The price of crude oil during the period 2000-2010 can be approximated by P(t) = 6t + 18 dollars per barrel (0 <= t <= 10) in year t, where t = 0 represents 2000. Russia's crude oil production over the same period can be approximated by Q(t) = ?0.08t2 + 1.2t + 5.5 million barrels per day (0 <= t <= 10). † Use these models to estimate Russia's daily oil revenue and also its rate of change in 2008. (Round your answers to the nearest $1 million.) daily oil revenue _________million rate of change in 2008 _______million per year
In: Statistics and Probability
In: Accounting
A 2010 Pew Research poll asked 1,306 Americans "From what you've read and heard, is there solid evidence that the average temperature on earth has been getting warmer over the past few decades, or not?". The table below shows the distribution of responses by party and ideology, where the counts have been replaced with relative frequencies.
| Earth is warming | Not warming | Don't know (or refuse) | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative Republican | 0.11 | 0.2 | 0.02 | 0.33 |
| Mod/Lib Republican | 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.01 | 0.13 |
| Mod/Cons Democrat | 0.25 | 0.07 | 0.02 | 0.34 |
| Liberal Democrat | 0.18 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.2 |
| Total | 0.6 | 0.34 | 0.06 | 1 |
b) What is the probability that a randomly chosen respondent believes the earth is warming or is a liberal Democrat? (please round to four decimal places)
c) What is the probability that a randomly chosen respondent believes the earth is warming given that he is a liberal Democrat? (please round to four decimal places)
d) What is the probability that a randomly chosen respondent believes the earth is warming given that he is a conservative Republican? (please round to four decimal places)
f) What is the probability that a randomly chosen respondent is a moderate/liberal Republican given that he does not believe that the earth is warming? (please round to four decimal places)
In: Statistics and Probability
Collins Inc. acquired 100% of the voting common stock of Merton Inc. on January 1, 2010. The book value and fair value of Merton’s accounts on that date are following. Credit balances are indicated by parentheses. Collins used the equity method to account for investment.
|
Book Value |
Fair Value |
|
|
Cash receivables |
140,000 |
140,000 |
|
Inventory |
340,000 |
340,000 |
|
Land |
440,000 |
480,000 |
|
Buildings (20-year useful life) |
480,000 |
480,000 |
|
Equipment (10-year useful life) |
180,000 |
180,000 |
|
Liabilities |
(860,000) |
(860,000) |
|
Common Stock |
(160,000) |
|
|
APIC |
(80,000) |
|
|
Retained Earnings |
(480,000) |
1.Assume that Collins issued 24,000 shares of common stock with a $5 par value and a $42 fair value for all of the outstanding stock of Merton. In this acquisition transaction, how much goodwill should be recognized?
$720,000
$188,000
$210,000
$100,000
2.Assume Collins had Common Stock 5,000,000 and Retained Earnings 1,000,000 at
Of acquisition. What will be the consolidated Retained Earnings (as of January 1, 2010
$6,000,000
$480,000
$1,000,000
$1,480,000
3. Assume that Collins issued 24,000 shares of common stock with a $5 par value and a $42 fair value for all of the outstanding stock of Merton. At the date of acquisition, at what amount is the investment recorded on Collins’ books?
$720,000
$820,000
$1,008,000
$120,000
In: Accounting
Since 2010 housing market in BC is on the never ending price rise. Vancouver has faced the highest price boom ever since then and the average rental apartments in the city has risen to the unprecedented $2300.00 rent. Discuss the reasons behind the price surges considering the balance of supply and demand in the market and predict how the market will respond post Covid-19. Try to focus on the driving forces behind the rise and the other current environmental factors which will or may come to effect post Covid-19.
In: Economics
In: Finance
Bob makes the following gifts in 2017:
In 2010 he gifts $190,000.00 to his daughter Maya to buy a home;
In 2011 he gifts $50,000.00 to Maya by paying UPMC Hamot for a surgery Maya
had to have her appendix removed; and
In 2015 he gave her $250,000.00 as a part of his estate planning
1. Does Bob have to file a gift tax return?
2. What is his gift tax liability for each year?
In: Finance
In 2010, the Top-slice Golf Company decided to augment their very successful line of golf clubs with a new line of professional caliber golf balls. The executives at Top-Slice were aware of the difficulty of penetrating the golf ball market but feel, with their name recognition and the possibility of receiving endorsements from tour professionals that were playing Top-Slice clubs, chances for success were substantial. The company purchased $175 million of equipment and buildings in 2011 to begin production. The Top-Slice golf ball has not performed up to expectations. The tour professionals did not care for the ball and did not endorse it. Significant improvements in golf balls by Callaway and Nike and the continued dominance of the Titleist ProV1 series made entering the market very difficult.
On July 1, 2017, the Board of Directors voted to sell off the golf ball manufacturing division. The company continued to operate the facility at current levels of production until the sale of the division was completed on June 1, 2018. Top-Slice has a April 30 year end and the controller and CEO are concerned about the proper reporting for the disposal of the golf ball manufacturing division in the year-end April 30, 2018 financials. The company wants to issue the financial statements to the public by the end of June 2018. You are to draft a report to the controller and CEO identifying the issues and accounting choices associated with reporting the disposal and the authoritative guidance that exists to determine the proper manner of reporting the assets, liabilities, and results of operation for the division.
