From the first condition, Nancy already has $1,300. From the second condition, Nancy will also receive 10% of her capital balance which is 10% of $100,000 or $10,000. In total, Nancy has a share of $11,300. So, Betty's share is the remaining amount from the $40,000 net income which is
$28,700
        
             
        
        
        
Soaking the documents in water after tearing them up words well, burning them is less safe, but is the safest for your records, always tear or shred them no matter what
        
             
        
        
        
During a recession, the way that governments try to encourage growth is : increasing unemployment benefits
During
a recession, a number of unemployment will rapidly increased ( almost a
third of citizen could be jobless). In order to handle this, government
could increase unemployment benefit so the unemployed people have
enough to scrapped by until the recession is over or started a new
business.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
J = 0.422
K = 0.58
Explanation:
When a portfolio is said to have risk that is equal to market, this means that the beta is equal to 1. 
Let us define the weight of stock J = x
Let us define the Weight of stock K = (1-x)
To get the The Beta of portfolio = (x*1.26) + ((1-x)*0.81) = 1
When we open the brackets,
1.26x + 0.81 - .81x = 1
1.26x-0.81x = 1-0.81
0.45x = 0.19
To get x we divide through by 0.45
X = 0.422
Therefore the Weight of stock J = 0.422
Then the Weight of stock K = 1 - 0.422 = 0.578
Approximately 0.58
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer: The donor may incur a gift tax liability. Also, the cost basis will be $50 per share to the recipient of the gift.
Explanation:
From the question, we are informed that a customer owns 200 shares of ABC, that were bought 2 years ago at $50 per share and that the current market value of ABC stock is $60 per share. 
If the customer gifts the stock to his son, the result is the donor may incur a gift tax liability. Also, the cost basis will be $50 per share to the recipient of the gift.