...ESTIME Y COMPARE LOS RENDIMIENTOS Y LA VARIABILIDAD (V.G. LA DESVIACIÓN ESTÁNDAR ANUALIZADA DE LOS RENDIMIENTOS MENSUALES DE LOS ÚLTIMOS 5 AÑOS) DE REYNOLDS Y DE HASBRO CON LOS DEL ÍNDICE S&P 500. ¿CUÁL DE LAS ACCIONES PARECE SER MÁS RIESGOSA? ACTIVO O PORTAFOLIO | R | σ | S&P 500 | 0.57% | 3.57% | REYNOLDS | 1.87% | 9.29% | HASBRO | 1.18% | 8.05% | La acción más riesgosa según los cálculos realizados es la de Reynolds, ya que sigma es más alta para esta acción. SUPONGA QUE LA POSICIÓN DE SHARPE HA SIDO 99 POR CIENTO DE LOS FONDOS INVERTIDOS EN EL S&P 500 Y YA SEA UNO POR CIENTO INVERTIDO EN REYNOLDS O UNO POR CIENTO INVERTIDO EN HASBRO. DETERMINE LA POSICIÓN DE PORTAFOLIO RESULTANTE. ¿CÓMO AFECTA CADA ACCIÓN LA VARIABILIDAD DE LA INVERSIÓN? ¿CÓMO SE RELACIONA ESTE RESULTADO CON SU RESPUESTA A LA PREGUNTA 1? PORTAFOLIO S&P 500 / REYNOLDS | S&P 500 | 0.99 | Reynolds | 0.01 | | | Rendimiento esperado portafolio | 0.00587338 | Covarianza S&P 500, Reynolds | 0.00093855 | σ2 Portafolio | 0.00126967 | σ Portafolio | 0.03563249 | Coeficiente de Variación portafolio | 6.06677340 | PORTAFOLIO S&P 500 / HASBRO | S&P 500 | 0.99 | Reynolds | 0.01 | | | Rendimiento esperado portafolio | 0.00580428 | Covarianza S&P 500, Reynolds | 0.00181111 | σ2 Portafolio | 0.00128674 | σ Portafolio | 0.03587110 | Coeficiente de Variación portafolio | 6.18010845 | Haga una regresión de los rendimientos mensuales...
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...The poem that I choose to write about is “Wild Geese” by Mary Oliver. In this poem she compares the behaviors of wild geese and humans. The poem doesn’t have rhyming words, but it does have a calm tone. The poem starts out saying “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it is”, these lines show repetition because she uses the word 'You' over and over again. These first few lines grasp the reader’s attention because you will think she is talking directly to you. These lines are telling the readers that they don’t have to ask for forgiveness all the time and they should be love themselves like the wild geese they have no regrets they don’t have a concept of right and wrong. The next lines also show repetitive rhythm using “Meanwhile”, “Meanwhile the world goes on. Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain are moving across the landscapes, over the prairies and the deep trees, the mountains and the rivers. Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, are heading home again.” In these lines she is saying that the no matter what wrong we have done the world still goes on, it’s not going to stop. These lines have a lot of descriptive words that allows the reader to grasp a picture in their mind. The last line here shows that the geese are returning home and so can you. The last lines of the poem “Whoever you are, no matter how...
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...The two short stories I have chosen to compare are “the Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, and “A Clean, Well-lighted Place” by Ernest Hemingway. These two short stories and authors are totally different, and touch on different walks of life. In the story “A Clean and Well-Lighted place,” the theme is centered around empathy, and despair. The author is economical with style in the short story. In the short story “The lottery,” the general theme is conformity, and irrational fear, and the narration of the story adds to the dark undertone, and distance to the reader as if they were looking in on a scene. Shirley Jackson wrote the story in a simple style, and straightforward manner. This is quite different to Ernest Hemingway’s short story “A Clean, Well-Lighted place,” because in contrast he concentrates on the dialogue between characters, and gives the reader a feeling of eves dropping a conversation in the café. I found some similarities between the stories, and the first is that there are no specific locations or period in time mentioned to set the scene. In “The Lottery,” the date of June 27th is mentioned, but no year is clear. In the story “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,” Hemingway kept the focus of the story away from a specific date and location, and kept the center of interest on character dialogue. The reader is given some clues in both stories to draw their own conclusions as to the time period and location. Hemingway uses Spanish language in places, and mentions a soldier...
