Match the animal with the correct classification.
1) Squid
2) Earthworm
3) Lobster
4) Scorpion
5) Jellyfish
6) Tapeworm
7) Centipede
8) No specific tissues just a collection of cells
9) Roundworm
10) Flea
TERMS:
a) sponge
b) cnidarian
c) platyhelminth
d) nematode
e) Hexapoda
f) myriapods
g) crustacea
h) chelicerata
I) mollusk
j) annelida
In: Biology
In: Statistics and Probability
Returns on stocks X and Y are listed below:
| Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stock X | 5% | 6% | -2% | -4% | 6% | 10% | 7% |
| Stock Y | 1% | -3% | 6% | 3% | 12% | 7% | -5% |
Consider a portfolio of 40% stock X and 60% stock Y.
What is the (population) variance of portfolio returns?
Please round your answer to six decimal places.
In: Statistics and Probability
Create a table of the following skin diseases:
1) Peptic ulcers
2) Giardiasis
3) Cholera
4) Cryptosporidiosis
5) Pseudomembranous colitis
6) Hepatitis
7) Salmonellosis
8) Campylobacter diarrhea
9) Amebiasis
10) Shigellosis
11) Typhoid fever
12) Mumps
13) Viral Gastroenteritis
14) Pinworm
15) Anisakiasis
Create columns as shown below:
| Name of Disease | Causative Agent(s) | Common Mode of Transmission | Pathogenesis and Virulence factors | Epidemiology | Prevention and Treatment |
In: Biology
Prove these scenarios by mathematical induction:
(1) Prove n2 < 2n for all integers n>4
(2) Prove that a finite set with n elements has 2n subsets
(3) Prove that every amount of postage of 12 cents or more can be formed using just 4-cent and 5-cent stamps
In: Advanced Math
Returns on stocks X and Y are listed below:
| Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stock X | 5% | 6% | -2% | -4% | 6% | 10% | 7% |
| Stock Y | 1% | -3% | 6% | 3% | 12% | 7% | -5% |
Consider a portfolio of 40% stock X and 60% stock Y.
What is the (population) variance of portfolio returns?
Please round your answer to six decimal places.
Note that the correct answer will be evaluated based on the full-precision result you would obtain using Excel.
In: Statistics and Probability
These are the cash flows.
|
Year |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
Revenue |
3.2000 |
4.0000 |
5.6000 |
5.6000 |
4.0000 |
2.4000 |
|
|
Expenses |
.7200 |
.9000 |
1.2600 |
1.2600 |
.9000 |
.5400 |
|
|
Depreciation |
.9500 |
.9500 |
.9500 |
.9500 |
.9500 |
.9500 |
|
|
Pretax profit |
1.5300 |
2.1500 |
3.3900 |
3.3900 |
2.1500 |
.9100 |
|
|
Tax |
.5355 |
.7525 |
1.1865 |
1.1865 |
.7525 |
.3185 |
|
|
Net income |
.9945 |
1.3975 |
2.2035 |
2.2035 |
1.3975 |
.5915 |
|
|
OCF |
1.9445 |
2.3475 |
3.1535 |
3.1535 |
2.3475 |
1.5415 |
|
|
|
|||||||
|
Cash flow investment |
−5.7000 |
.4362 |
|||||
|
Change in NWC |
−.3200 |
−.0800 |
−.1600 |
0.0000 |
.1600 |
.1600 |
.2400 |
|
OCF |
0.0000 |
1.9445 |
2.3475 |
3.1535 |
3.1535 |
2.3475 |
1.5415 |
|
Total cash flow |
−6.0200 |
1.8645 |
2.1875 |
3.1535 |
3.3135 |
2.5075 |
2.2177 |
Use this detail to determine answers to the questions below.
Ray’s Racks is a publicly traded company. The current stock price is $3.00 per share, and there are 20 million shares outstanding. The present value of the company’s debt is $40,000,000. The company has a bond issue outstanding with 6 years to maturity. The face value is $1,000, the coupon rate is 8% (paid quarterly), and the bond is currently selling for $1,020. The company’s corporate tax rate is 35% and their beta is 1.41. The current risk free rate is 5%, and the historic market return is 12%.
NOTE: It is critical that you do not round intermediate calculations. For example, while you may provide the after-tax cost of debt rounded to two decimal places, DO NOT calculate the WACC using rounded numbers. DO NOT calculate the NPV using a WACC that was rounded to two decimal places. These will give you incorrect answers. Provide each answer as requested, but DO NOT round intermediate calculations.
Question 1. What is the weighting to be used for equity in the WACC calculation?
Question 2. What is the weighting to be used for debt in the WACC calculation?
Question 3. What is the project's NPV?
In: Finance
Four economic classifications of mergers are (1) horizontal, (2) vertical, (3) conglomerate, and (4) congeneric. Explain the significance of these terms in merger analysis with regard to (a) the likelihood of governmental intervention and (b) possibilities for operating synergy. Use a practical example for illustrative purposes.
In: Finance
1, Journailize A-G
2, prepare trial balance
4, Prepare the Unadjusted Trial Balance in the Worksheet
5. Prepare Adjusted Trial Balance including Income Statement and Balance sheet sections.
6. Journailize Adjustments H-J and Post.
7. Prepare Financial Statements.
| Transaction Ref: | Yr: 2018 | External Entries included in Trial Balance | ||||
| A | 1-Jun | Dan Evans invests (contributes) $20,000 cash and $2,000 of supplies in business: Evans Consulting. | ||||
| B | 2-Jun | Evans pays seven month's rent in advance totaling $8,500 Ck # 101 | ||||
| C | 10-Jun | Evans provides services of $20,000 on account to a customer, Aatrix Corp. | ||||
| D | 11-Jun | Evans purchases equipment for $28,800 with Check # 102 for $13,000 with the balance "on account" payable from Home Depot Inv #27487 | ||||
| Useful life of the equipment is 5 years. $4,000 salvage value. | ||||||
| E | 16-Jun | Evans collects $5,000 of the Accounts Receivable from Aatrix Corp. | ||||
| F | 18-Jun | Dan Evans takes a $2,500 draw Ck # 103 | ||||
| G | 20-Jun | Evans purchased office supplies for $2,000 Inv# 12345 Ck #104 from Office Depot | ||||
| Adjusting Entries | ||||||
| H | 30-Jun | June Rent Used | ||||
| i | 30-Jun | Equipment depreciated for one month. | ||||
| J | 30-Jun | Took physical Inventory of Supplies totalling $4,000 | ||||
| Closing Entries | ||||||
| K, L | See page 161 27e Remember Explanation required: K. Closing, L. Closing, etc | |||||
In: Accounting
what are the scope of IFRS 1, IFRS 2, IFRS 3, IFRS 4, IFRS 5, IFRS 6, IFRS 7, IFRS 8, IFRS 9, IFRS 10, IFRS 11, IFRS 12, IFRS 13, IFRS 14, IFRS 15 IFRS 16, and 17
In: Accounting