Free Crowdfunding Promotion Publication info M2 Presswir.docxhanneloremccaffery
Free Crowdfunding Promotion
Publication info: M2 Presswire ; Coventry [Coventry]22 Aug 2016.
ProQuest document link
ABSTRACT
CrowdFunding is a team work! Twitter, Facebook, Press Releases, Blogs and web Communities Leverage with
power of Google and promote with its proven results! focused on kickstarter crowdfunding, crowdfunding sites,
business crowdfunding ,indiegogo crowdfunding, indiegogo, crowdfunding websites, uk crowdfunding, business ,
games crowdfunding, film crowdfunding, Crowd funding , crowdfunding sites, CrowdFunding, Crowd funding,
Startups Featured crowdfunding 2016 crowdsourcing.org crowdsourcing Kickstarter Indiegogo Campaign funding
Video 2016 game Project Movie Crowdfunding Trailer crowdfunding.
FULL TEXT
M2 PRESSWIRE-August 22, 2016-Free Crowdfunding Promotion
(C)2016 M2 COMMUNICATIONS http://www.m2.com
August 22, 2016
Are You Drawing A Crowd* Ask Yourself How Can I Add More Backers and Investors?
FREE Promotion ~ Promote your Campaign Business Idea Invention Product Cause at
http://crowdfundingexposure.com/free-crowdfunding-promotion-promote-my-crowdfunding-campaign-for-free/
today!
CrowdFunding Exposure wants to be part of your success. As our name implies.. we KNOW CrowdFunding and
know that a campaign is a team work and reaching crowd masses is the goal and we are the experts in
CrowdFunding Exposure since 2004.
Our experience shows between 1% to 3% of the crowd will invest in your project, thus the more time and more
people you can reach will increase your chance of your success. The following social media channels have high
potential of producing more interested backers, investors, and funders.
FREE Promotion ~ Promote your Campaign Business Idea Invention Product Cause
We started in 2004 as an Pioneer in Internet Marketing and Promotion. Twelve years ago we built a Social Media
and Press release system second to none. Our Accounts accounts and communities to find, collaborate and build
the largest CrowdFunding Community in the world totaling over 2.5 Million Investors and Angel Investors. Why*
Because we believe CrowdFunding is Creator's Economy which can solve many of the current issues in both the
business and social world...
Discover the advantage &power of working with the World's largest CrowdFunding Consulting, Multi-Media &it's
Web Communities leveraging Google &promoting with proven results.
CrowdFunding is a team work! Twitter, Facebook, Press Releases, Blogs and web Communities Leverage with
power of Google and promote with its proven results! focused on kickstarter crowdfunding, crowdfunding sites,
business crowdfunding ,indiegogo crowdfunding, indiegogo, crowdfunding websites, uk crowdfunding, business ,
games crowdfunding, film crowdfunding, Crowd funding , crowdfunding sites, CrowdFunding, Crowd funding,
Startups Featured crowdfunding 2016 crowdsourcing.org crowdsourcing Kickstarter Indiegogo Campaign funding
Video 2016 game ...
This document provides an overview and introduction to derivatives and risk management. It defines what derivatives are, the size of the derivatives market, and different types of derivatives like options, forwards, futures, and swaps. It also discusses important concepts like risk preferences, arbitrage, and the role of derivatives in risk management, price discovery, and speculation. Ethics in the derivatives profession and criticisms of derivatives are also covered at a high level.
Very Basic of Finance
What is Derivative
Why do we need derivative in the world of finance
Derivative Market at a glance
Types of Derivative
OTC Vs Exchange Traded
Option and Future (F&O)
Derivative Market in India
Regulatory Framework
Present Day
This document discusses currency hedging strategies in turbulent times. It examines the risks of both hedging and not hedging currency exposure. Key points made include:
- Companies face currency risk from contracted transactions, forecasted transactions, one-off exposures, translation of balance sheet items, and broader economic factors. Understanding how currency risk impacts the business is critical.
- Both hedging and not hedging currency exposure can result in volatile financial outcomes, as hedges taken at wrong times may become losses. There is no universally right approach.
- Treasury outsourcing can provide expertise, but companies should retain control over risk management decisions and strategy setting. Outsourcing the process, not
This chapter discusses market risk and its measurement. It provides examples of how major trading losses at banks like Barings and Sumitomo occurred due to poor risk management. It then outlines approaches to measuring market risk exposure, including dollar value exposure, RiskMetrics, historical simulation, and Monte Carlo simulation. Regulators set capital requirements based on measures of market risk to ensure banks hold sufficient capital to cover potential losses.
This document discusses currency futures hedging effectiveness using CME Group currency futures contracts. It introduces currency hedging strategies using financial derivatives like futures to reduce foreign exchange risk. It then discusses optimal hedge ratios, basis risk, and hedging with currency futures when the currency or maturity may not match the underlying exposure. The document also provides examples of empirical studies on currency hedging effectiveness and reviews literature on estimating optimal hedge ratios for currency futures.
This document discusses different types of international arbitrage opportunities and interest rate parity. It defines locational, triangular, and covered interest arbitrage, explaining how each works and how currency prices realign in response. It also explains interest rate parity, how the forward premium is determined based on interest rate differentials between countries, and factors like transaction costs that can affect parity. Diagrams and examples are provided to illustrate these concepts.
Free Crowdfunding Promotion Publication info M2 Presswir.docxhanneloremccaffery
Free Crowdfunding Promotion
Publication info: M2 Presswire ; Coventry [Coventry]22 Aug 2016.
ProQuest document link
ABSTRACT
CrowdFunding is a team work! Twitter, Facebook, Press Releases, Blogs and web Communities Leverage with
power of Google and promote with its proven results! focused on kickstarter crowdfunding, crowdfunding sites,
business crowdfunding ,indiegogo crowdfunding, indiegogo, crowdfunding websites, uk crowdfunding, business ,
games crowdfunding, film crowdfunding, Crowd funding , crowdfunding sites, CrowdFunding, Crowd funding,
Startups Featured crowdfunding 2016 crowdsourcing.org crowdsourcing Kickstarter Indiegogo Campaign funding
Video 2016 game Project Movie Crowdfunding Trailer crowdfunding.
FULL TEXT
M2 PRESSWIRE-August 22, 2016-Free Crowdfunding Promotion
(C)2016 M2 COMMUNICATIONS http://www.m2.com
August 22, 2016
Are You Drawing A Crowd* Ask Yourself How Can I Add More Backers and Investors?
FREE Promotion ~ Promote your Campaign Business Idea Invention Product Cause at
http://crowdfundingexposure.com/free-crowdfunding-promotion-promote-my-crowdfunding-campaign-for-free/
today!
CrowdFunding Exposure wants to be part of your success. As our name implies.. we KNOW CrowdFunding and
know that a campaign is a team work and reaching crowd masses is the goal and we are the experts in
CrowdFunding Exposure since 2004.
Our experience shows between 1% to 3% of the crowd will invest in your project, thus the more time and more
people you can reach will increase your chance of your success. The following social media channels have high
potential of producing more interested backers, investors, and funders.
FREE Promotion ~ Promote your Campaign Business Idea Invention Product Cause
We started in 2004 as an Pioneer in Internet Marketing and Promotion. Twelve years ago we built a Social Media
and Press release system second to none. Our Accounts accounts and communities to find, collaborate and build
the largest CrowdFunding Community in the world totaling over 2.5 Million Investors and Angel Investors. Why*
Because we believe CrowdFunding is Creator's Economy which can solve many of the current issues in both the
business and social world...
Discover the advantage &power of working with the World's largest CrowdFunding Consulting, Multi-Media &it's
Web Communities leveraging Google &promoting with proven results.
CrowdFunding is a team work! Twitter, Facebook, Press Releases, Blogs and web Communities Leverage with
power of Google and promote with its proven results! focused on kickstarter crowdfunding, crowdfunding sites,
business crowdfunding ,indiegogo crowdfunding, indiegogo, crowdfunding websites, uk crowdfunding, business ,
games crowdfunding, film crowdfunding, Crowd funding , crowdfunding sites, CrowdFunding, Crowd funding,
Startups Featured crowdfunding 2016 crowdsourcing.org crowdsourcing Kickstarter Indiegogo Campaign funding
Video 2016 game ...
This document provides an overview and introduction to derivatives and risk management. It defines what derivatives are, the size of the derivatives market, and different types of derivatives like options, forwards, futures, and swaps. It also discusses important concepts like risk preferences, arbitrage, and the role of derivatives in risk management, price discovery, and speculation. Ethics in the derivatives profession and criticisms of derivatives are also covered at a high level.