In: Accounting
Case 3: Passing along Costs In 2010, the costs of powdered milk, cocoa, coffee, and wheat rose at double-digit rates. Wildfires in Russia had caused wheat and other crop prices to shoot up. Cocoa prices reached a 33-year high in July, helped along by speculative activities, including the London-based commodity trading house Armajaro Holdings Ltd.’s move to store 240,000 metric tons of cocoa, worth roughly $1 billion. Tea prices went up significantly on account of higher fuel costs and poor harvests in India. Big consumer-goods companies often find ways to offset the commodity price increases, sometimes through cost-cutting and sometimes by passing along higher prices to retailers and consumers. J.M. Smucker Co. raised prices about 9 percent on products in its coffee lineup, which includes Folgers, Dunkin’ Donuts, and Millstone brands. In response to rising milk prices,Danone, which makes yogurt products, increased prices in markets including Mexico and Poland. Unilever’s chief financial officer noted that tea costs have gone up, and Unilever has already sent that higher cost down the chain on its consumer tea products.
a. Suppose the price of coffee beans increases by $0.20 per pound. What is the effect of this raw material price increase on the demand for roasted coffee?
b. If one pound produces 50 cups of coffee, would the price of a cup of coffee rise by $0.01? Explain.
The article reports that J. M. Smucker Co. plans to increase its coffee prices by 9 percent. If Smucker has a lot of rivals but has brand name that has value, will this 9 percent increase in retail prices imply that profit will rise by 9 percent? Explain.
a. Is it optimal for a firm to slash prices to retain market share? Explain
b. Is cutting prices during a recession and then raising them in a recovery a good strategy? Explain.
In: Economics
After the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, many charitable
organizations conducted fundraising campaigns to raise money for
emergency relief. Some of these campaigns allowed people to donate
by sending a text message using a cell phone to have the donated
amount added to their cell-phone bill. The report "Early Signals on
Mobile Philanthropy: Is Haiti the Tipping Point?" (Edge Research,
2010) describes the results of a national survey of 1526 people
that investigated the ways in which people made donations to the
Haiti relief effort.
The report states that 17% of Gen Y respondents (those born between
1980 and 1988) and 14% of Gen X respondents (those born between
1968 and 1979) said that they had made a donation to the Haiti
relief effort via text message. The percentage making a donation
via text message was much lower for older respondents. The report
did not say how many respondents were in the Gen Y and Gen X
samples, but for purposes of this exercise, suppose that both
sample sizes were 400 and that it is reasonable to regard the
samples as representative of the Gen Y and Gen X populations.
(a) Is there convincing evidence that the proportion of those in Gen Y who donated to Haiti relief via text message is greater than the proportion for Gen X? Use
α = 0.01.
(Use a statistical computer package to calculate the P-value. Use pY − pX. Round your test statistic to two decimal places and your P-value to three decimal places.)
| z | = |
| P-value | = |
State your conclusion.
We fail to reject H0. We have convincing evidence that the proportion of those in Gen Y who donated to Haiti relief via text message is greater than the proportion of those in Gen X.We reject H0. We don't have convincing evidence that the proportion of those in Gen Y who donated to Haiti relief via text message is greater than the proportion of those in Gen X. We fail to reject H0. We don't have convincing evidence that the proportion of those in Gen Y who donated to Haiti relief via text message is greater than the proportion of those in Gen X.We reject H0. We have convincing evidence that the proportion of those in Gen Y who donated to Haiti relief via text message is greater than the proportion of those in Gen X.
(b) Estimate the difference between the proportion of Gen Y and the
proportion of Gen X that made a donation via text message using a
99% confidence interval. (Round your answers to three decimal
places.)
( , )
Provide an interpretation of the interval.
We are 99% confident that the true difference between the proportion of Gen Y and the proportion of Gen X who made a donation via text message is between these two values.
We are 99% confident that the true difference between the proportion of Gen Y and the proportion of Gen X who made a donation via text message is directly in the middle of these two values.
We are 99% confident that the true proportion of Gen X is between these two values.
We are 99% confident that the true proportion of Gen Y is between these two values.
We are 99% confident that the true proportion of Gen Y is directly in the middle of these two values.
Provide an interpretation of the associated confidence level.
In repeated sampling with a sample size of 400, 99% of the resulting confidence intervals would contain the true proportion of Gen X who donated via text message.
In repeated sampling with any sample size, 99% of the resulting confidence intervals would contain the true difference in proportions who donated via text message.
In repeated sampling with a sample size of 400, 99% of the resulting confidence intervals would contain the true proportion of Gen Y who donated via text message.
In repeated sampling with a sample size of 400, 99% of the resulting confidence intervals would contain the true difference in proportions who donated via text message
In repeated sampling with any sample size, 99% of the resulting confidence intervals would contain the true proportion of Gen X who donated via text message.
In: Statistics and Probability