Perform a between-groups ANOVA on the provided data set. What are your hypotheses? What do you conclude from your analysis? Be sure to show all work.
Major GPA Business 3.0 Business 3.3 Business 3.1 Business 3.2 Psychology 3.9 Psychology 4.0 Psychology 3.3 Psychology 3.7 History 3.8 History 3.6 History 3.7 History 3.5
In: Statistics and Probability
|
What are the prices of a call option and a put option with the following characteristics?(Do not round intermediate calculations and round your final answers to 2 decimal places (e.g., 32.16).) |
| Stock price | = | $85 |
| Exercise price | = | $80 |
| Risk-free rate | = | 3.8% per year, compounded continuously |
| Maturity | = | 5 months |
| Standard deviation | = | 55% per year |
| Call price | $ |
| Put price | $ |
In: Finance
A magnetic field is perpendicular to the plane of a single-turn circular coil. The magnitude of the field is changing, so that an emf of 0.81 V and a current of 3.8 A are induced in the coil. The wire is then re-formed into a single-turn square coil, which is used in the same magnetic field (again perpendicular to the plane of the coil and with a magnitude changing at the same rate). What (a) emf and (b) current are induced in the square coil?
In: Physics
Please do it by type not pics.
|
Date Event |
Number |
Price/Unit |
|
1-Jan Beg. Inv |
3,000 |
4.50 |
|
5-Jan Purchased |
5,000 |
3.00 |
|
14-Jan Sold |
4,000 |
4.00 |
|
27-Jan Purchased |
6,000 |
2.00 |
|
29-Jan Sold |
2,500 |
3.50 |
1.Purple Cow Inc. uses the perpetual first-in-first-out method to account for their inventory. Using the following information calculate the ending inventory?
2.Purple Cow Inc. uses the periodic first-in-first-out method to account for their inventory. Using the following information calculate the cost of goods sold for the period?
In: Accounting
The IS curve represents goods-market equilibrium. Consumption depends positively on disposable income; investment depends negatively on the real interest rate; tax and government spending are exogenous. Following a large negative shock to confidence, investment demand falls and the IS curve shifts to the left, intersecting the LM curve at i = 0.
Use the IS-LM model to analyse the effects on GDP of each of the following policy options. Which policies does the model predict are effective in avoiding a recession?
i. The central bank increases the money supply by buying more short-term government bonds (‘quantitative easing’);
ii. Higher government expenditure paid for by increasing taxes;
iii. A tax cut paid for by printing money (a ‘helicopter drop’ of money);
iv. The central bank raises its inflation target (assume this is credible and increases inflation expectations πe)
In: Economics
1. Consider the markets for pharmaceutical-grade pain killers and over-the-counter pain relievers. Evaluated at the market equilibrium, the estimated price elasticities of demand are 0.2 for the former and 1.8 for the latter. Assume the price elasticity of supply is 1.0 in each market.
a. Construct side-by-side diagrams in which the prices of both goods are assumed to be equal. Identify the equilibrium price and quantity in both markets.
b. Suppose a fall in input prices increases the supply of both products proportionately. Illustrate the impact of the increase in supply on the equilibrium price and quantity.
c. Using the graphs drawn to answer (b), which good experiences a relatively larger change in price, and which good experiences a relatively larger change in quantity?
d. What happens to consumer spending (i.e. total revenue) in each market? Explain your answer by identifying and explaining the price and quantity effects.
In: Economics
During the year, Belyk Paving Co. had sales of $2,387,000. Cost of goods sold, administrative and selling expenses, and depreciation expense were $1,438,000, $436,300, and $491,300, respectively. In addition, the company had an interest expense of $216,300 and a tax rate of 40 percent (ignore any tax loss carryback or carryforward provisions.). The company paid out $384,000 in cash dividends. Assume that net capital spending was zero, no new investments were made in net working capital, and no new stock was issued during the year.
Calculate the firm's net new long-term debt added during the year. (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answer to the nearest whole number, e.g., 32.)
Net new long-term debt $
(Anyone can help me with this, all the answers I found are wrong...)
In: Finance
Jeff has a monthly income of $400, which he spends each month on dinners (which cost $20 each) and movies. He finds that he maximizes his utility by spending half his income on dinners and ha lf on movies. His marginal rate of substitution at this bundle of goods is 0.4 (measured with dinners on the horizontal axis).
a. Given this information, what is the price of movies?
b. Draw Jeff's budget constraint and indifference curve at this optimal bundle. Label both axes appropriately.
c. Write an equation—in slope- intercept form—for Jeff's budget constraint.
d. What is the opportunity cost, in terms of dinners, of an additional movie? e. Now suppose the price of dinners changes to $25. Show on your diagram how the budget constraint will change. Can Jeff still afford his initial bundle from part b?
In: Economics
Financial Statements of a Manufacturing Firm
The following events took place for Rushmore Biking Inc. during February, the first month of operations as a producer of road bikes:
| • | Purchased $398,300 of materials. |
| • | Used $342,500 of direct materials in production. |
| • | Incurred $296,000 of direct labor wages. |
| • | Applied factory overhead at a rate of 75% of direct labor cost. |
| • | Transferred $826,100 of work in process to finished goods. |
| • | Sold goods with a cost of $784,700. |
| • | Revenues earned by selling bikes, $1,404,600. |
| • | Incurred $337,400 of selling expenses. |
| • | Incurred $125,600 of administrative expenses. |
a. Prepare the income statement for Rushmore Biking Inc. for the month ending February 28. Assume that Rushmore Biking Inc. uses the perpetual inventory method.
| Rushmore Biking Inc. | ||
| Income Statement | ||
| For the Month Ended February 28 | ||
| $ | ||
| $ | ||
| Selling and administrative expenses: | ||
| $ | ||
| Total selling and administrative expenses | ||
| $ | ||
b. Determine the inventory balances on February 28, the end of the first month of operations.
| Materials inventory, February 28 | $ |
| Work in process inventory, February 28 | $ |
| Finished goods inventory, February 28 | $ |
In: Accounting
A2-kg object is falling downward with its speed increasing at a rate of 8m/s per second. We conjecture that there must be some other force acting on the object in addition to the downward pull of gravity. What can we say about this other force?
A. It has a magnitude of 2 N and points in the downward direction.
B. It has a magnitude of 16 N and points in the upward direction.
C. It has a magnitude of 36 N and points in the upward direction.
D. It has a magnitude of 4 N and points in the upward direction.
E. It has a magnitude of 20 N and points in the downward direction.
In: Physics