Questions
Saffron Industries most recent balance sheet reports total assets of $42,000,000, total liabilities of $16,000,000 and...

Saffron Industries most recent balance sheet reports total assets of $42,000,000, total liabilities of $16,000,000 and stockholders' equity of $26,000,000. Management is considering using $3,000,000 of excess cash to prepay $3,000,000 of outstanding bonds. What effect, if any, would prepaying the bonds have on the company's debt-to-equity ratio?

Remember that the Debt-to-Equity Ratio is: Total Liabilities / Total Stockholder's Equity

Group of answer choices

Prepaying the debt would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to worsen from .62 to .57.

Prepaying the debt would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to worsen from .62 to .50.

Prepaying the debt would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to improve from .62 to .50.

Prepaying the debt would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to remain unchanged.

Prepaying the debt would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to improve from .62 to .57.

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Question 25 pts

On July 1, Shady Creek Resort borrowed $250,000 cash by signing a 10-year, 8% installment note requiring equal payments each June 30 of $37,258. What amount of interest expense will be included in the first annual payment?

Group of answer choices

$37,258

$25,000

$232,742

$17,258

$20,000

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Question 35 pts

On January 1, Year 1, KASE issues $200,000 of 8%, 5-year bond, dated 1/1/20X1, which matures 1/1/20X6, and must pay interest twice a year (semi-annually) every first of July and first of January. The Cash balance at the end of July 1, 20X3 is:

Warning: When doing calculations, it is recommended to use Excel. If you are calculating by hand, do not round to the nearest whole number until you get to the final answer

Enter your answer as rounded to the nearest whole number, for example:

if the answer is 100, enter 100

if the answer is 100.49, enter 100

if the answer is 100.5, enter 101

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Question 45 pts

On July 1, Shady Creek Resort borrowed $250,000 cash by signing a 10-year, 8% installment note requiring equal payments each June 30 of $37,258. What is the journal entry to record the first annual payment?

Group of answer choices

Debit Interest Expense $20,000; debit Notes Payable $17,258; credit Cash $37,258.

Debit Interest Expense $20,000; credit Cash $20,000.

Debit Interest Expense $37,258; credit Cash $37,258.

Debit Cash $250,000; debit Interest Expense $37,258; credit Notes Payable $287,258.

Debit Interest Expense $20,000; debit Interest Payable $17,258; credit Cash $37,258.

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Question 55 pts

On July 1, Shady Creek Resort borrowed $250,000 cash by signing a 10-year, 8% installment note requiring equal payments each June 30 of $37,258. What amount of principal will be included in the first annual payment?

Group of answer choices

$25,000

$232,742

$37,258

$20,000

$17,258

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Question 65 pts

A corporation borrowed $125,000 cash by signing a 5-year, 9% installment note requiring equal annual payments each December 31 of $32,136. What journal entry would the issuer record for the first payment?

Group of answer choices

Debit Interest Expense $11,250; debit Notes Payable $20,886; credit Cash $32,136.

Debit Notes Payable $32,136; debit Interest Payable $11,250; credit Cash $43,386.

Debit Notes Payable $11,250; credit Cash $11,250.

Debit Interest Expense $7,136; debit Notes Payable $25,000; credit Cash $32,136.

Debit Notes Payable $32,136; credit Cash $32,136.

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Question 75 pts

A company issued 8%, 15-year bonds with a par value of $550,000 that pay interest semiannually. The market rate on the date of issuance was 8%. The journal entry to record each semiannual interest payment is:

Group of answer choices

Debit Bond Interest Expense $550,000; credit Cash $550,000.

Debit Bond Interest Payable $22,000; credit Cash $22,000.

Debit Bond Interest Expense $22,000; credit Cash $22,000.

Debit Bond Interest Expense $44,000; credit Cash $44,000.

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Question 85 pts

A bondholder that owns a $1,000, 10%, 10-year bond has:

Group of answer choices

The right to receive $10 per year until maturity.

Ownership rights in the issuing company.