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...Matt Lauber B. Sumey, Instructor Comp. II, MW, 1:30-2:45 p.m. 20 October 2014 Compare and Contrast Analysis While reading two good stories, you can find many comparisons and difference between the two. Mama in Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” and Amanda in Tennessee Williams “The Glass Menagerie” have some comparisons and difference. Mama and Amanda both live in modest homes. Mama’s house, “It is three rooms, just like the one that burned, except the rood is tin; they don’t make shingle roofs any more. There are no real windows, just some holes cut in the sides, like the portholes in a ship, but not round and not square, with rawhide holding the shutters up on the outside” (Walker 71). Amanda’s house, her front porch is a fire escape, so her house isn’t really that nice either (Williams 991). Also both Mama and Amanda are single mothers with two children. Both of their husbands left them with no say. Mama’s husband really doesn’t say why he left. But Amanda’s husband left with a phone call: TOM. This is our father who left us a long time ago. He was a telephone man who fell in love with a long distances; he gave up his job with the telephone company and skipped the light fantastic out of town… The last we heard of him containing a message of two words-“Hello-Good-bye!” and an address. (Williams 972) Another thing that Mama and Amanda have in common is that they have a different relationship with one of their children. Mama will probably pick Maggie over Dee, just like...
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...Matt Lauber B. Sumey, Instructor Comp. II, MW, 1:30-2:45 p.m. 20 October 2014 Compare and Contrast Analysis While reading two good stories, you can find many comparisons and difference between the two. Mama in Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” and Amanda in Tennessee Williams “The Glass Menagerie” have some comparisons and difference. Mama and Amanda both live in modest homes. Mama’s house, “It is three rooms, just like the one that burned, except the rood is tin; they don’t make shingle roofs any more. There are no real windows, just some holes cut in the sides, like the portholes in a ship, but not round and not square, with rawhide holding the shutters up on the outside” (Walker 71). Amanda’s house, her front porch is a fire escape, so her house isn’t really that nice either (Williams 991). Also both Mama and Amanda are single mothers with two children. Both of their husbands left them with no say. Mama’s husband really doesn’t say why he left. But Amanda’s husband left with a phone call: TOM. This is our father who left us a long time ago. He was a telephone man who fell in love with a long distances; he gave up his job with the telephone company and skipped the light fantastic out of town… The last we heard of him containing a message of two words-“Hello-Good-bye!” and an address. (Williams 972) Another thing that Mama and Amanda have in common is that they have a different relationship with one of their children. Mama will probably pick Maggie over Dee, just like...
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...Jada Huntley 2/27/15 English 1103 Margaret Garrison Compare & Contrast This paper is about two little girls and their similarities and differences. How they are different is that one of the little girls (Lynda Barry) is going unnoticed in her household and is being neglected and her only safe place is school and she loves it. The other little girl in Edward P. Jones story her mother takes care of her and makes sure she gets to school and has everything she needs for the first day. Where these two are the same is that they are both black, they both go to school and they both love it. “The Sanctuary of School” is Lynda Barry’s narrative essay about her experience as a neglected child and how she learned to use art to cope with her situation. In her essay Barry describes a memory of being a seven-year-old child of parents who focus their attention on finances instead of her and her brother. Barry writes about an occasion when she leaves her house in the early morning hours and finds herself at her school’s playground. She is found by the school janitor, who allows her to assist him as he does his duties to prepare the classrooms. Soon after she greeted by the school secretary and a teacher who both wave at her. When her teacher, Mrs. LeSane, arrives she runs toward her in tears of relief. Mrs. LaSane asks Barry to carry her purse, which Barry feels to be an honor. It is here that Barry finds her security in art, drawing a house with a blue sky and sun in the corner and...
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...Sony Xperia Beginning: Today, we will introduce the sony xperia series, and in the final two minutes, you can ask some questions. 2.Middle: My name is Fan Jiaqi. First, It's my turn to introduce its characteristics. Sony xperia is sony high-end smart phone series. Xperia is Sony 's first truly independent brand which represent Sony 's vision in the pursuit of a higher-end and more dynamic communication experience. And this series of mobile phones is also favored by most female. There are four features of Sony Xperia: i. Greenheart: Sony conducted a lot of work to reduce the loss of power in the standby state. The mobile chargers provided by Sony are the most efficient ones from the terms of power consumption in the standby mode. Sony throught sustainable development and production is one of the biggest challenges in the future, and it is also a problem to take immediate measures by responsible manufacturer. Through the Greenheart concept, Sony will be oriented to the future and ensure that the mobile phones are more environmentally friendly in the whole life cycle. ii. Bravia mobile® Engine: Sony Mobile BRAVIA® Engine make image more real. The world seems just close enough to touch. This feature allows you to see the color effect of picture and video more visible. iii. NFC smart touch card: The fashion Card use NFC Near Field Communication technology to open the scene functions, share information between a light touch, and bring us an easy entertainment and...
