Joanne started with Performance Horizons five years ago, after receiving her MBA from The Wharton School. She has told people the reason she went to Wharton was to have the best opportunities at jobs that would offer quick advancement so she could rapidly rise to the top of the organization. Joanne has a keen sense of what makes organizations tick and who to go to when things need to get done. She doesn’t “waste” her time with chitchat, as she calls it. Her time is all spent on doing a good job on all her assignments and making sure she makes the right connections with the executives. Her performance has always been rated as excellent.
Which two of the four motivates Joanne the most?
|
Need |
Why? |
In: Economics
Business Week conducted a survey of graduates from 30
top MBA programs (Business Week, September 22, 2003). The
survey found that the average annual salary for male and female
graduates 10 years after graduation was $168,000 and $117,000,
respectively. Assume the population standard deviation for the male
graduates is $40,000, and for the female graduates it is
$25,000.
When calculating values for z, round to two decimal
places.
In: Economics
Artie Siegel, an MBA student, has been having problems balancing his checkbook. His monthly income is derived from a graduate research assistantship; however, he also makes extra money in most months by tutoring undergraduates in their quantitative analysis course. His historical chances of various income levels are shown in the following table: Monthly Income* ($) Probability 350 0.40 400 0.20 450 0.30 500 0.10 *Assume that this income is received at the beginning of each month. Siegel’s expenditures also vary from month to month, and he estimates that they will follow this distribution: Monthly Expenses ($) Probability 300 0.10 400 0.45 500 0.30 600 0.15 He begins his final year with $600 in his checking account. Simulate the entire year (12 months) on the next page and discuss Siegel’s financial picture, i.e., will he be able to keep his head above water--(out of debt)? What is his expected average profit for the 12 months? Use the random numbers below. Random numbers for Income and Expenses Income .85 .54 .73 .95 .9 .19 .81 .2 .76 .55 .57 .01 Expenses .99 .44 .01 .80 .95 .72 .75 .16 .32 .57 .31 .32
Please complete in excel and attached excel screenshot! Much appreciated!
In: Statistics and Probability
Woodcock graduated from law school and finished his MBA in 1983. His student loans came due nine months later. Because he was a part-time student until 1990, he requested that payment be deferred, which the lender incorrectly approved. Because he was not in a degree program, payment should not have been deferred under the terms of the loan. Woodcock filed for bankruptcy in 1992, more than seven years after the loans first became due. Hence, that debt would be discharged unless there was an applicable suspension of the repayment period. Do you feel this mistaken extension is an applicable suspension? Should his student loans be discharged through filing for bankruptcy? [Woodcock v. Chemical Bank, 144 F.3d 1340 (10th Cir. 1998).]
In: Accounting
After graduating from college with your MBA, you decide to take your grandma’s secret cinnamon roll recipe and open up a bakery. You grew up devouring your grandma’s rolls, and you have convinced her to give you the secret. You are confident that your bakery will be the next big hit in the fast-food business. You take out a business loan for the maximum amount your bank will give you, hire several employees, and open a beautiful store that is designed to look like your grandma’s home. After eight months of hard work and diligence, you are crushed when you realize that your store manager has been stealing from you. One of your recent hires tells you that during her last shift, the manager, Stephanie, voided a sale of two-dozen cinnamon rolls, stamped the receipt as a return, and pocketed the money. Stephanie warned the new hire not to say anything and told her she deserved the money because she didn’t get paid enough. Encouraged by your open- door policy, the employee confides in you.
1. Identify what symptoms this fraud will generate. In addition, identify how this fraud will directly affect your revenue and inventory accounts.
2. Explain the steps you should take to search for each symptom you identified in part (1). In particular, describe the computer queries and transactions that should be searched to find this fraud.
3. After you have identified several symptoms, do you have enough evidence to prove that she is guilty? What other evidence is required or useful in this case?
4. Besides searching for symptoms of the fraud, what other investigative steps can be taken to elicit a confession or otherwise prove the fraud?
5. What steps could have been taken to prevent this fraud from occurring in the first place?
In: Accounting
Sheila Goodman recently received her MBA from the Harvard
Business School. She has joined the family business, Goodman
Software Products Inc., as Vice-President of Finance. She believes
in adjusting projects for risk. Her father is somewhat skeptical
but agrees to go along with her. Her approach is somewhat different
than the risk-adjusted discount rate approach, but achieves the
same objective. She suggests that the inflows for each year of a
project be adjusted downward for lack of certainty and then be
discounted back at a risk-free rate. The theory is that the
adjustment penalty makes the inflows the equivalent of riskless
inflows, and therefore a risk-free rate is justified.
A table showing the possible coefficient of variation for an
inflow and the associated adjustment factor is shown next:
| Coefficient of Variation |
Adjustment Factor |
||||
| 0 | − | 0.25 | 0.90 | ||
| 0.26 | − | 0.50 | 0.80 | ||
| 0.51 | − | 0.75 | 0.70 | ||
| 0.76 | − | 1.00 | 0.60 | ||
| 1.01 | − | 1.25 | 0.50 | ||
Assume a $125,000 project provides the following inflows with the
associated coefficients of variation for each year.
| Year | Inflow | Coefficient of Variation | ||||
| 1 | $ | 38,700 | 0.15 | |||
| 2 | 51,200 | 0.23 | ||||
| 3 | 78,200 | 0.48 | ||||
| 4 | 58,900 | 0.75 | ||||
| 5 | 66,500 | 1.05 | ||||
Use Appendix B for an approximate answer but calculate your final
answer using the formula and financial calculator methods.
a. Fill in the table below: (Do not round
intermediate calculations. Round "Adjustment Factor" answers to 2
decimal places and other answers to the nearest whole
dollar.)
b-1. If the risk-free rate is 6 percent, compute
the net present value of the adjusted inflows. (Negative
amount should be indicated by a minus sign. Do not
round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal
places.)