The right to receive $1,000 at maturity.

The right to receive dividends of $1,000 per year.

The right to receive $10,000 at maturity.

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Question 95 pts

On January 1, Year 1, Stratton Company borrowed $100,000 on a 10-year, 7% installment note payable. The terms of the note require Stratton to pay 10 equal payments of $14,238 each December 31 for 10 years. The required general journal entry to record the payment on the note on December 31, Year 2 is:

Group of answer choices

Debit Interest Expense $6,493; debit Notes Payable $7,745; credit Cash $14,238.

Debit Notes Payable $10,000; debit Interest Expense $4,238; credit Cash $14,238.

Debit Interest Expense $7,000; debit Notes Payable $7,238; credit Cash $14,238.

Debit Notes Payable $7,000; debit Interest Expense $7,238; credit Cash $14,238.

Debit Notes Payable $14,238; credit Cash $14,238.

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Question 105 pts

On January 1, Year 1, KASE borrowed $200,000 on a 6-year, 7% installment note payable. The terms of the note require KASE to pay 6 equal payments each December 31 for 6 years. The Notes Payable balance on December 31, Year 5 is:

Warning: When doing calculations, it is recommended to use Excel. If you are calculating by hand, do not round to the nearest whole number until you get to the final answer

Enter your answer as rounded to the nearest whole number, for example:

if the answer is 100, enter 100

if the answer is 100.49, enter 100

if the answer is 100.5, enter 101

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Question 115 pts

On January 1, Year 1, KASE issues $200,000 of 8%, 5-year bond, dated 1/1/20X1, which matures 1/1/20X6, and must pay interest twice a year (semi-annually) every first of July and first of January. The cumulative Bond Interest Expense through December 31, 20X4 is:

Warning: When doing calculations, it is recommended to use Excel. If you are calculating by hand, do not round to the nearest whole number until you get to the final answer

Enter your answer as rounded to the nearest whole number, for example:

if the answer is 100, enter 100

if the answer is 100.49, enter 100

if the answer is 100.5, enter 101

Flag this Question

Question 125 pts

Seedly Corporation's most recent balance sheet reports total assets of $35,000,000 and total liabilities of $17,500,000. Management is considering issuing $5,000,000 of par value bonds (at par) with a maturity date of ten years and a contract rate of 7%. What effect, if any, would issuing the bonds have on the company's debt-to-equity ratio?

Remember that the Debt-to-Equity Ratio is: Total Liabilities / Total Stockholder's Equity

Group of answer choices

Issuing the bonds would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to improve from 1.0 to 1.3.

Issuing the bonds would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to remain unchanged.

Issuing the bonds would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to improve from .5 to .8.

Issuing the bonds would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to worsen from 1.0 to 1.3.

Issuing the bonds would cause the firm's debt-to-equity ratio to worsen from .5 to .8.

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Question 135 pts

On January 1, Year 1, KASE borrowed $200,000 on a 6-year, 7% installment note payable. The terms of the note require KASE to pay 6 equal payments each December 31 for 6 years. The Cash payment on December 31, Year 2 is:

Warning: When doing calculations, it is recommended to use Excel. If you are calculating by hand, do not round to the nearest whole number until you get to the final answer

Enter your answer as rounded to the nearest whole number, for example:

if the answer is 100, enter 100

if the answer is 100.49, enter 100

if the answer is 100.5, enter 101

Flag this Question

Question 145 pts

On July 1, Shady Creek Resort borrowed $250,000 cash by signing a 10-year, 8% installment note requiring equal payments each June 30 of $37,258. What is the appropriate journal entry to record the issuance of the note?

Group of answer choices

Debit Cash $250,000; credit Notes Payable $250,000.

Debit Notes Payable $250,000; credit Cash $250,000.

Debit Cash $250,000; debit Interest Expense $37,258; credit Notes Payable $287,258.

Debit Cash $287,258; credit Interest Payable $37,258; credit Notes Payable $250,000.

Debit Cash $37,258; credit Notes Payable $37,258.

