People who patronized liquor sellers are called guests. Before those people can be served, the bar man has to decide whether to sell drinks to them or not. Some factors that make one unqualified to buy drinks include: under-age, intoxication, pregnancy, etc. So, the bar man has to assess the guest and decide whether to sell to him or not. Thus, when you are assessing a guest, you are: considering the age of that person, you are determining whether the customer is already drunk, you are checking if the customer is pregnant, if female, etc. When you are assessing a guest, you are getting information about the behavior of the guest.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
That's the only one that is fair
Answer:
When there are insufficient funds in an account, and a bank decides to bounce a check, it charges the account holder an NSF fee. If the bank accepts the check, but it makes the account negative, the bank charges an overdraft (OD) fee. If the account stays negative, the bank may charge an extended overdraft
Explanation:
Answered By Huntermike976
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Answer:
0.9; 100 million; 90 million; 2,143
Explanation:
The new fuel's price change has a standard deviation that is 50% greater than price changes in gasoline futures prices.
So, if standard deviation of future prices is taken as '1' then for spot price it will be 50% higher, i.e 1.5
The hedge ratio:
= Correlation × (standard deviation of spot price ÷ Standard deviation of future prices)
= 0.6 × (1.5 ÷ 1)
= 0.9
The company has an exposure of 100 million gallons of the new fuel.
Gallons in future gasoline:
= Hedge ratio × 100 million gallons of the new fuel
= 0.9 × 100
= 90 million
Each contract is on 42,000 gallons, then
Number of gasoline futures contracts should be traded:
= 90,000,000 ÷ 42,000
= 2,142.9 or 2,143
Answer:This violates no federal law
Explanation:
Federal laws are bills that have passed both houses of Congress, been signed by the president, passed over the president's veto, or allowed to become law without the president's signature. Individual laws, also called acts, are arranged by subject in the United States Code.