You registered your logo under the Trade Marks Act in May 1998. You are still setting up your business and have yet to use it. In January 2020,you discover that another company has started using the exact same trademark.Is there anything you cando about it?If so, what? If not, why not?
In: Operations Management
SafeData Corporation has the following account balances and respective fair values on June 30:
| Book Values | Fair Values | ||||||
| Receivables | $ | 103,500 | $ | 103,500 | |||
| Patented technology | 109,000 | 109,000 | |||||
| Customer relationships | 0 | 670,000 | |||||
| In-process research and development | 0 | 338,000 | |||||
| Liabilities | (578,000 | ) | (578,000 | ) | |||
| Common stock | (100,000 | ) | |||||
| Additional paid-in capital | (300,000 | ) | |||||
| Retained earnings deficit, 1/1 | 853,500 | ||||||
| Revenues | (340,000 | ) | |||||
| Expenses | 252,000 | ||||||
Privacy First, Inc., obtained all of the outstanding shares of SafeData on June 30 by issuing 20,000 shares of common stock having a $1 par value but a $50 fair value. Privacy First incurred $10,000 in stock issuance costs and paid $50,000 to an investment banking firm for its assistance in arranging the combination. In negotiating the final terms of the deal, Privacy First also agrees to pay $75,000 to SafeData’s former owners if it achieves certain revenue goals in the next two years. Privacy First estimates the probability adjusted present value of this contingent performance obligation at $22,500.
a)What is the fair value of the consideration transferred in this combination?
b)How should the stock issuance costs appear in Privacy First’s postcombination financial statements?
c)How should Privacy First account for the fee paid to the investment bank?
d)How does the issuance of these shares affect the stockholders’ equity accounts of Privacy First, the parent?
e)How is the fair value of the consideration transferred in the combination allocated among the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed?
f)If Privacy First’s stock had been worth only $25 per share rather than $50, how would the consolidation of SafeData’s assets and liabilities have been affected?
In: Accounting
SafeData Corporation has the following account balances and respective fair values on June 30:
| Book Values | Fair Values | ||||||
| Receivables | $ | 108,000 | $ | 108,000 | |||
| Patented technology | 123,000 | 123,000 | |||||
| Customer relationships | 0 | 840,000 | |||||
| In-process research and development | 0 | 524,000 | |||||
| Liabilities | (596,000 | ) | (596,000 | ) | |||
| Common stock | (100,000 | ) | |||||
| Additional paid-in capital | (300,000 | ) | |||||
| Retained earnings deficit, 1/1 | 847,400 | ||||||
| Revenues | (312,000 | ) | |||||
| Expenses | 229,600 | ||||||
Privacy First, Inc., obtained all of the outstanding shares of SafeData on June 30 by issuing 20,000 shares of common stock having a $1 par value but a $70 fair value. Privacy First incurred $10,000 in stock issuance costs and paid $70,000 to an investment banking firm for its assistance in arranging the combination. In negotiating the final terms of the deal, Privacy First also agrees to pay $95,000 to SafeData’s former owners if it achieves certain revenue goals in the next two years. Privacy First estimates the probability adjusted present value of this contingent performance obligation at $28,500.
In: Accounting
(a) In compensating a senior executive like the CEO of a firm, is there a difference between giving them stock options as opposed to a bonus based on achieving a specific profit level or achieving a specific stock price?
(b) Is either option a more effective incentive in solving the owner-manager principal-agent problem. Please explain.
(c) Why do many firms choose to give their CEOs stock options rather than bonuses? Please explain.
In: Economics
You are a social worker in an OBGYN department of a hospital. The CEO of the hospital has asked you to write a report about the length of time that women spend in the hospital after giving birth. The CEO has told you that in the thinks that insured women spend longer on average in the hospital than uninsured women after childbirth. She wants you to test this claim with data from your hospital. Two samples of 16 women were taken. Test the claim that insured women spend longer in the hospital than uninsured women using an α = .01.
Insured:
Mean = 2.3 days
Standard Deviation = 0.77
Sample Size = 16
Uninsured:
Mean = 1.9 days
Standard Deviation = 0.77
Sample Size = 16
To complete this lab exercise, you should:
Identify whether you will test this claim using a 1-tailed hypothesis or a 2-tailed hypothesis.
State the Null and Research Hypotheses
Find the Critical Value using the T-Table and interpret what you will do with the null hypothesis given that Critical Value
Identify the Correct Degrees of Freedom you’ll use
HAND CALCULATE the t-value. Show your work. Start with the formula and then plug in the correct values from there.
