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RideAnS [48]
4 years ago
9

A zero-coupon bond is a security that pays no interest, and is therefore bought at a substantial discount from its face value. I

f the interest rate is 5% with annual compounding how much would you pay today for a zero-coupon bond with a face value of $1,200 that matures in 9 years?
Business
1 answer:
Annette [7]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

$773.53

Explanation:

Given:

Interest rate, r = 5% compounded annually

Face value = $1,200

Time , n = 9 years

Now,

the Price of zero coupon bond is calculated as:

Price of zero coupon bond = \frac{\textup{Face value}}{{(1+r)^n}}

or

Price of zero coupon bond  = \frac{1,200}{{(1+0.05)^9}}

or

Price of zero coupon bond  = $773.53

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A corn farm, a coal mine, and a fishing company are all part of the _________ industry. A. Manufacturing B. Service C. Extractiv
mart [117]
Extractive industry is your answer
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Given the following historical demand and forecast, calculate the Mean Absolute Percentage Error: Week 1 Demand: 50 Forecast: 49
klio [65]

Answer:

A. about 2.0%

Explanation:

The forecasted error for week 1 is 1%. The demand for week 1 is 50 while estimated demand or forecast was 49. The difference between the two values is 1. The forecasted demand for week 2 is 50 while actual demand for week 2 is 54. The difference between the forecast and actual value is 4. The difference in week 3 is 5. Mean absolute deviation is 6% which means there can be 6% standard deviation from the forecasted values.

4 0
3 years ago
You are the marketing analyst for Better Beans Coffee Company, which has nine stores nationwide. The company wants to build two
yaroslaw [1]

Question Completion:

Existing Store  Revenue 2nd Store Cannibalization Revenue Net Revenue

                                        Revenue         Estimate      Drop         Increase for

                                                                                                      Market

Los Angeles   1,450,000  1,570,000         10%           145,000    1,425,000

Houston         1,400,000   1,475,000        25%          350,000    1,125,000

Orlando         2,100,000   2,155,000        30%          630,000   1,525,000

Atlanta           1,600,000   1,780,000         55%         880,000     900,000

Chicago         1,950,000   1,730,000         40%         780,000     950,000

San Diego    3,400,000  3,090,000          10%         340,000  2,750,000

Portant          1,000,000   1,075,000         25%         250,000     825,000

Dallas           2,000,000   1,850,000         60%       1,200,000    650,000

Boston         2,300,000  2,200,000         50%        1,150,000  1,050,000

1. Ignoring cannibalization rates for now, what two markets have the highest net revenue increases when adding a second store?

San Diego and Orlando

Atlanta and Dallas

Orlando and Dallas

San Diego and Portland

Dallas and Portland

2. What two markets should be chosen for a second store based on management's criteria that the cannibalization rate for the existing store should be less than 30%

Note: Cannibalization rates and net revenue increase amounts need to be considered when making this determination.

San Diego and Orlando

San Diego and Los Angeles

Chicago and Los Angeles

Chicago and Portland

San Diego and Portland

Answer:

Better Beans Coffee Company

1. San Diego's $2,750,000 and Orlando's $1,525,000 presented the highest net revenue increases when adding a second store.

2. Based on management's criteria that the cannibalization rate for the existing store should be less than 30%, San Diego with 10% and Los with 10% Cannibalization rates should be chosen.

Explanation:

Cannibalization Rate is a measure of the impact of new products or the presence of new stores on sales revenue for existing products or stores.  Cannibalization happens when a business, like the Better Beans Coffee Company, opens a new store in a town where there is an existing store. It can also happen when Better Beans releases new coffee products.  Consumers' attention and demand for existing products can decrease, as a switch to new products or new stores takes place.

4 0
4 years ago
Please help meeee!!!!!
mestny [16]

Answer:

Banks are owned by shareholders, while credit unions are owned by members

Explanation:

Banks are financial institutions established by the founders to make profits. Due to their capital requirements, banks are large corporations owned by the private sector or government. Like other corporations, the owners of a bank are its shareholders.

Large organizations form credit unions to cater to their employees well being. Credit unions are not for profit organizations since they are formed to cater to its members' well beings. It means membership to the credit union is limited to the founding organization's employees unless otherwise stated. The members of the credit unions are its owners.

