hello

i don’t have any idea.. about calculate the net asset values of both target firms with Australian Accounting Standards..

can you pleases tell me.. how can i calculate it?

Greenmount Ltd, an ASX listed consumer goods corporation aims to acquire a fashion businessto generate new growth opportunities. Following a formal search process, external advisorshave identified the following two businesses as best matching entities for a potential take—over:Tallows Ltd and Bilgolo Ltd. Only one will be selected. To move forward with the selection process, the external advisor has estimated that both firms have the same entity value of 52mbased on a Discounted Cash Flow {DCF} model, i.e. acquisition price of $2 million (excluding advisorfees}, which will be paid as cash consideration. The external advisor will charge 55,000finder’s fee and $3,000 legal fees paid in cash to prepare all required due diligence. You have been given access to the following information about the assets, liabilities, andshareholders’ equity for both potential target firms: Tallows Ltd _ _ RemainingHistorical cost: Carrying amount useful "f:Cash and cash equivalents 5 12,000 5 12,000 5Accounts receivable 5 21,000 5 21,000 5Inventory 5 250,000 5 220,000 5Property Plant and Equipment {net} 5 2,000,000 5 1,200,000 5 5 yearsTotal Assets 5 1,453,000 5Accounts Payable S 145,000 5Bank Loans 5 200,000 5Shareh olders’ Equity 5 1,108,000 5IJabilities and shareholders’ equity 5 1,453,000 5 Additional information for Tallows Ltd: Taking into account current market information and historical data of the firm, you determinethe following fair values: Accounts receivables: $18,000, Inventory: $180,000, Property Plantand Equipment: $1,000,000. _ _ RemainingHlstflffll costs Carrying amount useful "f:Cash and cash equivalents 5 5,003 5 5,000 5Accounts receivable 5 230,000 5 230,000 5Inventory 5 600,003 5 600,030 5Property Plant and Equipment {net} 5 5,500,000 5 1,000,000 5 10 yearsTotal Assets 5 1,835,000 3Accounts Payable 5 200,030 5Bond Payable 5 350,000 5Shareh olders’ Equity 5 1,275,000 5IJabilities and shareholders’ equity 5 1,836,000 5 Additional information for Bilgola Ltd: Considering current market prices and further historical information from the company, youdetermine the following fair values: Accounts receivable $200,000, Inventory $500,000,Property Plant and Equipment $2,000,000.

 
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Greenland Sports, Inc. has been asked to submit a bid to the National Hockey League on supplying 1,000 pairs of professional quality skates. The cost per pair of skates has been determined as follows:Direct labor 60Variable overhead 30Fixed overhead (allocated) 20Other non-manufacturing costs associated with each pair of skates are:Fixed selling and administrative costs 10Assume the commission on the sale of skates to the National Hockey League would be reduced to $15 per pair and that available production capacity exists to produce the 1,000 pairs of skates, the lowest price the firm can bid is some price greater than:

 
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Greenland ice sheet contains 3 million cubic kilometers of ice. if completely melted the ice would release 2.4 cubic kilometers of water spread out over Earth 340 million square kilometers of ocean surface. how much will the sea level rise