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Question 155 pts

On January 1, Year 1, KASE borrowed $200,000 on a 6-year, 7% installment note payable. The terms of the note require KASE to pay 6 equal payments each December 31 for 6 years. The cumulative Interest Expense through December 31, Year 4 is:

Warning: When doing calculations, it is recommended to use Excel. If you are calculating by hand, do not round to the nearest whole number until you get to the final answer

Enter your answer as rounded to the nearest whole number, for example:

if the answer is 100, enter 100

if the answer is 100.49, enter 100

if the answer is 100.5, enter 101

Flag this Question

Question 165 pts

This is a free-response question, which will be graded after all HW submissions are in. Your HW grade will not reflect these 5 points until this portion is graded by the TA's

Prompt:

KASE is in need of $300,000 to build a new prototype. Upon looking at its options, it finds it can get $300,000 in one of two ways:

  • On 1/1/20X1, issuing a $300,000 of 2.5%, 4-year bond, dated 1/1/20X1, which matures 1/1/20X5, and must pay interest twice a year (semi-annually) every first of July and first of January
  • On 1/1/20X1, borrowing $300,000 on a 6-year, 5.5% installment note payable. The terms of the note require KASE to pay 6 equal payments each December 31 for 6 years

Question:

If KASE wanted the most pre-tax Income Statement profit over 6 years, which way would she choose, and why?

In: Accounting

Question 1: Car Dealership Scenario. Complete parts A – D based on the database specifications listed...

Question 1: Car Dealership Scenario. Complete parts A – D based on the database specifications listed below.

Database Specification

  • Car Dealerships have a unique business id number, dealership name, city, state, and a unique website URL. The business id is a number in the range from 1000-9999.
  • Salespersons have a first name, last name, age, gender, and a unique employee id number. The employee number is in the range 100-999.
  • Customers have a first name, last name, city, state, gender, age, and a unique taxpayer id number. The taxpayer id number is 9 digits.
  • Cars have a make, model, year, suggested price, and a unique vehicle id number. A car can have (possibly multiple) colors that should be modeled as an attribute. Note: the make of a car is the manufacturer (e.g., Ford, Honda, BMW) and the model is the name of the model (e.g. Civic, Accord, CRX).
  • Salespersons work for dealerships. In order to be in the database, a salesperson must work for a dealership. However, a dealership may exist in the database without any salespersons. Dealerships have many salespersons who work for them, and a salesperson may work for many different dealerships. The database should record the start date when a salesperson began working for a dealership.
  • Dealerships own cars. A dealership may own many cars, or they may be completely out of inventory and own zero cars. A car can only be owned by one dealership, and must be owned by a dealership in order to be in the database. The database should record the date that the dealership acquired the car and the price that the dealership paid for the car.
  • Salespersons sell cars to customers. Even if a salesperson has not sold any cars to customers they should still be stored in the database. However, the database should only store information about customers who have purchased a car from a salesperson. Information about cars owned by dealerships should be stored in the database regardless of whether they have been sold or not. A salesperson may sell a particular car to only one customer. Similarly, a customer may purchase a particular car from only one salesperson. However, a customer may purchase more than one car from the same salesperson. When a salesperson sells a car to a customer, the sales price and date should be recorded in the database.

Parts A - D

  1. Based on the database specification given above, draw an ER diagram for the database. Include entities, attributes, relationships, cardinality, and participation constraints. The ER diagram should accurately reflect the specifications.  Clearly state any assumptions.

  1. Map your ER diagram to relations. Make sure to represent the relations, attributes, primary keys, and foreign keys.

  1. Implement your database. Based on your ER and relation diagrams, create tables, specify primary and foreign keys, and include any other necessary integrity constraints such as checks. Turn in a list of the SQL DDL commands (e.g., create table commands) that you used to create your database.
  1. Populate your database with data. You may do this either by writing SQL insert statements to load data, or by using the data entry or import features of MySQL Workbench. You need to create enough and appropriate data to illustrate that your database works for the queries below. At a minimum, load at least three records for each table. However, you may need to load more records to illustrate that particular queries work correctly.