8 0
3 years ago
The National Income and Product Accounts identity states:__________A) Expenditure  Production  Income.B) Production  Expendit
zaharov [31]

Answer:

I. National Income Accounting:

National income accounts are an accounting framework is useful in measuring economic activity.

A. Three approaches—all produce the same measurement of the production of the economy.

1. product approach: how much output is produced

2. income approach: how much income is created by production

3. Expenditure approach: how much purchasers spend

B. Why all three approaches are the same: Assumes no unsold goods (at this point) then the market values of goods and services produced must equal the amount buyers spend to purchase them (product approach=expenditure approach). What the seller receives (income) must equal what is spent (expenditure).

II. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

A. GDP vs. GNP

GNP= output produced by domestically owned factors or production. (By our people)

GDP= includes production produced by foreign owed factors of production within the countries border and excludes domestically owned production in foreign countries. (On our soil)

1. GDP = GNP – net factor payment from abroad (NFP)

2. How big is the difference?

B. Product approach: The market value of all final goods and services produced within a nation during a fixed period of time.

1. Market value: allows comparison between different goods. Has some problems – ignores some goods. underground economy, and government services.

2. Final goods and service: Treatment of inventories; Capital goods; Avoids double counting; Value added.

3. New production: Ignores goods produced in previous periods

C. Expenditure approach: Total spending on final goods and services produced within a nation during a specified period of time.

1. Income expenditure identity and four categories of spending: Consumption (C), Investment (I), government purchases of goods and services (G) and net exports (NX)

Y = C + I + C + NX

2. Consumption(C): Spending by domestic households on final goods and services

a. Consumer durable goods: Long lasting goods

b. Nondurable goods used up quickly

c. Services

3. Investment (I): Spending on new capital goods by business

a. Business fixed investment

b. Residential fixed investment

c. Inventory investment: Changes in the amount of unsold goods, goods in progress and new materials

4. Government purchases of goods and services (G):

a. State and local vs. Federal spending

b. Transfers and interest payments on debt are not counted. They are counted in total government expenditure which is not the same as government purchases of goods and services.

5. Net exports (NX): exports minus imports

a. Need to subtract imports since they are counted in C. I and G can add goods produced within the country purchased by foreign interests (exports).

D. Income approach adds up income received by producers, including profits and taxes paid to the government

1. Income generated by production

a. National income =

compensation of employees

+ proprietors income

+ rental income of persons

+ corporate profits

+ net interest

+ taxes on production

+ business transfers

+ surplus of gov enterprises

b. National income + statistical discrepancy = Net National Product (NNP)

Note: This changed a couple years ago. If you have an old addition, you may see the indirect business tax. It is no long used in this equation!

c. NNP + depreciation = GNP

d. GNP – NFP = GDP

2. Income of private sector and government

a. Private disposable income = income of private sector = private sector income earned at home (Y or GDP) and abroad (NFP) + payments from the government sector (transfers TR and interest on debt INT) – taxes paid to government (T) = Y + NFP + TR + INT – T

b. Government net income = T- TR – INT

III. Saving and Wealth

A. Wealth Difference between assets and liabilities

B. Measures of aggregate savings

1. Saving = current income – current spending; saving rate = saving/current income

2. Private saving (Spvt) Spvt = Y + NFP – T + TR + INT – C

3. Government Saving (Sgovt) Sgovt = T – TR- INT – G

a. Government saving = Government budget surplus (deficit = -Sgovt)

4. National Saving= private saving + government saving

S = Spvt + Sgovt = Y + NFP - C – G = GNP - C – G

C. The uses of private saving

1. S = I + (NX + NFP) = I + CA

CA = NX + NFP = current account balance

2. The use of savings identity

Spvt = I – Sgovt + CA

If the budget deficit increases one or a combination of the following happen

1) private saving must rise

2) investment must fall

3) the current account balance must fall

IV. Prices Indexes, Inflation and Interest Rates

A. Nominal vs. Real variables

Nominal Variables – Measures the economic variable in terms of the current market value.

Real Variable—Measure the variable valued at the prices in a base year.

B. Real vs. Nominal: Calculation the differences

Examples Small country only produces base balls and baseball bats

Explanation:

3 0
4 years ago
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