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...Children of Light Our fathers wrung their bread from stocks and stones And fenced their gardens with the Redmen's bones; Embarking from the Nether Land of Holland, Pilgrims unhouseled by Geneva's night, They planted here the Serpent's seeds of light; And here the pivoting searchlights probe to shock The riotous glass houses built on rock, And candles gutter by an empty altar, And light is where the landless blood of Cain Is burning, burning the unburied grain. Robert Lowell History History has to live with what was here, clutching and close to fumbling all we had-- it is so dull and gruesome how we die, unlike writing, life never finishes. Abel was finished; death is not remote, a flash-in-the-pan electrifies the skeptic, his cows crowding like skulls against high-voltage wire, his baby crying all night like a new machine. As in our Bibles, white-faced, predatory, the beautiful, mist-drunken hunter's moon ascends-- a child could give it a face: two holes, two holes, my eyes, my mouth, between them a skull's no-nose-- O there's a terrifying innocence in my face drenched with the silver salvage of the mornfrost. Robert Lowell Lowell was born in Boston, Massachusetts to a Boston Brahmin family that included poets Amy Lowell and James Russell Lowell. His mother, Charlotte Winslow, was a descendant of William Samuel Johnson, a signer of the United States Constitution, along with Jonathan Edwards, the famed Calvinist theologian, Anne Hutchinson, the...
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...1. Accounts receivable and other receivables The company maintains provision for doubtful accounts for estimated losses resulting from the inability of its customers to make require payments, and such losses have been within management’s expectations. 2. Inventories a. Valuation. IFRS requires that inventory is carried at the lower of cost or net realizable value. Cost of the certain finished goods that are purchased for resale in relation to semiconductor repair services cannot be determined using the LIFO because the IFRS does not permit the use of LIFO. b. Impairment. IFRS requires reversal of inventory impairments in the period in which an impairment condition reverses (with the reversal limited to the amount of the original write-down). 3. Property, Plant, and Equipment a. Cost. After initial recognition, IFRS permits two measurement alternatives: at cost less accumulated depreciation; or, if fair value can be measured reliably, at a revalued amount that equals its fair value at the date of the revaluation less any subsequent accumulated depreciation. An entity must make an accounting policy choice to use either the cost model (that would be consistent with U.S. GAAP) or the revaluation model to measure each class of PP&E. The accounting policy that is selected must be applied to the entire class of PP&E. b. Depreciation. IFRS requires that each part of an item of PP&E with a cost that is significant in relation to the total cost of the item shall be depreciated...
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...Lord Acton made, I do believe that power can lead to corruption, but not necessarily every individual will fall to victim to this. With power comes certain responsibility to lead others on a positive and uplifting path, never giving in to one’s own accord. Especially with “new” power, one can easily lose their morals in the pursuit of more power. This is greed and can lead to thief, lies, and total corruption. I believe that this comes from not only power, but the monetary reward that comes with power. Unfortunately more people than most strive to become the best not for bragging rights or to help others, but for the money flow that will be created from the power they obtain. Ego will also come into play, behaving as though others cannot compare to them, in this they are losing the ability to successfully lead and falling further into the corruption. According to the science and technology psychology, “to call someone “a little Hitler” meant he was a menial functionary who employed what power he had in order to annoy and frustrate others for his own gratification,” (2011). This reminded me of a time that I was employed at restaurant and me and another individual was up for the same promotion. The other individual ended up with the position and was now over me. I personally saw a change in them for the worse and how they abused their power to humiliate and weed out individuals that did not personally like, regardless of their performance on...
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.... Individual Assignment: Community Emergency Preparedness and Response Paper • Access The Neighborhood Web site using the link on the student Web site. • Read all of the community resources and character scenarios in Episode 5 of Season 2. o Click Season 2 from the Season menu at the top of the course home page. o Click Episode 5 from the Episode menu. o Click on Neighborhood News under the Neighborhood Information menu and read the articles for this episode. o Continue by reading the scenarios in all of the Health Care Settings and the Households . • Write a 1,750- to 2,100-word paper about community emergency preparedness and response. • Include the following in the paper: o Summarize the events which took place during Episode 5. Focus on the following areas of the Neighborhood: o Hospital o Senior center o School o Bley household o Examine the actions of health care workers in response to the health concerns of key characters within this episode. o What was the role did the public health care teams in the Neighborhood play in their emergency preparedness? o Which nurses initially responded to the emergency? What were their roles? o What other types of nurses should monitor the effects of this emergency on community health? o Identify other types of public health agencies (local, state, and national) that could have participated in the response...
