Economics:
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781285859460
Author: BOYES, William
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Question
Chapter 31, Problem 2E
To determine
To find:
The name of the company which has high stock price in current, next and upcoming years.
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Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Consider two firms
(a) Firm A has profits twice as large as Firm B's
profits. The firms do not differ in any other
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stock price is PB = $30? What would you
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Explain your answer
(b) Suppose stock prices are in equilibrium.
Explain what happens to the stock prices of
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(c) Suppose stock prices are in equilibrium.
Does the Efficient Market Hypothesis suggest
to
%3D
buy one stock or the other stock? Explain.
What is the value of a preferred stock that pays a perpetual dividend of $145 at the end of each year when the interest rate is 7 percent?
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B: You charge $50 for access to your basic financial literacy information, then charge $10 each for your monthly stock market analysis memos.
Which one is the best offer?
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- You and your friend have opened an account on E-Trade and have each decided to select five similar companies in which to invest. You are diligent in monitoring your selections, tracking prices, current events, and actions the company has taken. Your friend chooses his companies randomly, pays no attention to the financial news, and spends his leisure time focused on everything besides his investments. Explain what might be the performance for each of your portfolios at the end of the year.arrow_forwardThe relationship between a bond and its price is easier to determine than the relationship between a stock and its price.True or Falsearrow_forwardHow would you describe the relationship between a risky investment and the return on that investment (think stocks or retirement accounts)? a casual or limited relationship there is no relationship between the level of risk and the return you get on your investment a direct or positively correlated relationship an inverse or negatively correlated relationshiparrow_forward
- Suppose you expect a stock to pay a dividend of $10 every year forever and the discount rate is fixed at 5%. What would expect the price of that stock to be? What happens to the price of the stock if the discount rate falls to 2%? (Note: this exercise might help explain why the stock market is so high these days, despite the COVID-19 pandemic and lackluster economy.)arrow_forwardYou are a financial planner. One of your clients is 40 years old and wants to begin saving for retirement. You advise her to put $5,000 a year into the stock market. You estimate that the market's effective return will be, on average, 12 percent a year. Assume the investment will be made at the end of the year. What is the value of her savings after 20 years.You are a financial planner. One of your clients is 40 years old and wants to begin saving for retirement. You advise her to put $5,000 a year into the stock market. You estimate that the market's effective return will be, on average, 12 percent a year. Assume the investment will be made at the end of the year. What is the value of her savings after 20 years. Note:- Do not provide handwritten solution. Maintain accuracy and quality in your answer. Take care of plagiarism. Answer completely. You will get up vote for sure.arrow_forwardConsider a bond and a stock. The bond will pay out 100,000 at the end of year five. It will pay nothing at the end of years 1, 2, 3, or 4. The stock is for a corporation that makes profits off a patent. It will pay dividends for the next 25 years, 5,000 dollars at the end of each year. After that, the patent expires and the dividends go to zero. a) Suppose the interest rate is zero. What is the present value of each of these two assets? In other words, if you had to pay now, which is worth more? [Note: This requires calculating “present values”; you can use excel and if needed] b) The Fed’s monetary policy raises the interest rate to 2.5%. Which is worth more? c) The Fed’s monetary policy raises the interest rate to 5%. Which is worth more? d) What is the intuition for the different results in a), b) and c)? e) Do the above results suggest that, by raising the interest rate, the Fed can powerfully affect the price of assets like stocks?arrow_forward
- What is the expected return from an investment if there is a 20 percent chance of a 4 percent return, a 40 percent chance of a 8 percent return, and a 40 percent chance of a 12 percent returnarrow_forwardOn the golf course, John was playing near a group of four golfers. One of the four golfers was a director of Company ABC. The director was telling the three other golfers in his group that his company made much higher profits in the past year than in the previous year. When John went back to the office after the golf game, he checked with his broker regarding the stock and found that, two weeks earlier, the company had made an announcement similar to what the director had told his friends. John went ahead to buy the stock and was very pleased that the stock earned him abnormal returns over the next month. (i) Discuss the type of information that John heard on the golf course. Appraise which one (1) of the three forms of market efficiency is most relevant to this situation. (ii) Analyse and discuss whether the above situation describes a violation of the efficient markets hypothesis.arrow_forwardSuppose that all investors have the disposition effect. A new stock has just been issued at a price of $50, so all investors in this stock purchased the stock today. A year from now the stock will be taken over, for a price of $60 or $40 depending on the news that comes out over the year. The stock will pay no dividends. Investors will sell the stock whenever the price goes up by more than 10%. a. Suppose good news comes out in 6 months (implying the takeover offer will be $60). What equilibrium price will the stock trade for after the news comes out, that is, the price that equates supply and demand? b. Assume that you are the only investor that does not suffer from the disposition effect and your trades are small enough to not affect prices. Without knowing what will actually transpire, what trading strategy would you instruct your broker to follow?arrow_forward
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