  1. Write and run SQL queries in MySQL Workbench for each of the queries listed below using your database with the data loaded. In your report, for each query, restate the query in English, then list the SQL query you wrote for it, and finally, list the output from the database in response to the query.

Queries: Write and run SQL queries for the following questions. Use the minimum number of tables required for each query.

  1. List the first and last names of customers over 40 years old who purchased a Ford car.
  2. List the first and last names of salespersons who have NEVER sold a Ford car.
  3. List the total value (suggested price) of all cars owned by the dealership named ‘SILS Car Deals’.
  4. Find the average sales price (actual sales price, not suggested price) of a 2008 Honda Civic.
  5. List the dealership name and the total number of cars that each dealership owns.
  6. List the average age of customers who have purchased a car from salesperson ‘Homer Simpson’.
  7. List the last name, employee id number, and the overall number of cars sold by each salesperson who has sold at least one Honda Civic.
  8. List the names of salespersons who have worked for all the car dealerships.

In: Computer Science

You are analyzing the market for soccer balls. In particular, you want to analyze the change...

You are analyzing the market for soccer balls. In particular, you want to analyze the change in equilibrium price and quantity in that market, after these three events have occurred:

Event 1: A new soccer player becomes a huge success. This has two effects. First, it incentivizes more buyers to consume soccer balls. Second, the preferences of everyone change (old and new customers), as now many want to be a soccer player.

Event 2: A rise in the price of caucho or caoutchouc, input that is used in construction of soccer balls.

Event 3: The income of all (new and old) consumers of soccer balls has increased and a soccer ball is considered to be a normal good.

Which of the following statements is true relative to the equilibrium market before these events?

Group of answer choices

The equilibrium price of soccer balls increases but the effect in quantity depends on the magnitude of the shifts in demand and supply

The equilibrium quantity of soccer balls increases for sure but the effect in price depends on the magnitude of the shifts in demand and supply

The equilibrium price increases and the equilibrium quantity of soccer balls decreases

The equilibrium price decreases and the equilibrium quantity of soccer balls increases

In: Economics

You are going to apply a very popular investment strategy with options called a straddle. Basically,...

You are going to apply a very popular investment strategy with options called a straddle. Basically, you buy a call option and a put option for the same stock and the same maturity that are as close as possible to being at the money (stock and strike price very close to each other). First, use the information given in the spreadsheet to create the payoffs in dollars. The payoff diagram will fill in as you put in payoffs. Second, go out and choose a stock of your choice that has options traded on it and replicate a straddle strategy with real data. Yahoo Finance has easily accessible option data for stocks and can be viewed in straddle view. What conclusions can you draw from this type of strategy in terms of upside and downside as well as when do you gain and when do you lose?

Can you provide the completed table as well as the second part?

Given Information:
Stock Price                    25.27
Strike Price                    25.00
Call Price                      1.40
Put Price                      0.90
Calculations:
Stock Price Call Payoff Put Payoff Total Payoff
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

In: Finance

implement c++ Quicksort using median of 3 #ifndef QSORT_H #define QSORT_H #include #include using namespace std;...

implement c++ Quicksort using median of 3

#ifndef QSORT_H

#define QSORT_H

#include

#include

using namespace std;

template

T median_of_three(T& a, T& b, T& c, TComparator comparator) {

}

template

size_t partition(vector& vec, TComparator& comparator, size_t low, size_t high) {

// TODO: implement.