 
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Greetings Inc.:Capital BudgetingTHE BUSINESS SITUATIONGreetings Inc. stores, as well as the Wall Décor division, have enjoyed healthy profitability during thelast two years. Although the profit margin on prints is often thin, the volume of print sales has beensubstantial enough to generate 15% of Greetings’s store profits. In addition, the increased customertraffic resulting from the prints has generated significant additional sales of related non-print products.As a result, the company’s rate of return has exceeded the industry average during this two-yearperiod. Greetings’s store managers likened the e-business leverage created by Wall Décor to a “highoctane”fuel to supercharge the stores’ profitability.This high rate of return (ROI) was accomplished even though Wall Décor’s venture into e-businessproved to cost more than originally budgeted. Why was it a profitable venture even though costsexceeded estimates? Greetings stores were able to generate a considerable volume of business for WallDécor. This helped spread the high e-business operating costs, many of which were fixed, across manyunframed and framed prints. This experience taught top management that maintaining an e-businessstructure and making this business model successful are very expensive and require substantial sales aswell as careful monitoring of costs.Wall Décor’s success gained widespread industry recognition. The business press documented WallDécor’s approach to using information technology to increase profitability. The company’s CEO,Robert Burns, has become a frequent business-luncheon speaker on the topic of how to use informationtechnology to offer a great product mix to the customer and increase shareholder value. From theoutside looking in, all appears to be going very well for Greetings stores and Wall Décor.However, the sun is not shining as brightly on the inside at Greetings. The mall stores that competewith Greetings have begun to offer prints at very competitive prices. Although Greetings storesenjoyed a selling price advantage for a few years, the competition eventually responded, and now thepressure on selling price is as intense as ever. The pressure on the stores is heightened by the fact thatWileyPLUS 2/27/10 9:26 AMhttp://edugen.wiley.com/edugen/student/mainfr.uni Page 2 of 3pressure on selling price is as intense as ever. The pressure on the stores is heightened by the fact thatthe company’s recent success has led shareholders to expect the stores to generate an above-averagerate of return. Mr. Burns is very concerned about how the stores and Wall Décor can continue on apath of continued growth.Fortunately, more than a year ago, Mr. Burns anticipated that competitors would eventually find a wayto match the selling price of prints. As a consequence, he formed a committee to explore ways toemploy technology to further reduce costs and to increase revenues and profitability. The committee iscomprised of store managers and staff members from the information technology, marketing, finance,and accounting departments. Early in the group’s discussion, the focus turned to the most expensivecomponent of the existing business model—the large inventory of prints that Wall Décor has in itscentralized warehouse. In addition, Wall Décor incurs substantial costs for shipping the prints from thecentralized warehouse to customers across the country. Ordering and maintaining such a largeinventory of prints consumes valuable resources.One of the committee members suggested that the company should pursue a model that music storeshave experimented with, where CDs are burned in the store from a master copy. This saves the musicstore the cost of maintaining a large inventory and increases its ability to expand its music offerings. Itvirtually guarantees that the store can always provide the CDs requested by customers.Applying this idea to prints, the committee decided that each Greetings store could invest in anexpensive color printer connected to its online ordering system. This printer would generate the newprints. Wall Décor would have to pay a royalty on a per print basis. However, this approach does offercertain advantages. First, it would eliminate all ordering and inventory maintenance costs related to theprints. Second, shrinkage from lost and stolen prints would be reduced. Finally, by reducing the cost ofprints for Wall Décor, the cost of prints to Greetings stores would decrease, thus allowing the stores tosell prints at a lower price than competitors. The stores are very interested in this option because itenables them to maintain their current customers and to sell prints to an even wider set of customers ata potentially lower cost. A new set of customers means even greater related sales and profits.As the accounting/finance expert on the team, you have been asked to perform a financial analysis ofthis proposal. The team has collected the information presented in Illustration CA 4-1.Illustration CA 4-1 Information about the proposed capital investment projectEXERCISESWileyPLUS 2/27/10 9:26 AMhttp://edugen.wiley.com/edugen/student/mainfr.uni Page 3 of 3InstructionsMr. Burns has asked you to do the following as part of your analysis of the capital investment project.1 Calculate the net present value using the numbers provided. Assume that annual cash flows occur at the end ofthe year.2 Mr. Burns is concerned that the original estimates may be too optimistic. He has suggested that you do asensitivity analysis assuming all costs are 10% higher than expected and that all inflows are 10% less thanexpected.3 Identify possible flaws in the numbers or assumptions used in the analysis, and identify the risk(s) associatedwith purchasing the equipment.4 In a one-page memo, provide a recommendation based on the above analysis. Include in this memo: (a) achallenge to store and Wall Décor management and (b) a suggestion on how Greetings stores could use thecomputer connection for related sales

 
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Greetings,

I would like to seek your opinion and explainations, if any, on the underlined bold statement. If you have legal concepts/principles and case laws to apply, do list them out, but do not explain them to me (I will commence on reading myself)

Frank ordered 100 tonnes of beech wood from Samy. Frank told Samy that he needed the materials for making premium furniture for the royal family, and that if he performed the contract well, they would award him a further project where he would be able to make a profit of $1.2 million.