Make a decision regarding the null. Interpret your decision with regard to this question.
Find the p-value range for the hypothesis test using your test statistic and the t-table.
BY HAND, construct a 98% Confidence Interval for the difference between insured and uninsured women. What does this confidence interval tell you?
What are your overall conclusions? Is the confidence interval interpretation consistent with your interpretation from the t-test?
In: Math
Presented below is the comparative balance sheet for Grouper Company. PLEASE SHOW WORK
|
Grouper Company |
||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
December 31 |
||||||
|
2021 |
2022 |
|||||
| Assets | ||||||
|
Cash |
$181,000 | $272,500 | ||||
|
Accounts receivable (net) |
218,100 | 155,200 | ||||
|
Short-term investments |
271,100 | 149,100 | ||||
|
Inventories |
1,066,900 | 978,500 | ||||
|
Prepaid expenses |
24,800 | 24,800 | ||||
|
Plant & equipment |
2,604,700 | 1,948,400 | ||||
|
Accumulated depreciation |
(1,003,600) | (743,000) | ||||
| $3,363,000 | $2,785,500 | |||||
| Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||||
|
Accounts payable |
$49,800 | $74,700 | ||||
|
Accrued expenses |
168,900 | 200,700 | ||||
|
Bonds payable |
452,100 | 189,100 | ||||
|
Capital stock |
2,108,600 | 1,782,200 | ||||
|
Retained earnings |
583,600 | 538,800 | ||||
| $3,363,000 | $2,785,500 | |||||
Prepare a comparative balance sheet of Grouper Company showing the dollar change and the percent change for each item. (If there is a decrease from 2020 to 2021, then enter the amounts and percentages with either a negative sign, i.e. -92,000, -25.25 or parenthesis, i.e. (92,000), (25.25).)
|
GROUPER COMPANY |
||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
December 31 |
Increase or (Decrease) |
|||||||||||
|
Assets |
2021 |
2020 |
$ Change |
% Change |
||||||||
|
Cash |
$181,000 | $272,500 |
$enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Accounts receivable (net) |
218,100 | 155,200 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Investments |
271,100 | 149,100 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Inventories |
1,066,900 | 978,500 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Prepaid expenses |
24,800 | 24,800 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Plant and equipment |
2,604,700 | 1,948,400 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Accumulated depreciation |
(1,003,600 | ) | (743,000 | ) |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages | % | |||||
|
Total |
$3,363,000 | $2,785,500 |
$enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages | % | |||||||
|
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity |
||||||||||||
|
Accounts payable |
$49,800 | $74,700 |
$enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Accrued expenses |
168,900 | 200,700 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Bonds payable |
452,100 | 189,100 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Capital stock |
2,108,600 | 1,782,200 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages |
% | |||||||
|
Retained earnings |
583,600 | 538,800 |
enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages | % | |||||||
|
Total |
$3,363,000 | $2,785,500 |
$enter a dollar amount |
enter percentages | % | |||||||
In: Accounting
n a sample of
800800
U.S. adults,
197197
dine out at a resaurant more than once per week.
TwoTwo
U.S. adults are selected at random from the population of all U.S. adults without replacement. Assuming the sample is representative of all U.S. adults, complete parts (a) through (d).
In: Statistics and Probability
Research the following four federal agencies: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). Provide one real world example of an entity that each agency regulates.
In: Operations Management
A person wants to see if there is correlation between and person's height (x) has any factor on their foot/shoe size (y).
The data is:
Height (X): Foot/shoe Size (Y):
6'3" 12.5 U.S.
6'4" 11.5 U.S.
5'10" 12 U.S.
5'7" 9.5 U.S.
6'7" 15 U.S.
5'3" 7 U.S.
6'0" 10.5 U.S.
6'3" 13 U.S.
discuss why a regression analysis could be appropriate for this problem.
Specifically, what statistical questions are you asking? Why would you want to predict the value of Y? What if you wanted to predict a value of Y that’s beyond the highest value of X (for example if X is time and you want to forecast Y in the future)?examine your classmate’s problem to assess the appropriateness and accuracy of using a linear regression model. Discuss the meaning of the standard error of the estimate and how it affects the predicted values of Y for that analysis.
In: Statistics and Probability
PLEASE ANSWER ALL OF THE QUESTIONS! THANKS!
In: Anatomy and Physiology