Bondholders earn income in two primary ways. First, most bonds return regular interest—coupon rate—payments that are usually paid semi-annually. However, depending on the structure of the bond it may pay yearly, quarterly, or even monthly coupons.
Answer:
B : assets.
Explanation:
As we know that
The debit side records the expenses, assets, and losses plus there is always a debit balance. If there is an increase in these above accounts than it also contains a debit balance
While the credit side records the revenues, gains, liabilities, and the stockholder equity. If there is an increase in these above accounts than it also contains a credit balance
Answer: Not required to be accounted for by the short-cut method if using IFRS.
Explanation:
A Short term Lease is one where a person or entity is granted the legal use of a space for a small period of time which is a year or less.
In calculating this, the Sixteenth International Financial Reporting Standards, IFRS 16, states that a Short Term lease may be charged directly to a Profit and Loss account.
It does not approve the use of the Shortcut method which is a qualitative measure of analysis that is ONLY approved under the US Accounting system (GAAP) and even then is not widely used.
Answer: b. 34.15 or higher
Explanation:
Short sales refer to the sale of borrowed stocks in anticipation that the stock price of the underlying stock will fall. This will then enable you to make a profit by buying the cheaper shares and giving it back to the entity you borrowed from thereby making a profit.
With short sales, the price is usually upward trending so will normally increase from the last price. As the last price here was $34.15, that would be the likely minimum for the next sale.
This means that the next sale will either be at a price of $34.15 or a price higher than that.
565 x 3% = $16.95
$656 - $16.95 = $548.05