[pic] OEM Prospect Opportunity Screening Guide OEM Prospect Opportunity Screening Guide Step 1: Briefly describe your vision, the opportunity concept and strategy. What is your vision for the opportunity? What is the value creation proposition? What is the significant problem, want or need that it will solve? Why is this important enough that a prospect will pay an above average to a premium price for it? Why does this opportunity exist, now, for you
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Chapter 16 Discussion Questions 1. In the early 1970s the average Canadian industrial corporation had its interest covered almost six times. By 1991, the ratio had slipped below 1, but by 2000 had rebounded to 3 times, slipping again more recently. 2. The bond agreement specifies such basic items as the par value, the coupon rate, and the maturity date. 3. The bond agreement covers a limited number of items, whereas the bond indenture is a supplement that often contains over
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CLASS 1.1 Important concepts Entities – tax versus legal • Tax entities o People, partnerships, joint venture, companies … are considered to be entities for the purposes of calculating income tax. • Legal entities o Companies, which have separate legal personalities, are legal entities. Income flows • Income should be considered as a cash flow stream, where timing is important. • The question is, when the income recognised as earned or deducted (because tax delayed is tax denied)?
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Introduction The user of information and they needs of information are varied and as consequences the ways to present the financial statements also can be. Depending on the corporation, this information can be presented in a way that reflected an image according to the user’s needs, in other words, present the information that users want to see. In this sense, is important to know that this information is not always the most real neither the better. By definition Window Dressing is: “Window
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2008 CFA Level 1 - Mock Exam 1 (AM)模考试题 Q1-5 Question 1 Accepting an incentive offered by a client to a portfolio manager, such as a free vacation or a cash bonus, to reward good performance in a future period is: A) a violation of the Standards. B) not a violation of the Standards as long as client confidentiality is maintained. C) a violation of the Standards unless the manager gets written consent from her employer. D) not a violation of the Standards as long as the manager
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Operating Lease Running head: DEATH OF THE OPERATING LEASE 1 Death of the Operating Lease and its Impact on Leading U.S. Companies Mark S. Lynn Mount St. Mary’s University Copyright 2010, Mark S. Lynn Death of the Operating Lease Abstract The proposed elimination of operating lease treatment by the IASB and FASB, as outlined in 2 their discussion paper, Leases – Preliminary Views, will have a varying degree of impact on U.S firms. After a review of the evolution of lease accounting
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Daffodil International University Assignment No: 02 Course Title: Financial Analysis & Control Course Code: FIN-405 Assignment topic: FINANCIAL TERMINOLOGIES Submitted To: Md. Kamruzzaman Didar Lecturer Department of Business Administration Faculty Of Business & Economics Daffodil International University Submitted By: No | Name | Id.No. | Sec. | (1). | Md.Fateh-Ul-Hossain | 131-11-2909 | B | (2). | Jhumpa Das | 131-11-2900 | B | (3). | Md.Edul Mia | 131-11-2920
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IFRS and US GAAP: similarities and differences IFRS readiness series October 2012 Table of contents The heart of the matter 2 US financial reporting will change significantly within the next several years An in-depth discussion 4 Examining the implications IFRS affects US businesses in multiple ways What this means for your business 6 Anticipate and manage the change What companies can and should do now October 2012 The heart of the matter US financial
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CORPORATE FINANCE T H IRD E DIT ION JONATHAN BERK STANFORD UNIVERSITY PETER D E MARZO STANFORD UNIVERSITY Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle River Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto Delhi Mexico City Sao Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo To Rebecca, Natasha, and Hannah, for the love and for being there —J. B. To Kaui, Pono, Koa, and Kai, for all the love and laughter —P. D. Editor in Chief:
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in a corporation. The managerial finance function is defined and differentiated from economics and accounting. The chapter then summarizes the three key activities of the financial manager: financial analysis and planning, investment decisions, and financing decisions. A discussion of the financial manager's goals – maximizing shareholder wealth and preserving stakeholder wealth – and the role of ethics in meeting these goals is presented. The chapter includes discussion of the agency problem – the
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