Very Basic of Finance
What is Derivative
Why do we need derivative in the world of finance
Derivative Market at a glance
Types of Derivative
OTC Vs Exchange Traded
Option and Future (F&O)
Derivative Market in India
Regulatory Framework
Present Day
This document discusses currency hedging strategies in turbulent times. It examines the risks of both hedging and not hedging currency exposure. Key points made include:
- Companies face currency risk from contracted transactions, forecasted transactions, one-off exposures, translation of balance sheet items, and broader economic factors. Understanding how currency risk impacts the business is critical.
- Both hedging and not hedging currency exposure can result in volatile financial outcomes, as hedges taken at wrong times may become losses. There is no universally right approach.
- Treasury outsourcing can provide expertise, but companies should retain control over risk management decisions and strategy setting. Outsourcing the process, not
This chapter discusses market risk and its measurement. It provides examples of how major trading losses at banks like Barings and Sumitomo occurred due to poor risk management. It then outlines approaches to measuring market risk exposure, including dollar value exposure, RiskMetrics, historical simulation, and Monte Carlo simulation. Regulators set capital requirements based on measures of market risk to ensure banks hold sufficient capital to cover potential losses.
This document discusses currency futures hedging effectiveness using CME Group currency futures contracts. It introduces currency hedging strategies using financial derivatives like futures to reduce foreign exchange risk. It then discusses optimal hedge ratios, basis risk, and hedging with currency futures when the currency or maturity may not match the underlying exposure. The document also provides examples of empirical studies on currency hedging effectiveness and reviews literature on estimating optimal hedge ratios for currency futures.
This document discusses different types of international arbitrage opportunities and interest rate parity. It defines locational, triangular, and covered interest arbitrage, explaining how each works and how currency prices realign in response. It also explains interest rate parity, how the forward premium is determined based on interest rate differentials between countries, and factors like transaction costs that can affect parity. Diagrams and examples are provided to illustrate these concepts.
- Portfolio risk is lower than the weighted average risk of individual securities if their correlations are less than one. The capital asset pricing model relates a security's expected return to its beta, a measure of nondiversifiable risk.
- For markets to be efficient, security prices should quickly incorporate new information and no investors should consistently earn excess returns after accounting for risk and costs. However, the joint hypothesis problem notes that rejections of market efficiency may also reflect issues with the model used to calculate expected returns.
- Agency problems arise in situations where one party (the principal) delegates authority to another (the agent), such as when shareholders hire managers, but their incentives are not perfectly aligned.
Currency futures hedging effectiveness in cme group by md rubel khondokerRUBEL
This document discusses currency futures hedging effectiveness using contracts traded on the CME Group. It begins with an introduction to currency hedging strategies using financial derivatives like futures to reduce foreign exchange risk. It then provides background on currency risk and empirical evidence of companies hedging currency exposure. The objectives are to estimate optimal hedge ratios for CME currency futures and examine the relationship between spot and futures prices.
The document contains a chapter from a textbook on analysis of investments and management of portfolios. It includes true/false questions and multiple choice questions about key concepts such as asset allocation, investment objectives, life cycle phases, and tax considerations. It also provides sample asset allocation strategies for different investor profiles based on time horizon and risk tolerance.
This document discusses challenges to market efficiency, including evidence that contradicts the efficient market hypothesis. Some key points made:
- Certain trading strategies, like investing in small caps or value stocks, have been shown to outperform the market, indicating prices do not always reflect fundamental value.
- Implementation costs, noise trader risk, and limits to short-selling hamper arbitrageurs' ability to fully correct pricing errors. This allows mispricings to persist for periods of time.
- The 3Com/Palm stock example illustrates how an obvious and persistent mispricing occurred that rational investors could not fully exploit, due to short-selling constraints. This shows how both irrational investors and limits to arbitrage are
Risk And Return Measurement For Investment DecisionsSiddharth Sinha
The document discusses various concepts related to measuring risk and return for investment decisions. It covers key terms, risk diversification through investing in multiple countries and industries, measuring volatility in earnings, valuing companies using discounted cash flow methods, hedging risk exposures, combining hedge funds with traditional equities, the benefits of risk management, portfolio analysis of risk and return, and concludes with thanking the reader.
-8-CARREFOUR S.A.Synopsis and Objectives.docxmercysuttle
-8-
CARREFOUR S.A.
Synopsis and Objectives
In August 2002, the French retail giant Carrefour S.A. is considering alternative currencies for raising (euros) EUR750 million in the eurobond market. Carrefour’s investment bankers provide various borrowing rates across four different currencies. Despite the high nominal coupon rate and the lack of any material business activity in the United Kingdom, the British-pound issue appears to provide the lowest cost of funds if the exchange rate risk is hedged.
The case is designed to serve as an introduction to topics in international finance. Topics of discussion include foreign-currency borrowing, interest-rate parity, currency risk exposure, derivative contracts (in particular forward and swap contracts), and currency risk management. Students are tasked with exploring (1) motives for borrowing in foreign currencies, (2) the exposure created by such financing policy, and (3) strategies for managing currency risk.
Suggested Questions for Advance Assignment to Students
1. Why should Carrefour consider borrowing in a currency other than euros?
2. Assuming the bonds are issued at par, what is the cost in euros of each of the bond alternatives?
3. Which debt issue would you recommend and why?
Hypothetical Teaching Plan
1. What is going on at Carrefour?
2. Is the Swiss-franc issue, at 3⅝%, a “no-brainer”?
3. What can a firm do to manage the exchange-rate risk of foreign-currency borrowing?
4. Using appropriate forward rates, what is the cost of borrowing in Swiss francs? British pounds? U.S. dollars? What should Carrefour do?
As reference material, broad empirical evidence of the managerial question in the case can be found in Matthew R. McBrady and Michael J. Schill, “Foreign currency denominated borrowing in the absence of operating incentives” Journal of Financial Economics 86 (October 2007): 145–177 and Matthew R. McBrady, Sandra Mortal, and Michael J. Schill, “Do firms believe in interest-rate parity?” working paper, Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Case Analysis
1.What is going on at Carrefour?
Carrefour is a massive retailer (Europe’s largest) with strong but selective expansion prospects internationally (case Exhibit 1). The company has a history of funding its capital needs through securities denominated in many different currencies (case Exhibit 3), and is sophisticated in managing currency risk. Carrefour currently has a EUR750 million capital need that the company intends to meet through the eurobond market.[footnoteRef:1] This offering represents approximately 11% of Carrefour’s bond portfolio. Carrefour’s investment bank has provided market borrowing rates in euros and three foreign currencies. [1: Bob Bruner suggests using the case to develop various facets of the eurobond market: (1) the eurobond market is an external market, outside the regulatory jurisdiction of any one country; (2) the bonds so iss ...
The document provides an overview of the DSP Equity Savings Fund, an open-ended hybrid scheme that invests in equity, arbitrage, and debt instruments. The fund seeks to provide capital appreciation with lower volatility by maintaining equity exposure between 20-40% while hedging risk through options strategies. It aims to target lower drawdowns, limit risk of permanent capital loss, take a countercyclical approach, focus on absolute returns, and maintain a multi-asset portfolio to generate returns higher than benchmarks or inflation over the long run.
Allianz Global Investors: La volatilidad como clase de activoFinect
The document discusses volatility as an asset class and the Allianz Volatility Strategy fund. It begins by explaining what volatility is as an asset class and the different strategies for investing in it, including flexible, long volatility, option trading, and short volatility strategies. It then discusses why volatility makes an attractive asset class due to the negative variance risk premium. The document outlines the investment philosophy and process of the Allianz Volatility Strategy fund, which uses variance swaps to benefit from the variance risk premium. It concludes by reviewing the fund's performance in different market phases and the portfolio manager's experience.
Analysing private equity and venture capital funds through the lens of risk m...Izam Ryan
Can we interpret the role of PE/VC investments as a form of risk management?
Investments in PE/VC are usually thought of as being high risk / high return, But, studies also show that PE investments can reduce risk in certain situations.
The academic version of this paper was submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the Imperial MBA degree and the Diploma of Imperial College London. The academic version of this paper was awarded a Distinction.
Swallow Financial Planning's presentation to clients explaining our investment strategy and our approach to investing for the long term.
The presentation briefly covers:
- why we believe in asset-backed investments;
- why asset classes perform differently;
- why we believe it’s essential to diversify your investments;
- why risk and reward are always related;
- why risk reduces over the long term and;
- why we prefer passive funds.