Therefore, Frank asked Samy again and again if he would be able to deliver on time, by 1 December 2018, as it was crucial that Frank would be able to make the furniture on time. Samy assured him that it he would be able to deliver the beech wood on time.

However, Samy did not deliver on time. He was 2 weeks late. Frank had to spend another $38,000 on overtime pay and additional temporary workers to rush to finish the making of the furniture. He did not get the additional contract because the delivery of his furniture was delayed.

Frank is very upset. He asks you if he could sue Samy. If he did sue Samy, what, in your opinion, could he recover from Samy? Apply and identify the concepts of law that are relevant to damages. Please state the amount of damages that Frank may expect to get from Samy.

Thank You! 

 
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greetings, I need 4 full pages for this. 

Ensure no plagiarism and the work must be of good quality

Choose a television/visual advertisement (International or American based) that has caught your attention. The ad will need to convey identifiable values in some manner.

Consider the product being marketed through the ad and the values conveyed through the product.

Write a 1,050- to 1,400-word analysis that addresses the following:

  • Name of the product being advertised
  • The target audience for the product
  • How placement of the advertisement is intended to reach the audience being targeted
  • Frame-­by-­frame description of the visual and aural action taking place in the ad. What aspects of the ad are meant to catch the audience’s attention?
  • Values being communicated through the advertisement. What values does the company support? (You will need to research the company’s website and publicity documents, such as newspapers to find information about the company’s values.)
  • How the company’s values are reflected in the advertisement. Discuss the use of appeals used in the ad.
  • The social context of the ad. How does the cultural context of the advertisement affect the targeted audiences’ perceptions about the product?

Format your assignment according to appropriate course-level APA guidelines.

 
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Greetings,

I am currently looking at Cooper Tire and Rubber Co. as a shadow firm to find the coupon rate and Yield to Maturity.  I have included a link below to the WSJ Stock Price and News section of the company.  Can someone help me find the coupon rate and Yield to Maturity with examples on how to obtain it? Thank you in advance.

http://quotes.wsj.com/CTB

 
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21. Mr. Grey died on January 1, 2011. Mr. Grey made no gifts during his life. Under his will, Mr. Grey devised all of his probate assets to his wife. Decedent, Mr Grey, owned the following assets, probate and nonprobate, at the date of his death: •

 
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Greta, an elderly investor, has a degree of risk aversion of A = 4 when applied to return on wealth over a 3-year horizon. She is pondering two portfolios, the S&P 500 and a hedge fund, as well as a number of 3-year strategies. (All rates are annual, continuously compounded.) The S&P 500 risk premium is estimated at 7% per year, with a SD of 18%. The hedge fund risk premium is estimated at 5% with a SD of 25%. The return on each of these portfolios in any year is uncorrelated with its return or the return of any other portfolio in any other year. The hedge fund management claims the correlation coefficient between the annual returns on the S&P 500 and the hedge fund in the same year is zero, but Greta believes this is far from certain.

a-1.Assuming the correlation between the annual returns on the two portfolios is indeed zero, what would be the optimal asset allocation?

a-2.What is the expected return on the portfolio?

a-3.What should be Greta’s capital allocation?

 
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Greshak Corp. sold 10,000 shares of $150.00 par value preferred stock with a required 10.0% annual dividend at an issue price of $140.00 per share.  Assuming that flotation costs related to the preferred stock is $5.00 per share and the company’s marginal tax rate is 40%, what is Greshak’s cost of preferred stock capital (rounded)?

Select one:

A. 9.2%B. 10.0%C. 10.2%D. 10.4%9.2%E. 11.1%

 
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