Answer:
Freight Forwarder
Explanation:
The Freight Forwarder can be an individual person or a company which organizes the shipments for a person or company to get goods or products transferred from the manufacturer to the customer or the market i.e the final destination of distribution.
Forwarders involves with a carrier or with the number of carriers to transfer the goods.
Answer:
sentiment analysis
Explanation:
Sentimental analysis is the mining of subjective information from a source material (usually social media), this is aimed at understanding the social sentiment the public has about a brand or service.
Sentimental expressions can be positive negative or neutral. For example a statement from a review: 'I really like their services, they make sure you are satisfied with your purchase.' Is an example of positive sentimental expression.
Answer: Created by investors and traded on various exchanges
Explanation:
Call options are contracts that give the buyer the right to buy the underlying assets of the option on a particular date at a set price by exercising the option. American Call options can be exercised anytime before the date listed in the contract as well.
Call options are created by people who already own stock in the company i.e investors in IBM and traded on various exchanges such as the Chicago Board Options Exchange. It acts as a supplementary way to make income from stock if the investors do not believe that the stock price will go up thus enabling them to make income from the contract price.
Answer:
Explanation:
the picture attached shows all the explanation needed
Answer:
The answer would be PRICE SIGNALING
Explanation:
Price signaling may occur when consumers have imperfect information about product quality. To infer quality, consumers may rely on previous experience or may use some of the product’s observable characteristics, such as the product’s price. We examine the scenario whereby the firm can endogenously change consumers’ beliefs about the product’s quality by altering both the price and quality of its product. Our main findings are that, in this type of setting, price signaling causes the firm to raise its price, lower its quality, and dampen the degree to which it responds to cost shocks. If the cost of adjusting quality is sufficiently high, the dampening effect is pronounced in the downward direction, meaning that price signaling causes prices to respond less to cost decreases than cost increases.