The head of maintenance at XYZ Rent-A-Car believes that the mean number of miles between services is 4639 4639 miles, with a standard deviation of 437 437 miles. If he is correct, what is the probability that the mean of a sample of 32 32 cars would differ from the population mean by less than 181 181 miles? Round your answer to four decimal places.
In: Statistics and Probability
In: Chemistry
Kim Hotels is interested in developing a new hotel in Seoul. The company estimates that the hotel would require an initial investment of $25 million. Kim expects the hotel will produce positive cash flows of $4 million a year at the end of each of the next 20 years. The project's cost of capital is 14%.
$ million
In: Finance
Marilyn Helm Retailers is attempting to decide on a location for a new retail outlet. At the moment, the firm has three alternatives: stay where it is but enlarge the facility; locate along the main street in nearby
Newbury;
or locate in a new shopping mall in
Hyde Park.
The company has selected the four factors listed in the following table as the basis for evaluation and has assigned weights as shown:
|
Factor |
Factor Description |
Weight |
Present Location |
Newbury |
Hyde Park |
|
1 |
Average community income |
0.30 |
40 |
60 |
50 |
|
2 |
Community growth potential |
0.15 |
20 |
20 |
80 |
|
3 |
Availability of public transportation |
0.20 |
30 |
60 |
50 |
|
4 |
Labor availability, attitude, and cost |
0.35 |
80 |
50 |
50 |
a) Based on the given information, the best location for Marilyn Helm Retailers is to open the new retail outlet in
Hyde Park
, with a total weighted score of
54.5054.50.
(Enter your response rounded to two decimal places.)
b) A new subway station is scheduled to open across the street from the present location in about a month, so its third factor score should be raised to
40.
Then, the best location for Marilyn Helm Retailers is to open the new retail outlet in
Hyde Park
Hyde Park
Newbury
Present Location
, with a total weighted score of
nothing.
(Enter your response rounded to two decimal places.)
In: Economics
Kim Hotels is interested in developing a new hotel in Seoul. The company estimates that the hotel would require an initial investment of $20 million. Kim expects that the hotel will produce positive cash flows of $3 million a year at the end of each of the next 20 years. The project's cost of capital is 13%. While Kim expects the cash flows to be $3 million a year, it recognizes that the cash flows could, in fact, be much higher or lower, depending on whether the Korean government imposes a large hotel tax. One year from now, Kim will know whether the tax will be imposed. There is a 50% chance that the tax will be imposed, in which case the yearly cash flows will be only $2.2 million. At the same time, there is a 50% chance that the tax will not be imposed, in which case the yearly cash flows will be $3.8 million. Kim is deciding whether to proceed with the hotel today or to wait 1 year to find out whether the tax will be imposed. If Kim waits a year, the initial investment will remain at $20 million. Assume that all cash flows are discounted at 13%. Use the Black-Scholes model to estimate the value of the option. Assume the variance of the project's rate of return is 7.32% and the risk-free rate is 6%. Enter your answer in millions. For example, an answer of $1.2 million should be entered as 1.2, not 1,200,000. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to two decimal places.
In: Finance
Anil is planning a birthday party at an amusement park for his younger daughter and her friends. The manager of the park is considering whether to use uniform pricing or two-part-pricing. Anil's willingness to pay for rides for the party is p = 25 - 0.5Q, where p is the ticket price per ride and Q is the number of rides. The amusement park has a marginal cost of $5 for each additional ride. Its fixed cost for handling the party is $20.
a. Create a spreadsheet with quantity, price, consumer surplus, revenue, marginal revenue, cost, marginal cost, and profit as column headings. Fill in the spreadsheets cells for Q = 5 to Q = 50 in increments of 5 units. If the manager uses uniform pricing, what is the profit maximizing ticket price per ride, the number of rides, and the profit earned by the park?
b. Suppose that the manager uses two-part pricing: an entry fee for the entire party of young girls and price per ride. Calculate the profit-maximizing entry fee if the price per ride is the same as the monopoly price that you determined in part a. Calculate the total profit earned by the park.
c. Now suppose the manager uses two-part-pricing with a per-ride price equal to marginal cost and a profit-maximizing entry fee. Determine the price per ride, the number of rides, and the total profit (including profit from ticket sales and the entry fee) in this case.
In: Economics
Michael Wilson entered into a new business, hotel ownership, by buying a small 24 room hotel and café. The hotel is located in a remote area of Minnesota that is popular for tourists. Michael has hired you for advice.
Michael hired a young couple to run the hotel and café on a daily basis and plans to pay them a monthly salary. They will live for free in a small apartment adjacent to the office. The couple will be responsible for hiring and supervising five part-time personnel who will help with cleaning the rooms, cooking, waiting on customers in the café. The couple will maintain records of rooms rented, meals served, and payments received. They will also make weekly deposits.
Mike is concerned about his lack of control over the records and operations. Mike lives 5 hours away and will only be able to make periodic visits. Mike trusts the couple but wonders if it makes sense to place so much trust in employees.
Mike needs your help to identify possible ways that his motel and café could be defrauded and especially wants assistance to devise creative internal controls to help prevent or detect fraud.
Required
In: Accounting
|
Eric’s Demand |
Greg’s Demand |
Katie’s Demand |
|||||
|
Price per Acre |
Number of Acres |
Price per Acre |
Number of Acres |
Price per Acre |
Number of Acres |
||
|
$14 |
1 |
$11 |
1 |
$18 |
1 |
||
|
$13 |
2 |
$10 |
2 |
$17 |
2 |
||
|
$12 |
3 |
$9 |
3 |
$16 |
3 |
||
|
$11 |
4 |
$8 |
4 |
$15 |
4 |
||
|
$10 |
5 |
$7 |
5 |
$14 |
5 |
||
|
$9 |
6 |
$6 |
6 |
$13 |
6 |
||
|
$8 |
7 |
$5 |
7 |
$12 |
7 |
||
|
$7 |
8 |
$4 |
8 |
$11 |
8 |
||
b. Assume that the supply curve for the park is shown in the following chart. Graph this supply curve on your graph from part b. What is the socially optimal size of the park (in acres)?
|
Supply Curve |
|
|
Price per Acre |
Number of Acres |
|
$13 |
1 |
|
$17 |
2 |
|
$22 |
3 |
|
$27 |
4 |
|
$31 |
5 |
|
$35 |
6 |
|
$39 |
7 |
|
$44 |
8 |
In: Economics
Devos Inc. is building a hotel. It will have 4 kinds of rooms: suites where customers can smoke, suites that are non-smoking, budget rooms where the customers can smoke, and budget rooms that are non-smoking. When we build the hotel, we need to plan for how many rooms of each type we should have. The following are requirements for the hotel:
In: Operations Management
In: Statistics and Probability