I'm looking for someone who can answer these questions and solve some problems individuals, in Spanish using the program word documents. Thank you
A) Questions 10.1 to 10.8 page (attach file)
B) Exercise 7.1, 7.2, 7.3 page 237 (Besley, S. & Brigham, E. F. (2015).Principles of Finance(6.aed.). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning)
C) 7.14 page 243 (Besley, S. & Brigham, E. F. (2015).Principles of Finance(6.aed.). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning)
D) 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4 page 85 (Besley, S. & Brigham, E. F. (2015).Principles of Finance(6.aed.). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning)
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urn:uuid:a487999d-4eb7-5eff-aa76-000000000613 http://acsbibliotecavirtual.cengage.com:8080/fulfillmentRL> ACS4-6824316635981468290567048 2016-07-11T23:29:27-04:00 urn:uuid:10651597-841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689 0 Principles of Finance wolter Cengage Learning Editores we should put an id here application/pdf Ingls http://acsbibliotecavirtual.cengage.com:8080/media/10651597841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689.img urn:uuid:10651597-841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689 lzPXuRaE6kuow18CYQMpc4XKXOs= urn:uuid:a487999d-4eb7-5eff-aa76-000000000613 http://acsbibliotecavirtual.cengage.com:8080/fulfillmentRL> ACS4-2334702047961468290462344 2016-07-11T23:27:42-04:00 urn:uuid:10651597-841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689 0 Principles of Finance wolter Cengage Learning Editores we should put an id here application/pdf Ingls http://acsbibliotecavirtual.cengage.com:8080/media/10651597841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689.img urn:uuid:10651597-841c-e1d5-ec05-000000004689 /NgIuOuD5mtRYFTMOZUhqE3pgsY= 3-1 A financial market is a market in which people trade financial securities, commodities, and other fungible items of value at low transaction costs and at prices that reflect supply and demand. 3-2 Role of financial markets is to allocate capital, matching those who have capital to those who need it. 3-3 The more efficient the financial system, the lower the costs of intermediation, the lower the costs to the borrower, and, hence, the lower the prices of goods and services to consumers. 3-4 No their job is to make sure you don't get cheated, that the information ios truthful. If you want to invest then the onus is on you to do the research. The laws and rules that govern the securities industry in the United States derive from a simple and straightforward concept: all investors, whether large institutions or private individuals, should have access to certain basic facts about an investment prior to buying it, and so long as they hold it. To achieve this, the SEC requires public companies to disclose meaningful financial and other information to the public. This provides a common pool of knowledge for all investors to use to judge for themselves whether to buy, sell, or hold a particular security. Only through the steady flow of timely, comprehensive, and accurate information can people make sound investment decisions. The result of this information flow is a far more active, efficient, and transparent capital market that facilitates the capital formation so important to our nation's economy. To insure that this objective is always being met, the SEC continually works with all major market participants, including especially the investors in our securities markets, to listen to their concerns and to learn from their experience. The SEC oversees the key participants in the securities world, including securities exchanges, securities brokers and dealers, investment advisors, and mutual funds. Here the SEC is concerned primarily with promoting the disclosure of important market-related information, maintaining fair dealing, and protecting against fraud. Crucial to the SEC's effectiveness in each of these areas is its enforcement authority. Each year the SEC brings hundreds of civil enforcement actions against individuals and companies for violation of the securities laws. Typical infractions include insider trading, accounting fraud, and providing false or misleading information about securities and the companies that issue them. One of the major sources of information on which the SEC relies to bring enforcement action is investors themselves another reason that educated and careful investors are so critical to the functioning of efficient markets. To help support investor education, the SEC offers the public a wealth of educational information on this Internet website, which also includes the EDGAR database of disclosure documents that public companies are required to file with the Commission. Though it is the primary overseer and regulator of the U.S. securities markets, the SEC works closely with many other institutions, including Congress, other federal departments and agencies, the self-regulatory organizations (e.g. the stock exchanges), state securities regulators, and various private sector organizations. In particular, the Chairman of the SEC, together with the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, serves as a member of the President's Working Group on Financial Markets. 7-1 Most businesses produce four major financial statements - the income statement balance sheet - cash flow statement -statement of shareholders' equity. 7-2 No, because the $20 million of retained earnings doesn't mean the company has $20 million in cash. The retained earnings figure represents cumulative amount of net income that the firm has not paid out as dividends during its entire history. Thus, most of the reinvested earnings were probably spent on the firm's operating assets, such as buildings and equipment. 7-3 A cash flow statement, also known as statement of cash flows, is a financial statement that shows how changes in balance sheet accounts and income affect cash and cash equivalents, and breaks the analysis down to operating, investing and financing activities. 7-14 1) TA = TL & E = $300,000 2) TA turnover ratio =1.5 X Sales/TA = 1.5 X. Sales = TA times 1.5 Sales =$3000,000 X 1.5 = $450,000 3) Gross profit margin = 25% COGS = 75% of sales COGS = ($450,000)(0.75) =$337,500 4) Inventory turnover = COGS/INV = 5 inventory = COGS/5 =$67,500 5) DSO = 36 days Accounts receivable in $ is daily sales times 36 days ($450,000/360) X 36 days = $45,000 6) Debt ratio = 0.5 Debt = (TA)(0.5) ?Total debt = $15,000 A/P + Long-term debt = $15,000 A/P = $15,000 - $60,000 = $90,000 7) common stock = Total Liabilities and C/S - Total debt - Retained earning $300,000 - $150,000 - $97,000 = $52,500 8) Quick ratio = (Cash + A/R)/A/P (Cash + $45,000)/$90,000 = 0.8 Cash + $45,000 = ($90,000)(0.8) Cash + $45,000 = $72,000 Cash = $27,000 9) Fixed assets = Total assets - all other assets = $300,000 - ($27,000 + $45,000 + $67,500) 10-1 Calculation of Market price of the Bond: Semiannual interest payments For (6 years *2) = 12 Periods Peri od Cash Flow (CF) PVF (12%/ 2 = 6%) PV = CF*PVF 1 to 12 $ 8.38384 $335.35 0.49697 $496.97 (1000*8%*6/1 2) Face value * Interest rate * 6/12 = Terminal value (Face value) 40.00 12 1000 Total Present value = Current Market Price = 10-2 current market value (price) of the bond=50PVIFA(7%,12)+1000PVIF(7%,12) =$841.15 10-3 Using financial calculator n = (10 x 2) - (2 x 2) = 16 $832.32 i = 6% x .5 = 3 PMT = $100 x .5 = 50 FV = 1000 PV = solve PV = -$1,251.2220 Bond Price = $1,251.22 b) as time elapses, the price value decreases over time since i, PMT, and FV remains constant then using financial calculator n Price 20 $1,297.55 16 $1,251.22 12 $1,199.08 8 $1,140.39 4 $1,074.34 2 $1,038.27 Hence showing that, the price decreases over time. 10-4 a. Price of the bonds today will be given by =pv(rate,nper,pmt,fv) , rate = 0.10/2, nper = 10 years = 20 semiannual periods, pmt = 70/2, fv =1000 Hence price today = pv(0.10/2,20,70/2,1000) = $813.07 b. When the interest rates remains at 10% over the next 10 years, the price of the bond price will gradually increase from $813.07 today to $1000 in year 10, which is the face value