This document discusses various concepts related to investment risk and rates of return. It covers stand-alone risk, portfolio risk, standard deviation as a measure of risk, the benefits of diversification in reducing portfolio risk, and the capital asset pricing model. The key points are: 1) a portfolio's risk is generally lower than the average risk of its individual components due to diversification, especially if the components are not perfectly positively correlated; 2) standard deviation measures total risk while the coefficient of variation allows comparison of risk levels for investments with different returns; and 3) the capital asset pricing model suggests investors should only be compensated for non-diversifiable market risk, not company-specific risk.
The document provides an overview of key concepts related to saving, investment, and the financial system. It discusses how the financial system matches savers with borrowers through financial markets and intermediaries like banks and mutual funds. It explains that in a closed economy, saving must equal investment and explores how budget deficits and surpluses impact public saving. The document also discusses the meaning of private saving and investment and how interest rates adjust in financial markets to equalize the supply and demand of loanable funds. Finally, it notes that budget deficits can "crowd out" private investment and thereby reduce long-run economic growth.
Bernard Madoff perpetrated a massive fraud through his investment firm, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities. UBP had invested around $700 million total across various funds of hedge funds in four investment vehicles that were managed by Madoff. While Madoff claimed to employ a "split-strike conversion strategy", he was actually running a Ponzi scheme. The document discusses UBP's due diligence on Madoff over the years, the consistency of his returns, the implications for the hedge fund industry, and UBP's financial strength in light of the fraud.
This document discusses money markets and various money market securities. It begins by defining money market securities as debt securities with maturities of one year or less. It then profiles the key characteristics of popular money market instruments including Treasury bills, commercial paper, negotiable certificates of deposit, repurchase agreements, federal funds, and banker's acceptances. The document also examines how these securities are used by institutional investors to manage short-term cash and facilitate the flow of funds. It provides details on pricing models and yields for different money market products.
The document provides an overview of derivatives and risk management. It begins with definitions of key terms like yield curve, Eurodollar, and derivative. It then discusses how corporations and financial institutions use derivatives to hedge risks and speculate. Several high-profile disasters from improper derivatives use are summarized to provide lessons about risk management. The document also covers accounting and taxation issues related to derivatives as well as how effective risk management can help reduce a firm's cost of capital and increase expected cash flows.
7. International Arbitrage And Interest Rate Parity.pptxchallbhag
This document discusses various types of international arbitrage opportunities and interest rate parity. It defines locational, triangular, and covered interest arbitrage, and explains how each type works to equalize prices and eliminate arbitrage profits. It also introduces interest rate parity, which exists when exchange rates adjust such that covered interest arbitrage is no longer feasible due to offsets in interest rate differentials. Factors like transaction costs, political risks, and tax laws can affect whether interest rate parity holds in practice.
The document discusses capital structure theory and the impact of taxes. It covers Modigliani and Miller's propositions which state that in perfect capital markets, the value of a firm is unaffected by its capital structure. Taxes are introduced, violating a key assumption of perfect markets. When corporate taxes are considered, debt provides a tax advantage over equity, increasing firm value. However, this advantage may be offset by personal taxes on interest income. The document examines various capital structures and their impact on firm and shareholder value under different tax regimes.
The document discusses managing foreign exchange risk in corporate portfolios. It begins by explaining the three main types of foreign exchange exposures that corporations face: translation, transaction, and economic. It then provides details on accounting treatments for translation exposures, types of transaction exposures, and challenges with economic exposures. The document also discusses developing hedging programs to mitigate cash flow, fair value, and net investment risks. It outlines various hedging instruments available in onshore and offshore markets.
This document discusses the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply used to analyze economic fluctuations. It explains that the aggregate demand curve slopes downward because higher prices reduce consumption, investment, and net exports. The short-run aggregate supply curve slopes upward as higher prices induce firms to increase output in the short-run. In the long-run, the aggregate supply curve is vertical as potential output is determined by factors like resources, technology, and population which are unaffected by price level changes. The model shows how fluctuations in output and employment occur through movements along and shifts in the aggregate demand and supply curves.
Examine how nature is discussed throughout The Open Boat.” Loo.docxcravennichole326
Examine how nature is discussed throughout “The Open Boat.” Look at the literary critical piece by Anthony Channell Hilfer. Once you have established your own ideas, consider how Hilfer discusses nature in the short story and analyze the following questions: What does nature mean to the men aboard the boat? or Do their perceptions of nature shift throughout the story? Why or why not?
Do their perceptions of nature shift throughout the story? Why or why not?
Write down a loose response about what I think of the question and what I remember of the story.
ICE method.
I introduce the citation
C the citation itself
E explain its meaning to your argument.
The scenes shift with no discernable rhyme or reason. Crane invites every reader in. Critic Anthony Channell Hilfer disagrees with point, saying, “Crane’s image is an accusation of the putative picturesque spectators” (Hilfer 254). Hilfer’s challenge goes against what Crane is trying to do, by making nature a copilot through the reading.
3. Nature as Protagonist in “The Open Boat”
Anthony Channell Hilfer
Texas Studies in Literature and Language, Volume 54, Number 2, Summer
2012, pp. 248-257 (Article)
Published by University of Texas Press
DOI:
For additional information about this article
[ Access provided at 9 Apr 2020 17:36 GMT from Marymount University & (Viva) ]
https://doi.org/10.1353/tsl.2012.0012
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/476402
https://doi.org/10.1353/tsl.2012.0012
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/476402
Anthony Channell Hilfer248
3. Nature as Protagonist in “The Open Boat”
The bottom of the sea is cruel.
—Hart Crane, “Voyages”
As many critics have argued, questions of perspective and epistemology are
central to Stephen Crane’s “The Open Boat” (Kent; Hutchinson). The story’s
first sentence famously clues us to this: “None of them knew the color of
the sky” (68). But behind the uncertainties of perspective is a determinable
ontology, a presence, or rather, I shall argue, a sort of presence, the existence
of which implies a rectified aesthetic response. This response emerges, how-
ever, from negations, denials, and occultations: what is not seen, who is not
there, and what does not happen.3 Here again, when we look at nature we
behold things that are not there and miss “the nothing that is.”
Fully as much as Stevens in “The Snow Man,” Crane is concerned
with certain conventions of representation: personification, the pictur-
esque, the American sublime, and the melodramatic, which although it
does not inform “The Snow Man” is played on in Stevens’s “The Ameri-
can Sublime.” Crane’s story is intertextual with nature poetry, sentimental
poetry, hymns, and landscape art, as well as with Darwinism, theological
clichés, and, less obviously, theological actualities. For the most part these
conventions add up to what the Stevens poem declares is “not there.” To
get to “the nothing that is” we must first traverse this ocean of error. Doing
so helps keep our p.
Examine All Children Can Learn. Then, search the web for effec.docxcravennichole326
Examine
"All Children Can Learn"
. Then, search the web for effective, evidence-based differentiated strategies that are engaging, motivating, and address the needs of individual learners.
First, provide five evidence-based strategies:
Two instructional strategies (i.e., graphic organizers),
Two instructional tools (e.g., technology tool, device or iPad App, Web Quests, etc.),
One activity (e.g., Think-Pair-Share).
Second, for the two instructional strategies you listed explain how you can alter each to address the classroom needs you designed in Weeks One and Two and how the modification is relevant to the theory of differentiation.
.
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- Portfolio risk is lower than the weighted average risk of individual securities if their correlations are less than one. The capital asset pricing model relates a security's expected return to its beta, a measure of nondiversifiable risk.
- For markets to be efficient, security prices should quickly incorporate new information and no investors should consistently earn excess returns after accounting for risk and costs. However, the joint hypothesis problem notes that rejections of market efficiency may also reflect issues with the model used to calculate expected returns.
- Agency problems arise in situations where one party (the principal) delegates authority to another (the agent), such as when shareholders hire managers, but their incentives are not perfectly aligned.
Currency futures hedging effectiveness in cme group by md rubel khondokerRUBEL
This document discusses currency futures hedging effectiveness using contracts traded on the CME Group. It begins with an introduction to currency hedging strategies using financial derivatives like futures to reduce foreign exchange risk. It then provides background on currency risk and empirical evidence of companies hedging currency exposure. The objectives are to estimate optimal hedge ratios for CME currency futures and examine the relationship between spot and futures prices.
The document contains a chapter from a textbook on analysis of investments and management of portfolios. It includes true/false questions and multiple choice questions about key concepts such as asset allocation, investment objectives, life cycle phases, and tax considerations. It also provides sample asset allocation strategies for different investor profiles based on time horizon and risk tolerance.
This document discusses challenges to market efficiency, including evidence that contradicts the efficient market hypothesis. Some key points made:
- Certain trading strategies, like investing in small caps or value stocks, have been shown to outperform the market, indicating prices do not always reflect fundamental value.
- Implementation costs, noise trader risk, and limits to short-selling hamper arbitrageurs' ability to fully correct pricing errors. This allows mispricings to persist for periods of time.
