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Search results 171 - 180 of 359 matching essays
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171: Executive Summary of Pepsico
... Km-Krf)bs. I found beta on Value Line which was .95. The risk free rate was found by obtaining the current yield on a 20yr. T-bond from the Wall Street Journal. It equaled 6.60%. The Km-Krf was found in the book, and equaled 7.1%. After plugging those numbers into the formula, I came up with 13.35 ...
172: Cola Wars
Cola Wars Author: Stephen Brennan The Wall Street Journal recently did an article on how the soft-drink battleground has now turned toward new overseas markets. While once the United States, Australia, Japan, and Western Europe were the ...
173: Capitalism
... Reagan's new policies of lower taxes and tax reform was the virtual elimination of inflation. As a result, the U.S. economy expanded and new records were set on Wall Street. Critics of Reagan favored tax and spend policies that would inflate the economy into what we are now seeing in Russia. As our National Debt got larger, they blamed it ...
174: Cutting the National Debt
... the debt had climbed to $25.5 Billion. In each of the following years the debt was reduced, and by 1930 stood at $18.1 Billion. With the collapse of Wall Street in 1929, the country (debt history: 1850 to 1950) fell into the Great Depression, which lasted until 1940. At that time the debt had climbed to $51 Billion. By the ...
175: Our Nation's Credit Card Problem
... s something to think about. A recent study done on the typical bankruptcy by the University of Texas in conjunction with The University of Pennsylvania confirms this. Published in the Wall Street Journal the study noted that the typical bankruptcy was not a guy under a bridge or a real estate high roller but rather "Well educated, middle-class baby boomers with ...
176: The Merger of Banks
... activity rages in Canada. (petroleum industry). The Oil Daily, vol. 47, p. 1. Calian, Sara (1998, January 19) Increasing U.K. merger activity spreads through Europe with a wider scope. Wall Street Journal, vol. 15, p. 3. De Luca, Marcus (1998, January) Full steam ahead! (recruitment drive by City of London investment banks). Acquisitions Monthly, p. 84. Elstein, Aaron (1997, October 3 ...
177: Growth of NYS Business
... a number of factors. These include but cannot be limited to the construction of the Erie Canal, the invention of the telegraph, the developed of the railroads, the establishment of Wall Street and banking, the textile, shipping, agriculture and newpaper industries, the development of steam power and the use of iron products. On October 26, 1825 the Erie Canal was opened. The ...
178: The National Debt
... debt of three million dollars had decreased to one million dollars. In 1919, at the end of the World War 1, the debt skyrocketed to 25.5 billion. When the Wall Street fell apart in 1929, the United States fell into something that was called the Great Depression. It started in 1930 and lasted until 1940. During this depression, President Franklin Roosevelt ...
179: The Shoe Industry
... Right now Reebok is the closest company to Nike and is $2,459 behind in value in MIL. Nike's earnings in the last quarter leaped 24% which has pleased Wall Street investors. With such earnings Nike announced a 2-to-1 stock split, its second in many years. Nike and Reebok are far ahead than the other companies because there factories ...
180: Monetary/Fiscal Policy
... worried about reaching full employment rather quickly. Although the jobless would love that to happen, full employment would lead to high inflation and destruction of the economy. The consensus on Wall Street was that the Fed would have to raise rates until word got around about the report. By day's end, the mainstream were afraid of an economy that will grow ...


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