Questions
Illustrate the relationship between average revenue and marginal revenue in relation to the marketing structure

Illustrate the relationship between average revenue and marginal revenue in relation to the marketing structure

In: Economics

Year Money Supply (M2) Nominal GDP Velocity of Money(ratio) Consumer Price Index 1995 3,492.40 10543.644 2.155...

Year Money Supply (M2) Nominal GDP Velocity of Money(ratio) Consumer Price Index
1995 3,492.40 10543.644 2.155 2.87081
1996 3,647.90 10817.896 2.147 2.79070
1997 3,824.80 11284.587 2.179 3.03814
1998 4,046.30 11832.486 2.175 1.63112
1999 4,393.10 12403.293 2.135 1.66667
2000 4,656.30 12924.179 2.139 2.79296
2001 4,965.00 13222.690 2.090 3.72120
2002 5,440.10 13397.002 1.975 1.19590
2003 5,790.40 13634.253 1.921 2.75746
2004 6,061.10 14221.147 1.954 2.02629
2005 6,410.60 14771.602 1.988 2.84487
2006 6,709.90 15267.026 2.021 4.01879
2007 7,094.80 15493.328 1.997 2.07577
2008 7,491.10 15671.383 1.936 4.29470
2009 8,262.40 15155.940 1.733 -0.11359
2010 8,445.60 15415.145 1.736 2.62111
2011 8,825.80 15712.754 1.723 1.70078
2012 9,730.20 16129.418 1.639 3.00877
2013 10,471.40 16382.964 1.579 1.68406

We had two financial crises since 2000, 2000 dot.com bubble, 2008-2009 financial crisis. From FRED website, find the following data from 1995 to 2013, and make a graph. Explain the general trends of each series, and compare them between the two crises.

  1. Money supply (M2)
  2. Nominal GDP
  3. Velocity of Money
  4. Consumer Price Index

In: Economics

Excessive executive compensation in the financial services industry ranks high among examples of failed corporate governance....

Excessive executive compensation in the financial services industry ranks high among examples of failed corporate governance. Corporate government at the government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were particularly weak. The politically appointed board at both enterprises failed to understand the risks of sub-prime loan strategies being employed, did not adequately monitor the decisions of the CEO, did not exercise effective oversight of the accounting principles being employed (which led to inflated earnings), and approved executive compensation systems that allowed management to manipulate earnings to receive lucrative performance bonuses. The audit and compensation committees at Fannie Mae were particularly ineffective in protecting shareholder interest., with the audit committee allowing the company’s financial officers to audit report prepared under their direction and used to determine performance bonuses. Fannie Mae’s audit committee also was aware of management’s use of questionable accounting practices that reduced losses and recorded one-time gains to achieve financial targets linked to bonuses. In addition, the audit committee failed to investigate formal charges of accounting improprieties filed by a manager in the Office of the Controller.

Fannie Mae’s compensation committee was equally ineffective. The committee allowed the company’s CEO, Franklin Raines to select the consultant employed to design the mortgage firm’s executive compensation plan and agreed to a tiered bonus plan that would permit Raines and other senior managers to receive maximum bonus without great difficulty. The compensation plan allowed Raines to earn performance-based bonuses of $52 million and a total compensation of $90 million between 1999 and 2004. Raines was forced to resign in November 2004 when the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight found that Fannie Mae’s executives had fraudulently inflated earnings to receive bonuses linked to financial performance. Securities and Exchange Commission investigators also found evidence of improper accounting at Fannie Mae and required the company to restate its earnings between 2002 to 2004 by $6.3 billion.

Poor governance at Freddie Mac allowed its CEO and senior management to manipulate its financial data to receive performance-based compensation as well. Freddie Mac’s CEO Richard Syron received 2007 compensation of $19.8 million while the mortgage company’s share price declined from a high of $70 in 2005 to $25 at year end 2007. During Syron’s tenure as CEO, the company became embroiled in a multibillion-dollar accounting scandal, and Syron’s personally disregarded internal reports dating to 2004 that cautioned of an impending financial crisis at the company. Forewarnings within Freddie Mac and by Federal Regulators and outside industry observers proved to be correct, with loan underwriting policies at Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae leading to combined losses at the two firms in 2008 of more than $100 billion. The price of Freddie Mac’s shares had fallen to below $1 by the time of Syron’s resignation in September 2008.

Both organisations were placed into a conservatorship under the direction of the U.S. Government in September 2008 and were provided bailout funds of more than $160 billion by early 2011. The U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency estimated that the bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would potentially reach $200 billion to $300 billion by 2013.