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Risk And Return Measurement For Investment DecisionsSiddharth Sinha
The document discusses various concepts related to measuring risk and return for investment decisions. It covers key terms, risk diversification through investing in multiple countries and industries, measuring volatility in earnings, valuing companies using discounted cash flow methods, hedging risk exposures, combining hedge funds with traditional equities, the benefits of risk management, portfolio analysis of risk and return, and concludes with thanking the reader.
-8-CARREFOUR S.A.Synopsis and Objectives.docxmercysuttle
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CARREFOUR S.A.
Synopsis and Objectives
In August 2002, the French retail giant Carrefour S.A. is considering alternative currencies for raising (euros) EUR750 million in the eurobond market. Carrefour’s investment bankers provide various borrowing rates across four different currencies. Despite the high nominal coupon rate and the lack of any material business activity in the United Kingdom, the British-pound issue appears to provide the lowest cost of funds if the exchange rate risk is hedged.
The case is designed to serve as an introduction to topics in international finance. Topics of discussion include foreign-currency borrowing, interest-rate parity, currency risk exposure, derivative contracts (in particular forward and swap contracts), and currency risk management. Students are tasked with exploring (1) motives for borrowing in foreign currencies, (2) the exposure created by such financing policy, and (3) strategies for managing currency risk.
Suggested Questions for Advance Assignment to Students
1. Why should Carrefour consider borrowing in a currency other than euros?
2. Assuming the bonds are issued at par, what is the cost in euros of each of the bond alternatives?
3. Which debt issue would you recommend and why?
Hypothetical Teaching Plan
1. What is going on at Carrefour?
2. Is the Swiss-franc issue, at 3⅝%, a “no-brainer”?
3. What can a firm do to manage the exchange-rate risk of foreign-currency borrowing?
4. Using appropriate forward rates, what is the cost of borrowing in Swiss francs? British pounds? U.S. dollars? What should Carrefour do?
As reference material, broad empirical evidence of the managerial question in the case can be found in Matthew R. McBrady and Michael J. Schill, “Foreign currency denominated borrowing in the absence of operating incentives” Journal of Financial Economics 86 (October 2007): 145–177 and Matthew R. McBrady, Sandra Mortal, and Michael J. Schill, “Do firms believe in interest-rate parity?” working paper, Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Case Analysis
1.What is going on at Carrefour?
Carrefour is a massive retailer (Europe’s largest) with strong but selective expansion prospects internationally (case Exhibit 1). The company has a history of funding its capital needs through securities denominated in many different currencies (case Exhibit 3), and is sophisticated in managing currency risk. Carrefour currently has a EUR750 million capital need that the company intends to meet through the eurobond market.[footnoteRef:1] This offering represents approximately 11% of Carrefour’s bond portfolio. Carrefour’s investment bank has provided market borrowing rates in euros and three foreign currencies. [1: Bob Bruner suggests using the case to develop various facets of the eurobond market: (1) the eurobond market is an external market, outside the regulatory jurisdiction of any one country; (2) the bonds so iss ...
The document provides an overview of the DSP Equity Savings Fund, an open-ended hybrid scheme that invests in equity, arbitrage, and debt instruments. The fund seeks to provide capital appreciation with lower volatility by maintaining equity exposure between 20-40% while hedging risk through options strategies. It aims to target lower drawdowns, limit risk of permanent capital loss, take a countercyclical approach, focus on absolute returns, and maintain a multi-asset portfolio to generate returns higher than benchmarks or inflation over the long run.
Allianz Global Investors: La volatilidad como clase de activoFinect
The document discusses volatility as an asset class and the Allianz Volatility Strategy fund. It begins by explaining what volatility is as an asset class and the different strategies for investing in it, including flexible, long volatility, option trading, and short volatility strategies. It then discusses why volatility makes an attractive asset class due to the negative variance risk premium. The document outlines the investment philosophy and process of the Allianz Volatility Strategy fund, which uses variance swaps to benefit from the variance risk premium. It concludes by reviewing the fund's performance in different market phases and the portfolio manager's experience.
Analysing private equity and venture capital funds through the lens of risk m...Izam Ryan
Can we interpret the role of PE/VC investments as a form of risk management?
Investments in PE/VC are usually thought of as being high risk / high return, But, studies also show that PE investments can reduce risk in certain situations.
The academic version of this paper was submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the Imperial MBA degree and the Diploma of Imperial College London. The academic version of this paper was awarded a Distinction.
Swallow Financial Planning's presentation to clients explaining our investment strategy and our approach to investing for the long term.
The presentation briefly covers:
- why we believe in asset-backed investments;
- why asset classes perform differently;
- why we believe it’s essential to diversify your investments;
- why risk and reward are always related;
- why risk reduces over the long term and;
- why we prefer passive funds.
This document discusses various concepts related to investment risk and rates of return. It covers stand-alone risk, portfolio risk, standard deviation as a measure of risk, the benefits of diversification in reducing portfolio risk, and the capital asset pricing model. The key points are: 1) a portfolio's risk is generally lower than the average risk of its individual components due to diversification, especially if the components are not perfectly positively correlated; 2) standard deviation measures total risk while the coefficient of variation allows comparison of risk levels for investments with different returns; and 3) the capital asset pricing model suggests investors should only be compensated for non-diversifiable market risk, not company-specific risk.
The document provides an overview of key concepts related to saving, investment, and the financial system. It discusses how the financial system matches savers with borrowers through financial markets and intermediaries like banks and mutual funds. It explains that in a closed economy, saving must equal investment and explores how budget deficits and surpluses impact public saving. The document also discusses the meaning of private saving and investment and how interest rates adjust in financial markets to equalize the supply and demand of loanable funds. Finally, it notes that budget deficits can "crowd out" private investment and thereby reduce long-run economic growth.
Bernard Madoff perpetrated a massive fraud through his investment firm, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities. UBP had invested around $700 million total across various funds of hedge funds in four investment vehicles that were managed by Madoff. While Madoff claimed to employ a "split-strike conversion strategy", he was actually running a Ponzi scheme. The document discusses UBP's due diligence on Madoff over the years, the consistency of his returns, the implications for the hedge fund industry, and UBP's financial strength in light of the fraud.
This document discusses money markets and various money market securities. It begins by defining money market securities as debt securities with maturities of one year or less. It then profiles the key characteristics of popular money market instruments including Treasury bills, commercial paper, negotiable certificates of deposit, repurchase agreements, federal funds, and banker's acceptances. The document also examines how these securities are used by institutional investors to manage short-term cash and facilitate the flow of funds. It provides details on pricing models and yields for different money market products.
The document provides an overview of derivatives and risk management. It begins with definitions of key terms like yield curve, Eurodollar, and derivative. It then discusses how corporations and financial institutions use derivatives to hedge risks and speculate. Several high-profile disasters from improper derivatives use are summarized to provide lessons about risk management. The document also covers accounting and taxation issues related to derivatives as well as how effective risk management can help reduce a firm's cost of capital and increase expected cash flows.
7. International Arbitrage And Interest Rate Parity.pptxchallbhag
This document discusses various types of international arbitrage opportunities and interest rate parity. It defines locational, triangular, and covered interest arbitrage, and explains how each type works to equalize prices and eliminate arbitrage profits. It also introduces interest rate parity, which exists when exchange rates adjust such that covered interest arbitrage is no longer feasible due to offsets in interest rate differentials. Factors like transaction costs, political risks, and tax laws can affect whether interest rate parity holds in practice.
The document discusses capital structure theory and the impact of taxes. It covers Modigliani and Miller's propositions which state that in perfect capital markets, the value of a firm is unaffected by its capital structure. Taxes are introduced, violating a key assumption of perfect markets. When corporate taxes are considered, debt provides a tax advantage over equity, increasing firm value. However, this advantage may be offset by personal taxes on interest income. The document examines various capital structures and their impact on firm and shareholder value under different tax regimes.
The document discusses managing foreign exchange risk in corporate portfolios. It begins by explaining the three main types of foreign exchange exposures that corporations face: translation, transaction, and economic. It then provides details on accounting treatments for translation exposures, types of transaction exposures, and challenges with economic exposures. The document also discusses developing hedging programs to mitigate cash flow, fair value, and net investment risks. It outlines various hedging instruments available in onshore and offshore markets.
This document discusses the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply used to analyze economic fluctuations. It explains that the aggregate demand curve slopes downward because higher prices reduce consumption, investment, and net exports. The short-run aggregate supply curve slopes upward as higher prices induce firms to increase output in the short-run. In the long-run, the aggregate supply curve is vertical as potential output is determined by factors like resources, technology, and population which are unaffected by price level changes. The model shows how fluctuations in output and employment occur through movements along and shifts in the aggregate demand and supply curves.