}

template

void QuickSort(vector& vec, TComparator comparator,size_t low,size_t high) {

if(comparator(low,high)){

size_t loc = partition(vec,comparator,low,high);

QuickSort(vec,comparator,low,loc-1);

QuickSort(vec,comparator,loc+1,high);

}

return;

}

template

void quicksort(vector& vec, TComparator comparator) {

// TODO: implement.

size_t size = vec.size();

QuickSort(vec,comparator,0,size-1);

}

#endif

test_case:

int main() {

srand(time(NULL));

vector<int> test;

for (int i =0; i < 10; i++) {

test.push_back(rand() % 1000);

}

for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {

cout << test[i] << " ";

}

cout<<"Before sort;"<<endl;

quicksort(test, std::less<int> {});

for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {

cout << test[i] << " ";

}

cout << endl;

return 0;

}

In: Computer Science

how would i change the for loops to while loops in the code below #include<stdio.h> #include<stdlib.h>...

how would i change the for loops to while loops in the code below

#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
int main()
{
int seed;
// Taking seed value as input from the user
printf("Enter a seed value (0 to quit): \n");
scanf("%d", &seed);
// Running the loop until user enters 0 to quit
// count array will count frequency of 0 , 1 , 2 ,3
int count[4];
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) count[i] = 0;
while (seed != 0)
{
// Passing seed value to the function srand()
srand(seed);
// Printing 5 random values
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
// generae a random number
// and take it modulo with 4
int rand_num = rand() % 4;
printf("%d ", rand_num);
count[rand_num]++;
}
printf("\n");
// Taking next seed value as input from the user
printf("Enter a seed value (0 to quit): \n");
scanf("%d", &seed);
}
// print count of each element [0-3]
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
printf("Count of %d = %d\n", i , count[i]);
}

return 0;
}

In: Computer Science

As the community health LPN, you have received a referral for a 39-year old Indonesian lady...

As the community health LPN, you have received a referral for a 39-year old Indonesian lady for staple removal, post-op emergency cholecystectomy. Upon arrival to the home, you observe broken glass around the entrance of the basement apartment and note it is in desperate need of repairs. One of the windows has been boarded up and the step has a board missing and the wood looks rotten. The client answers the door, carrying a 2-year child on her hip and 2 older siblings, ages 5 and 7 are standing behind her. The children are all noted to be dressed in several layers of clothing. Upon entering the home, you note the home feels quite cold and damp. The only furniture you can see is a small table, two chairs and a mattress on the floor of the only bedroom. There is no visible toys, books, or TV. In communicating with the client, you detect a thick accent and she speaks in broken English. She informs you that she is doing ok; however, the family is struggling financially since they arrived in NL from Indonesia 1 year ago. Her husband is working at the local gas bar part time. The client states "I try get groceries cheap but that hard". " I like NL but miss my home country. (I talk to my family every month". I get job but need more education. My son he needs medicine but we no money. My husband has bad cough, he always tired and no taste no more." I attend my church online and meet 2 ladies from my home country. One lady wants to teach me how make masks. She tells me I think take English course by our church.

• What resources are available in your community?

• What is the role of a community health LPN in caring for the client and her family?

• Who should be included in the interprofessional care team for this client?

• How can the LPN provide culturally appropriate care?

• How can LPN’s working in community ensure they are empowering families to meet their own needs?

In: Nursing

case study Julie is 45 year old mother and lives on a cropping farm, run as...

case study
Julie is 45 year old mother and lives on a cropping farm, run as a family business, with her husband and his brother. Julie has three children same, aged 14; Katie, aged 12 and James aged 8.The two older children attend boarding school and return home for holidays. James is at home and attends the local primary school 50 km away.
Both Julie's boys have type 1 diabetes that she manages.
Julie has lived with her diabetes for 37 years and has many comorbidities due her both her diabetes and celiac disease. which she developed as a teenager. Julie has stage 3 chronic kidney disease, poor eyesight and osteoporosis. She is currently tryinģ to give up smoking after having smoked since of 16.
Julie currently sees her endocrinologist in large metropolitan hospital every three-month at outpatient clinic. It take her five hours to drive by car to the appointment in the city a journey that she takes with her husband. Her nephrologist is based at the regional hospital about 2 hours drive from home.Julie engages with a diabetes educator via phone and face to face monthly . The local hospital is 50 km away and is small, rural hospital. with a locum doctor and regular nursing staff, who cover the acute inpatient ward, and community registered nurse. She attends a community chronic diseases self management program at the local church hall run by the community registered nurse once a week in town and does her weekly groceries. Julie has expressed to the diabetes educator that she need more assistance with managing her own condition. She is concerned that her son who have type 1 diabetes, may end up with the same comorbidities as her because she has an autoimmune chronic condition