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...A Family of One Sound As we move forward through our lives we begin to see, new bonds created that makes this group a family. We speak together as one mind, one heart, one sound, so that love and support can be found. Our mistakes are learned from and we begin to look back, on the way things used to be before our music was intact. We cannot be a selfish a selfish generation only looking for fame, what we should realize is that at the end of every year we will never be the same. The truth about this group is that we leave no one out, and we all know to leave no doubt. Our parents always talk to us about setting the example for each other, what they don’t realize is that we are setting the example, for music, our other mother. Through the power of music everything is possible to us and we will not be denied, we need to take a stand and show everyone the power of ‘Jaguar Pride’. I am a witness as are you to the effect of one musician can have on us all, his memory reminds us that WE NEED TO STAND TALL. As our lives continue to change daily our bonds grow stronger, our music creates a common goal, to mourn no longer. My message through this spoken word is simple but everlasting; we should band together as one sound and persevere through our tragic passing. We’re the definition of putting up a fight, we have no weakness, and the ability to make our hardest times into positive memories is what will complete us. As we stand here today as witnesses to the power of music in our...
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...“I’ll be fine, they tell me. I won’t die. It’ll just hurt a lot.”(Lockhart 34) We Were Liars E. Lockhart. Cadence’s family has always sought to present itself as perfect, rich Democrats. During the summer vacation of her fifteenth year on her family’s private island, Cadence has an accident which causes her to suffer debilitating headaches. Cadence also has amnesia, and can’t remember the details of what happened to her that summer. During the summer of her seventeenth year, Cadence tries to learn the truth about what really happened to her. Her grandfather tries to manipulate his children through the promise of houses and jewelry. Throughout the book you find out more about the family and about the accident. One reason to read it is because it is very interesting and has many plot twists. It makes you keep reading because it is a very big mystery on what caused her accident and why can’t she remember anything. Cadence Sinclair Eastman is the main character and narrator of the book. She is the only daughter of Penny Sinclair Eastman and the oldest granddaughter of Harris and Tipper Sinclair. Cadence suffers with migraine headaches which she believes were caused by a traumatic head injury she suffered during the summer she was fifteen while she was vacationing on her grandparents’ private island. Cadence, however, does not remember what caused her brain injury and her family will not tell her the specifics of her accident. “I used to be blonde, but now my hair is black.” “I...
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...Compare and Contrast His/110CA-U.S. History to 1865 02/11/2014 Charles Slater Compare and Contrast In 1607, 104 men survived a journey which would bring them to the American coast. They sailed into the Chesapeake Bay and up a river which they would later name the James. ("America History", 2007). There where many things that were revealed that caused the failure of some colonies and the success of others. From disease to greed and all the other ups and downs that molded America today. Major differences between the British colonies and the French colonies where the greed and the way the two colonies performed actions that made them fruitful in all the endeavors they were making their goals. Take for intense when the British first came over their goals weren’t clearly set out and endorsed by companies that did not well equip the people they sent over very well, which made it so colonist were very unprepared and met catastrophe. The goals that the British companies had set where small colonies, based for trade and they wanted fur and other agricultural items. The British had little to no regard for the Indians land and saw it as property that could be bought and sold, The British also believed that the land was their God given right and it was their job to use the land. They did trade with the Indians but didn’t see the major uses for the local understanding. The French on the other had came over and set a major problem for the British. The French colonist...
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...John Nicolet June 5, 2015 Compare and Contrast 1. Compare and contrast the Magna Carta to the U.S. Constitution. A.The 6th amendment of the Constitution reads "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjpy the right to be confronted with the witness against him." Also it was in the Magna Carta that "No freeman shall be taken or imprsioned or exiled or in any waydestroyrd except by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land. B. In Paragraph 29 of the Magna Carta it reads as follows, "No freeman is to be taken or imprisoned or disseised of his free tenement or of his liberties or free customs, or outlawed or exiled or in any way ruined, nor will we go against such a man or send against him save by lawful judgement of his peers or by the law of the land. To no-one will we sell or deny of delay right or justice. It reads the same in Amendment 6 that " In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial..wherein the crime shall have been committed." 2. Compare and contrast the English bill of rights of 1689 and the U.S. Constitution. A.The Bill creates separation of powers, limits the powers of the king and queen, enhances the democratic election and bolsters freedom of speech as well in the Constitution it talks about the seperation of power of each branch of the government. For example in Article 3 Section 2 talks about the Judical branches power and powers that the Supreme Court...
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