Similar to ChanceBrooksAn Introduction to Derivatives and Risk Man.docx (20)
Examine how nature is discussed throughout The Open Boat.” Loo.docxcravennichole326
Examine how nature is discussed throughout “The Open Boat.” Look at the literary critical piece by Anthony Channell Hilfer. Once you have established your own ideas, consider how Hilfer discusses nature in the short story and analyze the following questions: What does nature mean to the men aboard the boat? or Do their perceptions of nature shift throughout the story? Why or why not?
Do their perceptions of nature shift throughout the story? Why or why not?
Write down a loose response about what I think of the question and what I remember of the story.
ICE method.
I introduce the citation
C the citation itself
E explain its meaning to your argument.
The scenes shift with no discernable rhyme or reason. Crane invites every reader in. Critic Anthony Channell Hilfer disagrees with point, saying, “Crane’s image is an accusation of the putative picturesque spectators” (Hilfer 254). Hilfer’s challenge goes against what Crane is trying to do, by making nature a copilot through the reading.
3. Nature as Protagonist in “The Open Boat”
Anthony Channell Hilfer
Texas Studies in Literature and Language, Volume 54, Number 2, Summer
2012, pp. 248-257 (Article)
Published by University of Texas Press
DOI:
For additional information about this article
[ Access provided at 9 Apr 2020 17:36 GMT from Marymount University & (Viva) ]
https://doi.org/10.1353/tsl.2012.0012
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/476402
https://doi.org/10.1353/tsl.2012.0012
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/476402
Anthony Channell Hilfer248
3. Nature as Protagonist in “The Open Boat”
The bottom of the sea is cruel.
—Hart Crane, “Voyages”
As many critics have argued, questions of perspective and epistemology are
central to Stephen Crane’s “The Open Boat” (Kent; Hutchinson). The story’s
first sentence famously clues us to this: “None of them knew the color of
the sky” (68). But behind the uncertainties of perspective is a determinable
ontology, a presence, or rather, I shall argue, a sort of presence, the existence
of which implies a rectified aesthetic response. This response emerges, how-
ever, from negations, denials, and occultations: what is not seen, who is not
there, and what does not happen.3 Here again, when we look at nature we
behold things that are not there and miss “the nothing that is.”
Fully as much as Stevens in “The Snow Man,” Crane is concerned
with certain conventions of representation: personification, the pictur-
esque, the American sublime, and the melodramatic, which although it
does not inform “The Snow Man” is played on in Stevens’s “The Ameri-
can Sublime.” Crane’s story is intertextual with nature poetry, sentimental
poetry, hymns, and landscape art, as well as with Darwinism, theological
clichés, and, less obviously, theological actualities. For the most part these
conventions add up to what the Stevens poem declares is “not there.” To
get to “the nothing that is” we must first traverse this ocean of error. Doing
so helps keep our p.
Examine All Children Can Learn. Then, search the web for effec.docxcravennichole326
Examine
"All Children Can Learn"
. Then, search the web for effective, evidence-based differentiated strategies that are engaging, motivating, and address the needs of individual learners.
First, provide five evidence-based strategies:
Two instructional strategies (i.e., graphic organizers),
Two instructional tools (e.g., technology tool, device or iPad App, Web Quests, etc.),
One activity (e.g., Think-Pair-Share).
Second, for the two instructional strategies you listed explain how you can alter each to address the classroom needs you designed in Weeks One and Two and how the modification is relevant to the theory of differentiation.
.
Examine each of these items, which are available on the internet .docxcravennichole326
Examine each of these items, which are available on the internet:
1) for music, listen to the first movement of J.S. Bach's MAGNIFICAT; this is the High Baroque era. If you can find a performance with Sir John Eliot Gardiner and his Monteverdi Choir and the English Baroque soloists, go for it.
2) For art, find Giovanni Bellini's ST. FRANCIS IN THE DESERT; you might want to read up on the background of this wonderful painting. Not only St. Francis, but what else do you notice i the painting?
3) For architecture, look at the church at Melk Abbey, Austria; BE SURE to look at the interior shots. Again,
this is high Baroque--but in post-Reformation Catholicism, it had a political aim, too; can you figure it out?
After you have analyzed these, telling what you think the artists/musicians valued and were trying to express, tell me what
YOU think about them! Remember, if you read up on these items, LIST THE WORKS YOU CONSULTED! That way, you avoid plagiarism.
write a 1-page paper on each of these three, telling 1) where they found this value, 2) why it was important “back then,” and 3) is it still around today.
.
Examine a web browser interface and describe the various forms .docxcravennichole326
Examine a web browser interface and describe the various forms of analogy and composite interface metaphors that have been used in its design. What familiar knowledge has been combined with new functionality? need a couple of paragraphs.. and one reference
need this in the next 4 hours..
.
Examine a scenario that includes an inter-group conflict. In this sc.docxcravennichole326
Examine a scenario that includes an inter-group conflict. In this scenario, you are recognized as an authority in cross-cultural psychology and asked to serve as a consultant to help resolve the conflict. You will be asked to write up your recommendations in a 6-page paper not including your title and reference page.
Darley, J.M. & Latané, B. (1968). Bystander interview in emergencies: Diffusion of responsibility.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 8
(4), 377-383.
Scenario: Culture, Psychology, and Community
Imagine an international organization has approached you to help resolve an inter-group conflict. You are an authority in cross-cultural psychology and have been asked to serve as a consultant based on a recent violent conflict involving a refugee community in your town and a local community organization. In the days, weeks, and months leading up to the violent conflict, there were incidents of discrimination and debates regarding the different views and practices people held about work, family, schools, and religious practice. Among the controversies has been the role of women’s participation in political, educational, and community groups
.
Part 1: Developing an Understanding
(2 pages)
Based on the scenario, explain how you can help integrate the two diverse communities so that there is increased understanding and appreciation of each group by the other group. (
Note
: Make sure to include in your explanation the different views and practices of cultural groups as well as the role of women.)
Based on your knowledge of culture and psychology, provide three possible suggestions/solutions that will help the community as a whole. In your suggestions make sure to include an explanation regarding group think and individualism vs. collectivism.
Part 2: Socio-Emotional, Cognitive, and Behavioral Aspects
(2 pages)
Based on your explanations in Part 1, how do your suggestions/solutions impact the socio-emotional, cognitive, and behavior aspects of the scenario and why?
Part 3: Gender, Cultural Values and Dimensions, and Group Dynamics
(2 pages)
Explain the impact of gender, cultural values and dimensions, and group dynamics in the scenario.
Further explain any implications that may arise from when working between and within groups.
Support your Assignment by citing all resources in APA style, including those in the Learning Resources.
.
Examine a current law, or a bill proposing a law, that has to do wit.docxcravennichole326
Examine a current law, or a bill proposing a law, that has to do with technology and criminal activity. The law can be at the state or federal level. Identify the law or bill, where it comes from, and its purpose or intent. Next, identify positive outcomes if the law is successful. Finally, identify at least two unintended consequences that the law could bring about. . . DUE 4/18, 2021
.
Exam IT 505Multiple Choice (20 questions , 2 points each)Pleas.docxcravennichole326
Exam IT 505
Multiple Choice (20 questions , 2 points each)
Please Submit a word document of your exam. Please DO NOT repeat the questions. Only submit your answers for example 1.A, 2. B……Ect
1. Which of the following is NOT one of the typical characteristics of back-end networks?
A. high data rate B. high-speed interface
C. distributed access D. extended distance
2. Problems with using a single Local Area Network (LAN) to interconnect devices
on a premise include:
A. insufficient reliability, limited capacity, and inappropriate network
interconnection devices
B. insufficient reliability, limited capacity, and limited distances
C. insufficient reliability, limited distances, and inappropriate network
interconnection devices
D. limited distances, limited capacity, and inappropriate network
interconnection devices
3. Which of following is NOT one of the designs that determines data rate and
distance?
A. the number of senders B. the number of receivers
C. transmission impairment D. bandwidth
4. The fact that signal strength falls off with distance is called ________________.
A. bandwidth B. attenuation
C. resistance D. propagation
5. Which of the following is NOT one of the distinguishing characteristics for optical
fiber cables compared with twisted pair or coaxial cables?
A. greater capacity B. lower attenuation
C. electromagnetic isolation D. heavier weight
6.________ is a set of function and call programs that allow clients and servers to intercommunicate.
A. IaaS B. SQL C. API D. Middleware
7. A computer that houses information for manipulation by networked clients is a __________.
A. server B. minicomputer C. PaaS D. broker
8. ________ is software that improves connectivity between a client application and a server.
