Answer:
No, a currency carry trade with positive profit can not be conducted.
Explanation:
The currency carry trade is the trading strategy where investor funding from lower-yield currency to invest in higher-yield currency with expectation to earn positive profit from the yield differences between the two currencies.
However, this strategy only works when the difference is big enough to compensate for the depreciation ( if any) of the higher-yield currency against the lower-yield currency.
With the given information, the strategy will not work because the depreciation of NZ$ against US$ after one-year is too big to be compensated for the yield difference.
For specific example, suppose the strategy is conducted, in 2008, an investor will borrow, for example, US$1 at 4.2%, exchange it to NZ$1.71. Then, invest NZ$1.71 at 9.1%.
In 2019, an investor will get NZ$1.86561 (1.71 x 1.091). The, he/she exchanges at the 2019 exchange rate, for US$1.36176 (1.86561 / 1.37). While at the same time, he will have to pay back 1 x 1.042 = US$1.042 => The loss making in US$ is US$0.32.
Answer:
Task identification/identity, feedback
Explanation:
Task identification, simply put, is the ability of an employee to understand his or job and its requirements.
Feedback on the other hand can also be simply said to be the response that is derived from a product use by consumers. Feedback helps to tell whether a product or firm is doing the right thing or there is room for improvement in its products or firm practices.
In the case of Anya, her job involves a great deal of task/job identification/identity as she has to be capable of envisioning the specifications of clients as well as requesting for feedback to ensure that she is doing exactly what the client wants.
Cheers.
I think that the stament given above is true, as this principle <span>lets business survive or fail without much interaction from the government.</span>
Answer:
This is false.
Explanation:
The statement in the question interchange the meanings of the two terms. The correct definitions are therefore given as follows:
Libel is can be described as a written or published false statement about another person that damages their reputation unjustly.
Slander refers a spoken false statement about another person that damages their reputation unjustly.
Based on the definitions above, the statement in the question can be correctly rewritten as follows:
Slander is a defamatory or hurtful remark told about someone to others, and libel is when this remark or comment is broadcast over the TV, radio, printed in a publication, or forwarded to others on the Internet.
C, in a private exam room. Telling someone in the waiting room is a clear violation of HIPAA laws, and you're skirting the line at the discharge window. There are too many inherent risks with email: the account on file may be an account multiple people can access; you might have the wrong address, even if due to a typo; and so on. Discussing care in an exam room is the best way to maintain HIPAA compliancy.