In: Statistics and Probability
Sheila Goodman recently received her MBA from the Harvard
Business School. She has joined the family business, Goodman
Software Products Inc., as Vice-President of Finance. She believes
in adjusting projects for risk. Her father is somewhat skeptical
but agrees to go along with her. Her approach is somewhat different
than the risk-adjusted discount rate approach, but achieves the
same objective. She suggests that the inflows for each year of a
project be adjusted downward for lack of certainty and then be
discounted back at a risk-free rate. The theory is that the
adjustment penalty makes the inflows the equivalent of riskless
inflows, and therefore a risk-free rate is justified.
A table showing the possible coefficient of variation for an
inflow and the associated adjustment factor is shown next:
| Coefficient of Variation |
Adjustment Factor |
||||
| 0 | − | 0.25 | 0.90 | ||
| 0.26 | − | 0.50 | 0.80 | ||
| 0.51 | − | 0.75 | 0.70 | ||
| 0.76 | − | 1.00 | 0.60 | ||
| 1.01 | − | 1.25 | 0.50 | ||
Assume a $185,000 project provides the following inflows with the
associated coefficients of variation for each year.
| Year | Inflow | Coefficient of Variation | ||||
| 1 | $ | 32,000 | 0.16 | |||
| 2 | 59,600 | 0.20 | ||||
| 3 | 77,000 | 0.48 | ||||
| 4 | 62,200 | 0.72 | ||||
| 5 | 67,000 | 1.14 | ||||
Use Appendix B for an approximate answer but calculate your final
answer using the formula and financial calculator methods.
a. Fill in the table below: (Do not round
intermediate calculations. Round "Adjustment Factor" answers to 2
decimal places and other answers to the nearest whole
dollar.)
b-1. If the risk-free rate is 7 percent, compute
the net present value of the adjusted inflows. (Negative
amount should be indicated by a minus sign. Do not
round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal
places.)
b-2. Should this project be accepted?
Yes
No
In: Finance
Sheila Goodman recently received her MBA from the Harvard
Business School. She has joined the family business, Goodman
Software Products Inc., as Vice-President of Finance. She believes
in adjusting projects for risk. Her father is somewhat skeptical
but agrees to go along with her. Her approach is somewhat different
than the risk-adjusted discount rate approach, but achieves the
same objective. She suggests that the inflows for each year of a
project be adjusted downward for lack of certainty and then be
discounted back at a risk-free rate. The theory is that the
adjustment penalty makes the inflows the equivalent of riskless
inflows, and therefore a risk-free rate is justified.
A table showing the possible coefficient of variation for an
inflow and the associated adjustment factor is shown next:
| Coefficient of Variation |
Adjustment Factor |
||||
| 0 | − | .25 | .90 | ||
| .26 | − | .50 | .80 | ||
| .51 | − | .75 | .70 | ||
| .76 | − | 1.00 | .60 | ||
| 1.01 | − | 1.25 | .50 | ||
Assume a $125,000 project provides the following inflows with the
associated coefficients of variation for each year.
| Year | Inflow | Coefficient of Variation | ||||
| 1 | $ | 38,700 | .15 | |||
| 2 | 51,200 | .23 | ||||
| 3 | 78,200 | .48 | ||||
| 4 | 58,900 | .75 | ||||
| 5 | 66,500 | 1.05 | ||||
Use Appendix B for an approximate answer but calculate your final
answer using the formula and financial calculator methods.
a. Fill in the table below: (Do not round
intermediate calculations. Round your dollar answers to the nearest
whole dollar.)
Year Adjustment Factor Adjusted Inflow
1
2
3
4
5
b-1. If the risk-free rate is 6 percent, compute
the net present value of the adjusted inflows. (Negative
amount should be indicated by a minus sign. Do not
round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal
places.)
b-2. Should this project be accepted?
| No | |
| Yes |
In: Finance
Individual A just turned 30 years old, have just received your MBA, and have accepted your first job. He must decide how much money to put into its retirement plan. The plan works as follows: Every dollar in the plan earns 7% per year. You cannot make withdrawals until he retires on his sixty-fifth birthday. After that point, individual A can make withdrawals as he sees fit.
Individual A decides that he will plan to live to 100 and work until hi turns 65. He estimates that to live comfortably in retirement, he'll need $100,000 per year starting at the end of the first year of retirement and ending on his one-hundredth birthday.
Individual A will contribute the same amount to the plan at the end of every year that you work.
(a) How much does Individual A need to contribute each year to fund his retirement? The situation above is not very realistic because most retirement plans do not allow you to specify a fixed amount to contribute every year. Instead, you are required to specify a fixed percentage of your salary that you want to contribute. Assume that your starting salary is $75,000 per year and it will grow 2% per year until you retire.
(b) Assuming everything else stays the same as in the previous question, what percentage of his income does he need to contribute to the plan every year to fund the same retirement income?
In: Finance
Microeconomics is the study of how individuals and firms make decisions in specific markets, whereas macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole. Which of the answer choices is a topic in microeconomics?
A. The factors influencing the rate of growth of U.S. gross domestic product.
B. The effect of a tax on the production of coal in Philippi, West Virginia.
C. The impact of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan on U.S. government spending.
D. The degree to which monetary policy influences the unemployment rate in the U.S.
In: Economics