A. SQL B. API C. Middleware D. SAP
9. The inability of frame relay to do hop by hop error control is offset by:
A. its gigabit speeds B. its high overhead
C. the extensive use of in-band signaling D. the increasing reliability of networks
10. All Frame Relay nodes contain which of the following protocols?
A. LAPB B. LAPD
C. LAPF Core D. LAPF Control
11. The technique employed by Frame Relay is called __________.
A. inband signaling B. outband signaling
C. common channel signaling D. open shortest path first routing
12. In ATM, the basic transmission unit is the ________.
A. frame B. cell
C. packet D. segment
13. When using ATM, which of the following is NOT one of the advantages for the
use of virtual paths?
A. less work is needed to set a virtual path
B. the network architecture is simplified
C.
EXAM
Estructura 8.1 - Miniprueba A
Verbos
Complete the chart with the correct verb forms.
infinitivo
seguir
(1) [removed]
yo
(2) [removed]
morí
tú
seguiste
(3) [removed]
nosotras
seguimos
(4) [removed]
ellos
(5) [removed]
murieron
Completar
Fill in the blanks with the correct preterite forms of the verbs in parentheses.
Diego y Javier [removed] (conseguir) un mapa.
Esta mañana usted [removed] (despedirse) de los estudiantes.
Tú [removed] (sentirse) mal ayer.
La semana pasada yo no [removed] (dormir) bien.
Amparo [removed] (preferir) comer en casa.
Oraciones
Write sentences using the information provided. Use the preterite and make any necessary changes.
Modelo
Edgar / preferir / pollo asado
Edgar prefirió el pollo asado.
Álvaro y yo / servir / los entremeses
[removed]
¿quién / repetir / las instrucciones?
[removed]
ayer / yo / despedirse / de / mis sobrinos
[removed]
ustedes / dormirse / a las diez
[removed]
La cena
Fill in the blanks with the preterite form of the appropriate verbs from the list. Four verbs will not be used.
abrir
conseguir
escoger
leer
mirar
pedir
preferir
probar
repetir
sentirse
servir
vestirse
Anoche Jorge, Iván y yo salimos a cenar a Mi Tierra, un restaurante guatemalteco. Nosotros
(1) [removed]
este lugar porque Jorge
(2) [removed]
una reseña (
review
) en Internet que decía (
said
) que la comida es auténtica y muy sabrosa. No es un restaurante elegante; entonces nosotros
(3) [removed]
de bluejeans. De verdad, en Mi Tierra mis amigos y yo
(4) [removed]
como (
like
) en casa. El camarero que nos
(5) [removed]
fue muy amable. Para empezar, Jorge e Iván
(6) [removed]
tamales, pero yo
(7) [removed]
esperar el plato principal: carne de res con arroz y frijoles. Comimos tanto (
so much
) que no
(8) [removed]
nada de postre (
dessert
). ¡Fue una cena deliciosa!
.
Examine current practice guidelines related to suicide screeni.docxcravennichole326
Examine current practice guidelines related to suicide screening and prevention and how they could pertain to John.
Choose two of the following questions to answer as part of your initial post.
What events in John's life created a "downward spiral" into homelessness and hopelessness? Which events were related to social needs, mental health needs, and medical needs, and which could health care have addressed?
What were some of the barriers John faced in accessing medical care and mental health care?
How does homelessness and mental illness intersect? Do you believe homelessness may develop because of a mental health issue, or do you believe those who become homeless eventually sink into psychological despair?
The tipping point for many people who live at the margins of society may be things that could have been managed given the right support. How can your role as an APRN help identify, alleviate, or support those who are in need like John?
In your own experience, have you encountered a homeless individual? What was that like? Do you recall what you were thinking?
Please include at least three scholarly sources within your initial post.
Rubric:
Discussion Question Rubric
Note:
Scholarly resources are defined as evidence-based practice, peer-reviewed journals; textbook (do not rely solely on your textbook as a reference); and National Standard Guidelines. Review assignment instructions, as this will provide any additional requirements that are not specifically listed on the rubric.
Discussion Question Rubric – 100 PointsCriteriaExemplary
Exceeds ExpectationsAdvanced
Meets ExpectationsIntermediate
Needs ImprovementNovice
InadequateTotal PointsQuality of Initial PostProvides clear examples supported by course content and references.
Cites three or more references, using at least one new scholarly resource that was not provided in the course materials.
All instruction requirements noted.
40 points
Components are accurate and thoroughly represented, with explanations and application of knowledge to include evidence-based practice, ethics, theory, and/or role. Synthesizes course content using course materials and scholarly resources to support importantpoints.
Meets all requirements within the discussion instructions.
Cites two references.
35 points
Components are accurate and mostly represented primarily with definitions and summarization. Ideas may be overstated, with minimal contribution to the subject matter. Minimal application to evidence-based practice, theory, or role development. Synthesis of course content is present but missing depth and/or development.
Is missing one component/requirement of the discussion instructions.
Cites one reference, or references do not clearly support content.
Most instruction requirements are noted.
31 points
Absent application to evidence-based practice, theory, or role development. Synthesis of course content is superficial.
Demonstrates incomplete understandin.
Examine Case Study Pakistani Woman with Delusional Thought Processe.docxcravennichole326
Examine Case Study: Pakistani Woman with Delusional Thought Processes.
You will be asked to make three decisions concerning the medication to prescribe to this client. Be sure to consider factors that might impact the client’s pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic processes.
At each decision point stop to complete the following:
Decision #1
Which decision did you select?
Why did you select this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
What were you hoping to achieve by making this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
Explain any difference between what you expected to achieve with Decision #1 and the results of the decision. Why were they different?
Decision #2
Why did you select this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
What were you hoping to achieve by making this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
Explain any difference between what you expected to achieve with Decision #2 and the results of the decision. Why were they different?
Decision #3
Why did you select this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
What were you hoping to achieve by making this decision? Support your response with evidence and references to the Learning Resources.
Explain any difference between what you expected to achieve with Decision #3 and the results of the decision. Why were they different?
Also include how ethical considerations might impact your treatment plan and communication with clients.
BACKGROUND
The client is a 34-year-old Pakistani female who moved to the United States in her late teens/early 20s. She is currently in an “arranged” marriage (her husband was selected for her since she was 9 years old). She presents to your office today following a 21 day hospitalization for what was diagnosed as “brief psychotic disorder.” She was given this diagnosis as her symptoms have persisted for less than 1 month.
Prior to admission, she was reporting visions of Allah, and over the course of a week, she believed that she was the prophet Mohammad. She believed that she would deliver the world from sin. Her husband became concerned about her behavior to the point that he was afraid of leaving their 4 children with her. One evening, she was “out of control” which resulted in his calling the police and her subsequent admission to an inpatient psych unit.
During today’s assessment, she appears quite calm, and insists that the entire incident was “blown out of proportion.” She denies that she believed herself to be the prophet Mohammad and states that her husband was just out to get her because he never loved her and wanted an “American wife” instead of her. She tells you that she knows this because the television is telling her so.
She currently weighs .
Examination of Modern LeadershipModule 1 Leadership History, F.docxcravennichole326
Examination of Modern Leadership
Module 1: Leadership: History, Fundamentals, and the Modern Context
Module 1 content establishes the context for the entire course dedicated to the examination of modern and postmodern leadership. The introduction of critical theory and its use in ORG561 provides a framework for investigation. The context of social, economic, political, and technological environments informs an exploration of modern and postmodern leadership approaches. Emphasis on leader self-awareness sets the stage for reflection, introspection, and personal leadership development.
Learning Outcomes
1. Compare and contrast historical leadership concepts against modern and postmodern organization needs.
2. Analyze leadership approaches using a critical framework.
3. Construct a personal leadership biography.
For Your Success & Readings
A key to success in ORG561 is to start early, build, reflect, reinforce, build, reflect, and reinforce.
Begin each week’s study by reading and comprehending the learning outcomes. Learning outcomes are always revealed in assignments, discussions, and lectures. Likewise, learning outcomes are reflected in rubrics, which are used as objective measures for scoring and grading. Establish the learning outcomes as your checklist for success.
In Module 1 criticaltheory is introduced through the readings, lecture, discussion, and Critical Thinking Assignment. The critical approach provides new frameworks on which to research leadership. You may not be familiar with critical inquiry, so seize the opportunity to advance your analytic skills. You are expected to use one or more critical frames in each module of this course. Take the time this week to fully understand the reasoning and context of critical theory.
Studying the history of leadership requires reading publications from earlier eras. Notice that some of the required and recommended readings for Module 1 are not current publications, but these contribute to understanding the earlier periods of organization and leadership study.
