Yes it can be applied.
If an investor is pessimistic that a certain risk that they fear will occur, they avoid investing in the fields prone to the risk.
For example, if an investor is offered an opportunity in the oil and flammable fuels and the persons dreads fire, that person declines the offer no matter how viable it is.
Answer:
$72,000
Explanation:
To calculate investment interest expense dedcution, we need to know the total investment income & total investment interest expenses
Then there're 2 scenarios as followings:
- If the investment interest expenses are less than the net investment income, the entire investment interest expense is deductible.
- If the investment interest expenses are more than the net investment income, we can deduct the expenses up to the net investment income amount. The rest of the expenses are carried forward to next year.
In this example, Ramon's investment income is $72,000 ($34,500 of interest and a $37,500 net capital gain on the sale of securities); is lower than his interest expenses of $83,100.
So Ramon is entiled to deduct $72,000 all the entire investment interest expense in current year
Hey there!
The correct answer to your question is "velocity."
The total number of points of work a team can accomplish in each scrum period is called velocity.
Velocity is basically the rate of points you can receive in each course of working.
I hope this helps you.
Have a great day! :)
I would say "B. Who is the enemy?" , because of its generalization and vagueness. I recommend looking deeper into the definitions, but who is the enemy is definitely my choice.
Back when interest rates were high, I had just one account. I had a money-market checking account that offered good interest rates and unlimited check writing. But those days are long gone.
I want as high an interest rate as I can get for my savings. In order to get those rates, I am using a money-market savings account. All such accounts I’ve seen restrict the number of transactions I can make in a month. I need to be able to pay bills, no matter how many of them there are — and I never ever want to pay fees for excess transactions!
So I have a separate checking account. It pays less than half the interest rate of my savings account, but I can make as many transactions as I want. The bank offers a bill pay application that I use for most payments, and I can write as many checks as I want to. I can transfer money between the accounts quickly.