Sources: Chris Isidore, “Fannie, Freddie Bailout: $153 Billion…and counting,” CNNMoney, February 11, 2011;” Adding up the government’s Total Bailout Tab, “ New York Times Online, February 4, 2009; Eric Dash, “Fannie Mae to restate results by $6.3 Billion because of Accounting,” New York Times Online, www.nytimes.com, December 7, 2006; Annys Shin, “Fannie Mae sets executive salaries,” Washington Post, February 9,2006,p.D4; and Scott DeCarlo, Eric Weiss, Mark Jickling, and James R.Cristie, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Scandal in U.S. Housing (Nova Publishers,2006), pp. 266-286.

QUESTION 1

A) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are two examples of poor execution of corporate governance in mortgage financial institutions. Identify and discuss the corporate governance issues in this case study.

In: Finance

Select an organization in your area and identify three of their objectives, and then demonstrate how...

Select an organization in your area and identify three of their objectives, and then demonstrate how maintenance can contribute to achieving them.

In: Operations Management

Select an organization in your area and identify three of their objectives, and then demonstrate how...

Select an organization in your area and identify three of their objectives, and then demonstrate how maintenance can contribute to achieving them.?

In: Operations Management

Identify and briefly describe the three stages of tumor development. Include a description of the types...

Identify and briefly describe the three stages of tumor development. Include a description of the types of factors that contribute to each stage.

In: Biology

Sony Music Publishing Company wants to decide the price of Saylor Twift’s next album. The company...

Sony Music Publishing Company wants to decide the price of Saylor Twift’s next album. The company conducted a survey of 1000 customers to estimate the willingness-to-pay (WTP) of the customers. The following table summarizes the results of the survey:

WTP

Frequency

$19.99

150

$18.99

200

$17.99

350

$16.99

150

$15.99

150

Total

1000

a) If Sony decides to charge the customers $18.99 per album, then what will be the revenue per 1000 potential customers?

b) What is the best price to maximize the revenue?

In: Operations Management

To test whether the mean time needed to mix a batch of material is the same...

To test whether the mean time needed to mix a batch of material is the same for machines produced by three manufacturers, a chemical company obtained the following data on the time (in minutes) needed to mix the material.

Manufacturer
1 2 3
21 27 21
26 27 19
24 30 22
25 32 26

Use Fisher's LSD procedure to develop a 95% confidence interval estimate (in minutes) of the difference between the means for manufacturer 1 and manufacturer 2. (Round your answers to two decimal places.)

min to  min

In: Statistics and Probability

1. What is the relationship between productivity and the standard of living? 2. What is the...

1. What is the relationship between productivity and the standard of living?

2. What is the difference between absolute advantage and comparative advantage?

3. List two factors that affect people's buying plans that lead to changes in demand (shifts in the demand curve.)

4. Did the four hurricanes in Florida in 2004 lead to a decrease in the quantity of orange juice supplied or a decrease in the supply of orange juice?

In: Economics

Create an "IPCC-like" stabilization scenario using the following simplified information. Starting in the year 2004, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is 378 ppm,

Create an "IPCC-like" stabilization scenario using the following simplified information. Starting in the year 2004, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is 378 ppm, the global emissions of CO2 are 7.4 Gt carbon per year, the total carbon in the atmosphere is 767 Gt, and emissions are growing by 4% per year, for example, in 2005 emissions reach 7.7 Gt, 8.0 Gt in 2006, and so on. Note that concentration is given in terms of CO2, but emissions and atmospheric mass are given in Gt carbon. The oceans absorb 3 Gt net (absorbed minus emitted) each year for the indefinite future. The change or decline of emissions is influenced by "global CO2 policy" as follows: in year 2005, the emissions rate declines by 0.1 percentage points to 3.9%, and after that and up to the point that concentration stabilizes, the change is 0.1% multiplied by the ratio of the previous year's total emissions divided by 7.4 Gt, that is

 

After concentration stabilizes, emissions are 3 Gt year, so that emissions are exactly balanced by ocean absorption. To illustrate, Chg%2004 = 4% and Chg%2005 = 3.9%, and so on. Also, concentration can be calculated as 378 ppm X (total carbon in atmosphere/767 Gt).

(a) What is the maximum value of concentration reached?

(b) In what year is this value reached?

(c) What is the amount of CO2 emitted that year?

(d) Plot CO2 concentration and emissions per year on two separate graphs.

(e) The scenario in this problem is a simplification of how a carbon stabilization program might actually unfold in the future. Identify two ways in which the scenario is simplistic.

In: Accounting