Postmodern leadership literature expounds on the notion that self-awareness is a critical component required to lead. In ORG561, the thread of self-examination is woven throughout the course. You will have opportunities to move beyond reflection to develop a better understanding of personal assumptions and biases, skills and competencies, and professional development plans, all related to leadership. Embrace the opportunity!
Required
· Introduction and Chapters 1 & 2 in Leadership: A Critical Text
· Axley, S. R. (1990). The practical qualities of effective leaders. Industrial Management, 32(5), 29-31.
· Brocato, B., Jelen, J., Schmidt, T., & Gold, S. (2011). Leadership conceptual ambiguities.Journal of Leadership Studies, 5(1), 35-50. doi:10.1002/jls.20203
· Gandolfi, F., & Stone, S. (2016). Clarifying leadership: High-impact leaders in a time of leadership crisis. Revista De Management Comparat International, 17(3), 212-224.
· Blom, M. .
Examine current international OB issues that challenge organizat.docxcravennichole326
Examine current international OB issues that challenge organizational leaders to resolve critical issues involving cross-cultural communication, negotiation, leadership, motivation, decision-making, among others.
(1) identify the key organizational behavior issues facing management,
(2) what impact the international environment has on these issues,
(3) strategies management should use to overcome these issues,
(4) how these strategies will impact the overall organizational operations, and
(5) identify the potential costs and risks to the organizations of implementing the newly developed strategies.
Offer a set of recommendations, which must be derived from both data and theory. Teams must include aspects of global leadership, global motivation and global team-management in their work.
APA format, Times New Roman (12), 20-25 pages, No plagiarism.
.
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment .docxcravennichole326
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment
Component Proficient (15 to 20 points) Competent (8 to 14 points) Novice (1 to 7 points) Score
Assignment
Requirements
Student completed all required
portions of the assignment
Completed portions of the
assignment
Did not complete the required
assignment.
Writing Skills,
Grammar, and APA
Formatting
Assignment strongly demonstrates
graduate-level proficiency in
organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is well written, and ideas
are well developed and explained.
Demonstrates strong writing skills.
Student paid close attention to spelling
and punctuation. Sentences and
paragraphs are grammatically correct.
Proper use of APA formatting. Properly
and explicitly cited outside resources.
Reference list matches citations.
Assignment demonstrates graduate-
level proficiency in organization,
grammar, and style.
Assignment is effectively
communicated, but some sections
lacking clarity. Student paid some
attention to spelling and
punctuation, but there are errors
within the writing. Needs attention
to proper writing skills.
Use of APA formatting and citations
of outside resources, but has a few
instances in which proper citations
are missing.
Assignment does not demonstrate
graduate-level proficiency in
organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is poorly written and
confusing. Ideas are not
communicated effectively. Student
paid no attention to spelling and
punctuation. Demonstrates poor
writing skills.
The assignment lacks the use of APA
formatting and does not provide
proper citations or includes no
citations.
Maintains
purpose/focus
Submission is well organized and has a
tight and cohesive focus that is
integrated throughout the document
Submissions has an organizational
structure and the focus is clear
throughout.
Submission lacks focus or contains
major drifts in focus
Understanding of
Course Content
Student demonstrates understand of
course content and knowledge.
Student demonstrates some
understanding of course content
and knowledge.
Student does not demonstrate
understanding of course content and
knowledge.
Work Environment
Application
Student strongly demonstrates the
practical application, or ability to apply,
of course objectives within a work
environment.
Student demonstrates some
practical application, or ability to
apply, of course objectives within a
work environment.
Student does not demonstrate the
practical application, or ability to
apply, of course objectives within a
work environment.
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment
At UC, it is a priority that students are provided with strong educational programs and courses that
allow them to be servant-leaders in their disciplines and communities, linking research with practice and
kn.
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment Component .docxcravennichole326
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment
Component
Proficient (15 to 20 points)
Competent (8 to 14 points)
Novice (1 to 7 points)
Score
Assignment Requirements
Student completed all required portions of the assignment
Completed portions of the assignment
Did not complete the required assignment.
Writing Skills, Grammar, and APA Formatting
Assignment strongly demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is well written, and ideas are well developed and explained. Demonstrates strong writing skills. Student paid close attention to spelling and punctuation. Sentences and paragraphs are grammatically correct.
Proper use of APA formatting. Properly and explicitly cited outside resources. Reference list matches citations.
Assignment demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is effectively communicated, but some sections lacking clarity. Student paid some attention to spelling and punctuation, but there are errors within the writing. Needs attention to proper writing skills.
Use of APA formatting and citations of outside resources, but has a few instances in which proper citations are missing.
Assignment does not demonstrate graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is poorly written and confusing. Ideas are not communicated effectively. Student paid no attention to spelling and punctuation. Demonstrates poor writing skills.
The assignment lacks the use of APA formatting and does not provide proper citations or includes no citations.
Maintains purpose/focus
Submission is well organized and has a tight and cohesive focus that is integrated throughout the document
Submissions has an organizational structure and the focus is clear throughout.
Submission lacks focus or contains major drifts in focus
Understanding of Course Content
Student demonstrates understand of course content and knowledge.
Student demonstrates some understanding of course content and knowledge.
Student does not demonstrate understanding of course content and knowledge.
Work Environment Application
Student strongly demonstrates the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student demonstrates some practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student does not demonstrate the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
.
Executive Program Group Project Assignment Component Profi.docxcravennichole326
Executive Program Group Project Assignment
Component
Proficient (15 to 20 points)
Competent (8 to 14 points)
Novice (1 to 7 points)
Score
Assignment Requirements
Student completed all required portions of the assignment
Completed portions of the assignment
Did not complete the required assignment.
Writing Skills, Grammar, and APA Formatting
Assignment strongly demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is well written, and ideas are well developed and explained. Demonstrates strong writing skills. Student paid close attention to spelling and punctuation. Sentences and paragraphs are grammatically correct.
Proper use of APA formatting. Properly and explicitly cited outside resources. Reference list matches citations.
Assignment demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is effectively communicated, but some sections lacking clarity. Student paid some attention to spelling and punctuation, but there are errors within the writing. Needs attention to proper writing skills.
Use of APA formatting and citations of outside resources, but has a few instances in which proper citations are missing.
Assignment does not demonstrate graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is poorly written and confusing. Ideas are not communicated effectively. Student paid no attention to spelling and punctuation. Demonstrates poor writing skills.
The assignment lacks the use of APA formatting and does not provide proper citations or includes no citations.
Maintains purpose/focus
Submission is well organized and has a tight and cohesive focus that is integrated throughout the document
Submissions has an organizational structure and the focus is clear throughout.
Submission lacks focus or contains major drifts in focus
Understanding of Course Content
Student demonstrates understand of course content and knowledge.
Student demonstrates some understanding of course content and knowledge.
Student does not demonstrate understanding of course content and knowledge.
Work Environment Application
Student strongly demonstrates the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student demonstrates some practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student does not demonstrate the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Criteria Excellent Satisfactory Less than Satisfactory Not Completed
Log
Completion
4 points
Food logs are
complete with detailed
food/beverage items
3 points
Food logs are
complete but lack
some detail on
food/beverage items
(3 pts)
2 points
Food logs are
complete are missing
substantial detail on
food/beverage items
0 points
Student did not
complete this
component of the
project.
/ 4
Por.
Executive Practical Connection Activityit is a priority that stu.docxcravennichole326
Executive Practical Connection Activity
it is a priority that students are provided with strong educational programs and courses that allow them to be servant-leaders in their disciplines and communities, linking research with practice and knowledge with ethical decision-making. This assignment is a written assignment where students will demonstrate how this course research has connected and put into practice within their own career.
Assignment:
Provide a reflection of at least 500 words (or 2 pages double spaced) of how the knowledge, skills, or theories of this course have been applied, or could be applied, in a practical manner to your current work environment. If you are not currently working, share times when you have or could observe these theories and knowledge could be applied to an employment opportunity in your field of study.
Requirements:
· Provide a 500 word (or 2 pages double spaced) minimum reflection.
· Use of proper APA formatting and citations. If supporting evidence from outside resources is used those must be properly cited.
· Share a personal connection that identifies specific knowledge and theories from this course.
· Demonstrate a connection to your current work environment. If you are not employed, demonstrate a connection to your desired work environment.
· You should NOT, provide an overview of the assignments assigned in the course. The assignment asks that you reflect how the knowledge and skills obtained through meeting course objectives were applied or could be applied in the workplace.
MY ROLE: BIGDATA/KAFKA ADMIN
Need Plagiarism report for this Assignement.
