Answer:
32
Explanation:
Using Formula
Cost + (Cost*Margin) = Selling Price
Cost is not known...
Cost (1 + Margin) = Selling Price
Cost = Selling Price / 1 + Margin
Here, Margin is 0.45 of cost and selling price is 46.4
Cost = 44.4 / 1.45
Cost = 32
Answer:
• It could prevent a will from going into probate
•It avoids confusion if the primary beneficiary on dies first
•It allows for another option if the primary beneficiary cannot inherit it
Explanation:
A Secondary beneficiary otherwise known as contingent beneficiary is a person or an entity who has been named in a Will, insurance policy or trust to inherit assets therein should the main or primary beneficiary dies before the grantor.
Secondary beneficiary is important because should the primary beneficiary dies first, he is entitled to the benefits therein inorder to avoid confusion as to who should inherit the deceased's assets. It is also important because it provides other option where the primary beneficiary is not able to inherit the will i.e not found at the time of grantor's death or disclaim inheritance in the will, the secondary beneficiary inherits same and also prevent the will from going into probate i.e allowing it to pass through the court process which is oftentimes time consuming .
Answer:
The correct answer would be, Decline in Customers.
Explanation:
P.T. Barnum was a successful American promoter. He founded Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in 1871. At a young age, he moved to New York and tried a lot of businesses including newspaper publishing and running a boarding house.
He started the circus in 1871 which became a huge success just because of his work plus the tactics of advertisement he used to promote his work. According to him, Decline in the customers happen without publicity. He believed that people will come to see your show only if you have attracted them enough to get them out of their houses and come to see your show through your powerful advertisements.
Answer:
a. Briefly discuss what is meant by audit risk, inherent risk and control risk.
Audit risk is the risk that the auditor expresses an inappropriate audit opinion when the financial statements are materially misstated.
Audit Risk = Inherent Risk x Control Risk x Detection Risk
Auditors will want their overall audit risk to be at an acceptable level. Inappropriate opinion will result in damages / costs
Inherent risk is the susceptibility of an assertion to a misstatement that could be material individually or when aggregated with other misstatements, assuming there were no related internal controls.
Control risk is the risk that a material misstatement, that could occur in an assertion and that could be material will not be prevented or detected and corrected on a timely basis by the entity's internal control.
b. What level of detection risk is implicit in this problem?
Detection risk is the risk that the procedures performed by the auditor to reduce audit risk to an acceptably low level will not detect a misstatement
In this case the detection risk given is 0.41.
Answer:
1. Calculate the NPV for each option available for the project. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answers in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g. 1,234,567.)
- go to market now = $744,000
- focus group = $852,000
- consulting firm = $916,000
2. Which action should the firm undertake?
The NPV is higher than the rst of the options.
Explanation:
expected payoffs:
- option 1 (go to market now) = (40% x $1.86 million) + 0 = $744,000
- option 2 (focus group) = (55% x $1.86 million) + 0 = $1,023,000
- option 3 (consulting firm) = (70% x $1.86 million) + 0 = $1,302,000
expected NPVs:
- option 1 (go to market now) = $744,000
- option 2 (focus group) = $1,023,000 - $171,000 = $852,000
- option 3 (consulting firm) = $1,302,000 - $386,000 = $916,000
go to market now