Answer:
b. Short-term loss of $700 and a long-term gain of $900.
Explanation:
August 1, 2018, price per share $50
August 1, 2019, sold 50 shares at $36, resulting in a short term capital loss of ($700)
August 31, 2019, sold 50 shares at $68, resulting in a long term capital gain of $900
If you own a stock for 1 year or less, any gain/loss will be considered short term. If you own a stock for more than 1 year, any gain/loss will be considered long term.
Everything the includes law .........
Answer:
$454,000
Explanation:
Ending inventory is the value of the inventory in the store at the end of the year.
Goods are purchased and added to the the beginning inventory, the sale for the period is deducted from it. the residual value is the value of ending Inventory.
In This question it is assumed that there is $26,000 of beginning inventory of the goods. $470,000 of the purchases were made and at the end of the year there was $42,000 balance of inventory.
We can calculate the deduction value as follow
Ending Inventory = Beginning Inventory + Purchases - deduction
$42000 = $26,000 + $470,000 - deduction
$42000 = $496,000 - deduction
Deduction = $496,000 - $42,000 = $454,000
Answer:
marketing will change the most over the next 10 years because location, browsing, and buying will be increasingly co-mingled. Analysts will use technological and psychological triggers to help us all buy more, and understand why we're buying.
Explanation:
Answer: None of the above
Explanation:
All of the above are correct.
For option A, Economists who advocate discretionary monetary policy do indeed believe that the monetary authority using this policy is more flexible to shape the best monetary policy to the existing circumstances.
Option B is also correct because Crowding out occurs when the government increases investment by borrowing which leaves less money for the private sector to borrow so they spend less. The government spent money here yet the private sector did not spend less so it is Zero Crowing out.
Option C by option B's explanation holds true because the entire amount the Government increased by was denied the private sector.
Option D is also true as not all Economists prefer rule-based monetary policy to discretionary monetary policy.
They are all true.