Answer:
hope this helps
Assume that you hold a well-diversified portfolio that has an expected return of 11.0% and a beta of 1.20. You are in the process of buying 1,000 shares of Alpha Corp at $10 a share and adding it to your portfolio. Alpha has an expected return of 21.5% and a beta of 1.70. The total value of your current portfolio is $90,000. What will the expected return and beta on the portfolio be after the purchase of the Alpha stock? Do not round your intermediate calculations.
Old portfolio return
11.0%
Old portfolio beta
1.20
New stock return
21.5%
New stock beta
1.70
% of portfolio in new stock = $ in New / ($ in old + $ in new) = $10,000/$100,000=
10%
New expected portfolio return = rp = 0.1 × 21.5% + 0.9 × 11% =
12.05%
New expected portfolio beta = bp = 0.1 × 1.70 + 0.9 × 1.20 =
1.25
Explanation:
Check the price of the bag and see if it is equal to the money you have collected
Answer:
C
Explanation:
Reduction of cost basis per share.
When you take a look at some of the rules that IRS has, you see that stock dividends do not get taxsd at the time of receipt. They don't get taxed because, the shareholder does not receive anything from the company, only but a hope on any increased future share price increment or appreciation.
The process is a multiplicative inverse of which people seem to check