****Directions
Choose from one of the following tweets and answer the 4 questions, Include at least one scholarly source***** The link is included in each tweet for more information.
1. Identify a healthcare issue within your community and explain the issue to your class colleagues. (You may use the same issue you identified in Week 2, but please expand your responses to address this week's focus).
2. Describe the type of healthcare policy you would advocate for in an effort to change this issue.
3. What type of campaign would you need to launch in order to gather a network of support?
4. Compose a Tweet that describes what you have shared with your class colleagues. Remember, Twitter only allows for 140 characters so you will need to be concise.
1. NR708HealthPol Retweeted
Tara Heagele, PhD, RN, PCCN, EMT@TaraHeagele
#NurseTwitter Hurricane season starts today! Helping Vulnerable People Before Disasters Strike | Campaign for Action https://campaignforaction.org/helping-vulnerable-people-before-disasters-strike/#.XtUB00-UAZ4.twitter …
Helping Vulnerable People Before Disasters Strike | Campaign for Action
Floods, tornadoes, heat waves, blizzards, earthquakes, and hurricanes threaten the health and well-being of millions of people each year
campaignforaction.org
13h
·
·
2. NR708HealthPol Retweeted
Diana Mason@djmasonrn
By @AmyAnderso.
Executive FunctionThe Search for an Integrated AccountMari.docxcravennichole326
Executive Function
The Search for an Integrated Account
Marie T. Banich
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, and Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Colorado at Boulder;
Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Denver
ABSTRACT—In general, executive function can be thought
of as the set of abilities required to effortfully guide be-
havior toward a goal, especially in nonroutine situations.
Psychologists are interested in expanding the under-
standing of executive function because it is thought to be a
key process in intelligent behavior, it is compromised in a
variety of psychiatric and neurological disorders, it varies
across the life span, and it affects performance in compli-
cated environments, such as the cockpits of advanced
aircraft. This article provides a brief introduction to the
concept of executive function and discusses how it is
assessed and the conditions under which it is compromised.
A short overview of the diverse theoretical viewpoints re-
garding its psychological and biological underpinnings is
also provided. The article concludes with a consideration
of how a multilevel approach may provide a more inte-
grated account of executive function than has been previ-
ously available.
KEYWORDS—executive function; frontal lobe; prefrontal
cortex; inhibition; task switching; working memory; atten-
tion; top-down control
Like other psychological constructs, such as memory, executive
function is multidimensional. As such, there exists a variety of
models that provide varying viewpoints as to its basic component
processes. Nonetheless, common across most of them is the idea
that executive function is a process used to effortfully guide
behavior toward a goal, especially in nonroutine situations.
Various functions or abilities are thought to fall under the rubric
of executive function. These include prioritizing and sequencing
behavior, inhibiting familiar or stereotyped behaviors, creating
and maintaining an idea of what task or information is most
relevant for current purposes (often referred to as an attentional
or mental set), providing resistance to information that is dis-
tracting or task irrelevant, switching between task goals, uti-
lizing relevant information in support of decision making,
categorizing or otherwise abstracting common elements across
items, and handling novel information or situations. As can be
seen from this list, the functions that fall under the category of
executive function are indeed wide ranging.
ASSESSING EXECUTIVE FUNCTION
The very nature of executive function makes it difficult to
measure in the clinic or the laboratory; it involves an individual
guiding his or her behavior, especially in novel, unstructured,
and nonroutine situations that require some degree of judgment.
In contrast, standard testing situations are structured—partic-
ipants are explicitly told what the task is, given rules for per-
forming the task, and provide.
Executive Compensation and IncentivesMartin J. ConyonEx.docxcravennichole326
Executive Compensation and Incentives
Martin J. Conyon*
Executive Overview
The objective of a properly designed executive compensation package is to attract, retain, and motivate
CEOs and senior management. The standard economic approach for understanding executive pay is the
principal-agent model. This paper documents the changes in executive pay and incentives in U.S. firms
between 1993 and 2003. We consider reasons for these transformations, including agency theory, changes
in the managerial labor markets, shifts in firm strategy, and theories concerning managerial power. We show that
boards and compensation committees have become more independent over time. In addition, we demonstrate
that compensation committees containing affiliated directors do not set greater pay or fewer incentives.
Introduction
E
xecutive compensation is a complex and con-
troversial subject. For many years, academics,
policymakers, and the media have drawn atten-
tion to the high levels of pay awarded to U.S.
chief executive officers (CEOs), questioning
whether they are consistent with shareholder in-
terests.1 Some academics have further argued that
flaws in CEO pay arrangements and deviations
from shareholders’ interests are widespread and
considerable.2 For example, Lucian Bebchuk and
Jesse Fried provide a lucid account of the mana-
gerial power view and accompanying evidence.3
Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan too
provide an analysis of the ‘skimming view’ of CEO
pay.4 In contrast, John Core et al. present an
economic contracting approach to executive pay
and incentives, assessing whether CEOs receive
inefficient pay without performance.5 In this pa-
per, we show what has happened to CEO pay in
the United States. We do not claim to distinguish
between the contracting and managerial power
views of executive pay. Instead, we document the
pattern of executive pay and incentives in the
United States, investigating whether this pattern
is consistent with economic theory.
The Context: Who Sets Executive Pay?
B
efore examining the empirical evidence pre-
sented in this paper, it is important to consider
the pay-setting process and who sets executive
pay. The standard economic theory of executive
compensation is the principal-agent model.6 The
theory maintains that firms seek to design the most
efficient compensation packages possible in order to
attract, retain, and motivate CEOs, executives, and
managers.7 In the agency model, shareholders set
pay. In practice, however, the compensation com-
mittee of the board determines pay on behalf of
shareholders. A principal (shareholder) designs a
contract and makes an offer to an agent (CEO/
manager). Executive compensation ameliorates a
moral hazard problem (i.e., manager opportunism)
arising from low firm ownership. By using stock
options, restricted stock, and long-term contracts,
shareholders motivate the CEO to maximize firm
value. In other words, shareholders try to design
optimal compensation packages .
Executing the StrategyLearning ObjectivesAfter reading.docxcravennichole326
Executing the Strategy
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Distinguish good operational plans from weak ones.
• Detail the value of tracking progress on all operational plans.
• Discuss why emergent strategies occur and how they might affect an organization’s
current strategy.
• Implement the ten basic steps of a generic strategic formulation process.
• Manage, improve, and evaluate an existing strategic management process.
Chapter 9
Neil Webb/Ikon Images/Getty Images
spa81202_09_c09.indd 247 1/16/14 10:08 AM
CHAPTER 9Section 9.1 Managing Operational Plans
Implementing a strategy (see Figure 1.1) in the real world is not a leisurely swim across
a calm pond on a sunny day, but rather like crossing from one bank of a raging river to
the other, encountering hidden eddies, fog, driving rain, lightning, and riptides along the
way. While it is not impossible to reach the other bank (the goal), the task often becomes
one of overcoming obstacles and making constant adjustments without losing sight of the
goal. Implementation is like that. Even the most brilliant strategy is worthless if it cannot
be implemented.
This chapter focuses on strategy execution and its difficulties. Part of the chapter is devoted
to assessing, improving, and managing the strategy formulation process itself.
9.1 Managing Operational Plans
The process for obtaining board approval of operational plans is covered in this chapter.
Exactly what is it that gets approved? An operational plan is a document that specifies the
projects or tasks that must be accomplished to achieve particular operational objectives.
Many of these plans will contain activities that are ongoing. Some will include plans for
enhanced or new services. Details specified in operational plans include the names of those
who will be involved and the indi-
vidual responsible for each one, what
equipment will be needed, when each
will start and end, and the estimated
costs for each activity. Given the level
of detail required, it should come as
no surprise that an operational plan
for a large functional unit, such as the
nursing department in a hospital, can
run to many pages, as there are lots of
activities to be detailed. Operational
plans for small HSOs such as physi-
cian clinics and community health
centers may be just a few pages long
unless new strategic initiatives are to
be undertaken.
It takes contributions from everyone
who will be involved in that HSO’s
operations to create such plans. They
will make sure that continuing cur-
rent operations are included in the plans, which is easily done. What adds a level of com-
plexity and difficulty is incorporating additional tasks demanded by a change in strategy.
Consider the following scenarios, which illustrate the difficulty in creating operational
plans that involve more than simply repeating what was done the previous year:
Javier Larrea/age fotostock/Getty Ima.
Executing Strategies in a Global Environment Examining the Case of .docxcravennichole326
Executing Strategies in a Global Environment: Examining the Case of Federal Express 5-7 pages
Requirements:
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Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
76. scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible
website, in whole or in part.
An Introduction to Derivatives and Risk Management, 10th ed.