. Hormones all over the body, these endocrine glands are located. These messengers regulate a variety of physiological processes as well as psychological wellbeing. In preserving the body's homeostasis, they play a significant role.

Protein hormones are soluble in water and made of amino acids. Since the cell membrane is made up of a phospholipid bilayer that prevents any fat-insoluble molecules from diffusing into the cell, peptide hormones cannot flow through it.

Learn more about Hormones here

brainly.com/question/13020697

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You might be interested in
Explain how some of the behavioral biases discussed in the chapter might contribute to the successof technical trading rules.
kirill115 [55]

Answer:

A number of the behavioral biases discussed in the chapter might contribute to such trends and patterns. For example, a conservatism bias might contribute to a trend in prices as investors gradually take new information in to account, resulting in gradual adjustment of prices towards their fundamental values.

Explanation:

Step by step explanation:

1. Technical analysis can generally be viewed as a search for trends or patterns in market prices. Technical analysts tend to view these trends as momentum, or

gradual adjustments to ‘correct’ prices, or, alternatively, reversals of trends. A number of the behavioral biases discussed in the chapter might contribute to such trends and patterns. For example, a conservatism bias might contribute to a trend in prices as investors gradually take new information into account, resulting in gradual adjustment of prices towards their fundamental values. Another example derives from the concept of representativeness, which leads investors to inappropriately conclude, on the basis of a small sample of data, that a pattern has

been established that will continue well into the future. When investors

subsequently become aware of the fact that prices have overreacted, corrections reverse the initial erroneous trend.

2. Even if many investors exhibit behavioral biases, security prices might still be set efficiently if the actions of arbitrageurs move prices to their intrinsic values. Arbitrageurs who observe mispricing in the securities markets would buy

underpriced securities (or possibly sell short overpriced securities) in order to profit from the anticipated subsequent changes as prices move to their intrinsic values.

Consequently, securities prices would still exhibit the characteristics of an efficient market.

3. One of the major factors limiting the ability of rational investors to take advantage of any ‘pricing errors’ that result from the actions of behavioral investors is the fact

that a mispricing can get worse over time. An example of this fundamental risk is the apparent ongoing overpricing of the NASDAQ index in the late 1990s. A

related factor is the inherent costs and limits related to short selling, which restrict the extent to which arbitrage can force overpriced securities (or indexes) to move

towards their fair values. Rational investors must also be aware of the risk that an apparent mispricing is, in fact, a consequence of model risk; that is, the perceived

mispricing may not be real because the investor has used a faulty model to value the security

4. There are two reasons why behavioral biases might not affect equilibrium asset

prices: first, behavioral biases might contribute to the success of technical trading

rules as prices gradually adjust towards their intrinsic values, and second, the

actions of arbitrageurs might move security prices towards their intrinsic values. It

might be important for investors to be aware of these biases because either of these

scenarios might create the potential for excess profits even if behavioral biases do

not affect equilibrium prices.

In addition, an investor should be aware of his personal behavioral biases, even if

those biases do not affect equilibrium prices, to help avoid some of these

information processing errors (e.g. overconfidence or representativeness).

5. Efficient market advocates believe that publicly available information (and, for

advocates of strong-form efficiency, even insider information) is, at any point in

time, reflected in securities prices, and that price adjustments to new information

occur very quickly. Consequently, prices are at fair levels so that active

management is very unlikely to improve performance above that of a broadly

diversified index portfolio. In contrast, advocates of behavioral finance identify a

number of investor errors in information processing and decision making that could

result in mispricing of securities. However, the behavioral finance literature

generally does not provide guidance as to how these investor errors can be exploited

to generate excess profits. Therefore, in the absence of any profitable alternatives,

even if securities markets are not efficient, the optimal strategy might still be a

passive indexing strategy.

6. a. Davis uses loss aversion as the basis for her decision making. She holds on to

stocks that are down from the purchase price in the hopes that they will recover.

She is reluctant to accept a loss.

7. a. Shrum refuses to follow a stock after she sells it because she does not want to

experience the regret of seeing it rise. The behavioral characteristic used for the

basis for her decision making is the fear of regret.

8. a. Investors attempt to avoid regret by holding on to losers hoping the stocks will

rebound. If the stock rebounds to its original purchase price, the stock can be sold

with no regret. Investors also may try to avoid regret by distancing themselves from their decisions by hiring a full-service broker.

7 0
2 years ago
Which of the following would occur if a firm chose not to hold inventory for a given product?
GrogVix [38]

Answer:

C. Order placement costs would increase

Explanation:

Order placement costs are those incurred when ordering a product: for example, the wages of the employees who place the orders, the shipping costs, the cost of tariffs and duties in case the products are imported from abroad, and any other specific costs associated with the process of getting the product from the source to the firm.

If a company chooses not to hold inventory, order placement costs will increase in the moment that they get an order for the good which is not in stock, simply because the good will have to be ordered.

8 0
3 years ago
On September 1, Boylan Office Supply had an inventory of 30 calculators at a cost of $18 each. The company uses a perpetual inve
natima [27]

Answer:

Sept 6.   DR Inventory (80 * 20)                                  1,600  

                    CR Accounts Payable                                             $1,600

Sept 9.    DR Inventory                                                    80

                    CR Cash                                                                   80

Sept 10.  DR Accounts Payable                                     63

                    CR Inventory                                                            63

Sept 12.  DR Accounts Receivable (26 * 31)                806

                     CR Sales Revenue                                                806

               DR Cost of Goods Sold  (21 * 26)                 546

                     CR Inventory                                                         546

Sept 14.    DR Sales Returns and Allowances                 31

                     CR Accounts Receivable                                        31

                 DR Inventory                                                  21

                      CR Cost of Goods Sold                                         21

Sept. 20    DR Accounts Receivable (30 * 32)             960

                        CR Sales Revenue                                              960

                  DR Cost of Goods Sold (30 * 21)               630

                        CR Inventory                                                        630

3 0
3 years ago
Concord Corporation planned to use 1 yard of plastic per unit budgeted at $91 a yard. However, the plastic actually cost $90 per
Greeley [361]

Answer:

Total Material Variance = $10,060 Unfavorable

Explanation:

Provided Information,

Standard budgeted unit of raw material = 1 yard

Standard price per unit = $91.00

Actual price per yard = $91.00

Actual units produced = 4,600

Actual yards of plastic used = 4,660 yards

Standard yards for actual production = 4,600 \times 1 yard = 4,600

Total Material Variance = Standard Cost for actual output - Actual Cost

Standard Cost = 4,600 \times $90 = $414,000

Actual Cost = 4,660 \times $91 = $424,060

Total Material Variance = $414,000 - $424,060 = - $10,060

Since value is negative as actual cost is more than budgeted, the variance is unfavorable.

Final Answer

Total Material Variance = $10,060 Unfavorable

8 0
3 years ago
How are command group in menu tabs
Lera25 [3.4K]

Answer:

Typically, related commands are clustered together on the same menu or toolbar. Menus typically are displayed as one-word strings clustered in a row at the top of the integrated development environment (IDE) or a tool window.

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
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