Answer:
1) The yield to maturity is required rate of return on a bond expressed as a nominal annual interest rate. For noncallable bonds, the yield to maturity and required rate of returns are interchangeable terms
2) Unlike YTM and required return, the coupon rate used as the interest rate in bond cash flow valuation, but is fixed percentage of par over the life of the bond used to set the coupon payment amount.
3) The coupon rate is constant at 10%. The YTM is 8%.
Explanation:
What you’re talking about is Beta. Beta is the ratio of how much a stock changes relative to the market as a whole (NYSE, NASDAQ)
A Beta of 2.0 means it changes (up/down) twice as much as the general market (Dow, S & P, NAS), such as the twitchy, hyper reactive tech stocks ( FAANG’s and also boom-or-bust Big Oil). In other words, high Standard Deviations.
A Beta of 0.5 means it changes (up/down) half as much as the general market. Sleepy blue chips such as GE, AT&T or power utilities fall in that category. Low Standard Deviations
Most stocks by definition pretty much track the market (Beta 1.0) so there are a lot of those. Middling Standard Deviations
So…it is dictated by your risk tolerance.
Answer:
a. demand assurances of performance from Massive.
Explanation:
When Silas Paving Co finds out about the sale of Massive Earthmovers assets to Phoenix Equipment corp, it should find out from Massive if there is still assurance of performance on their contract. If assurance is given by Massive that the contract still holds then Silas Paving Co does not need to worry.
If however there is no assurance from Massive then Silas will be able to take action against Massive for breach of contract.
Answer:
The correct answer is "Patent infringement"
Explanation:
Patent infringement is when somebody uses or sells a patented item without the approvement of the patent holder. The permission is guaranteed in the form of a license. The patent holder may receive a compensation from the impostor for the unauthorized use.