Question
identify 5 evidence based nursing intervention that are appropriate to implement in planning the patient's nursing care and provide a clear rationale for each intervention

In: Nursing

case study Julie is 45 year old mother and lives on a cropping farm, run as...

case study
Julie is 45 year old mother and lives on a cropping farm, run as a family business, with her husband and his brother. Julie has three children same, aged 14; Katie, aged 12 and James aged 8.The two older children attend boarding school and return home for holidays. James is at home and attends the local primary school 50 km away.
Both Julie's boys have type 1 diabetes that she manages.
Julie has lived with her diabetes for 37 years and has many comorbidities due her both her diabetes and celiac disease. which she developed as a teenager. Julie has stage 3 chronic kidney disease, poor eyesight and osteoporosis. She is currently tryinģ to give up smoking after having smoked since of 16.
Julie currently sees her endocrinologist in large metropolitan hospital every three-month at outpatient clinic. It take her five hours to drive by car to the appointment in the city a journey that she takes with her husband. Her nephrologist is based at the regional hospital about 2 hours drive from home.Julie engages with a diabetes educator via phone and face to face monthly . The local hospital is 50 km away and is small, rural hospital. with a locum doctor and regular nursing staff, who cover the acute inpatient ward, and community registered nurse. She attends a community chronic diseases self management program at the local church hall run by the community registered nurse once a week in town and does her weekly groceries. Julie has expressed to the diabetes educator that she need more assistance with managing her own condition. She is concerned that her son who have type 1 diabetes, may end up with the same comorbidities as her because she has an autoimmune chronic condition

Question
identify 5 evidence based nursing intervention that are appropriate to implement in planning the patient's nursing care and provide a clear rationale for each intervention

In: Nursing

On the afternoon of May 20, the patient, Mr. Ard, began feeling nauseated. He was in...

On the afternoon of May 20, the patient, Mr. Ard, began feeling nauseated. He was in pain and had shortness of breath. Althoughhis wife rang the call bell several times, it was not until sometime later that evening that someone responded and gave Ard medicationfor the nausea. The nausea continued to worsen. Mrs. Ard then noticed that her husband was having difficulty breathing. He wasreeling from side to side in bed. Believing that her husband was dying, she continued to call for help. She estimated that she rang thecall bell for 1.25 hours before anyone responded. A code was eventually called. Unfortunately, Mr. Ard did not survive the code. Therewas no documentation in the medical records for May 20, between 5:30 PM and 6:45 PM, that would indicate that any nurse orphysician checked on Ard’s condition. This finding collaborated Mrs. Ard’s testimony regarding this time period.

A wrongful death action was brought against the hospital, and the district court granted judgment for Mrs. Ard. The hospital appealed.

Ms. Krebs, an expert in general nursing, stated that it should have been obvious to the nurses from the physicians’ progress notes thatthe patient was a high risk for aspiration. This problem was never addressed in the nurses’ care plan or in the nurses’ notes.

On May 20, Ard’s assigned nurse was Ms. Florscheim. Krebs stated that Florscheim did not perform a full assessment of the patient’srespiratory and lung status. There was nothing in the record indicating that she completed such an evaluation after he vomited. Krebsalso testified that a nurse did not conduct a swallowing assessment at any time. Although Florscheim testified that she checked on thepatient around 6:00 PM on May 20, there was no documentation in the medical record. Ms. Farris, an expert witness for the defense,testified on cross-examination that if a patient was in the type of distress described by Mrs. Ard and no nurse checked on him for 1.25hours, that would fall below the expected standard of care.

  • What happened?
  • Why did things go wrong?
  • What were the relevant legal issues?
  • How could the event have been prevented?
  • What is your verdict?

In: Nursing