Answer:
With rare exceptions, cars decrease in value with age. Depending on other factors, like accidents, repairs, or other damage, the value of a car may decrease even faster. If you borrowed money to buy a car, you might owe more on your car loan than its current value. When that happens, you have negative equity in the car. Some car dealers say you won’t be responsible for the remaining balance on your old car loan when you trade in your old car. But that might not be true. Dealers sometimes just roll over the negative equity into your new car loan, so you still end up paying it.
Step-by-step explanation:
Say you want to trade in your car for a newer model.
Your loan payoff is $18,000
Your car is worth $15,000
You have negative equity of $3,000. That must be paid if you want to trade in your vehicle. If the dealer promises to pay off the $3,000, it shouldn’t be included in your new loan.
But some dealers
add that $3,000 to the loan for your new car
subtract the amount from your down payment
or do both
Answer:
f(x) = 3x
Step-by-step explanation:
The equation of a line passing through the origin is
y = mx ( m is the slope )
Calculate m using the slope formula
m =
with (x₁, y₁ ) = (0, 0) and (x₂, y₂ ) = (1, 3)
m = = 3 , then
y = 3x ← is the equation of the graphed line
You need to divide the two numbers. 15/3 = 5
For every 5 days you do 1 job
5:1
The correlation coefficient is a number that indicates the direction
and closeness of points of a line of best of fit.
So it tells us two things.
It tells us the direction of the line of best fit
and it tells us the closeness of the points.
Usually, anything between -0.9 and -0.6 has a moderate negative correlation. If you look at this on a graph, you will notice that the points definitely resemble a line so we say it's moderate.
It will be a negative correlation because the slope is negative.