Answer:
A person in school with more authority than teachers
Explanation:
Principal = A person above teachers in school
Principle = An important rule or moral
Answer:
Lower Bound (Minimum Value) of Put Option = Max. of ( 0 , S * E-rt - C) (In Bold is PV of S)
where, C = Spot Price / Current Price , S = Exercise Price/ Strike Price, Rf= Risk free rate , t is tenure in pa, E is Exponential
= Max. of (0, 30 * E-rt - 35)
= max. of (0, 28.5 - 35) = Max of (0, -6.5)
Thus 0 is the Minimum Bound.
At below 0 say -0.1 (Impracticle Put Buyer will never receive OP)
At Above 0 say 0.1; Gain/ Loss = PV of 30 -35 - OP =28.85 -35 - 0.1 = -6.25 Loss i.e No Arbitrage Opportunity.
Explanation:
Answer:
$271.97
Explanation:
For this question we use the PMT i.e monthly payment that is presented on the attached spreadsheet. Kindly find it below:
Data provided in the question
Given that,
Present value = $30,000
Future value = $0
Rate of interest = 4.70% ÷ 12 months = 0.391666%
NPER = 10 years × 12 months = 120 months
The formula is shown below:
= PMT(Rate;NPER;-PV;FV;type)
The present value come in negative
So, after solving this, the monthly payment is $271.97
The correct answer that would best complete the given statement above would be the term LOVE AND BELONGING. <span>Zach, a high school junior, has just moved to a new town and cannot wait to get to school to meet new people. He likes sports and hopes he can try out for the soccer team. According to Maslow, Zach is working to fulfill his LOVE AND BELONGING needs. This is according to Maslow's hierarchy of needs which includes physiological needs, safety, love and belonging, esteem, self-actualization and self-transcendence. </span>
Answer:
Undervalued
Explanation:
The PPP exchange rate is the implicit exchange rate, so that everywhere, one dollar has the same purchasing power. In general, this exchange rate is different from the exchange rate on the market.
Because the same nominal GDP translates to a higher real GDP by using the PPP exchange rate, one Pakistan Rupee must be valued more in terms of U.S. dollars than in contexts of the market exchange rate under the PPP exchange rate. The Pakistan Rupee is therefore worth less than its true value in the economy, i.e., undervalued.