A business's balance sheet cannot be used to accurately predict what the business might be sold for because: A) it identifies all the revenues and expenses of the business. B) assets are generally listed on the balance sheet at their historical cost, not their current value. C) it gives the results of operations for the current period. D) some of the assets and liabilities on the balance sheet may actually be those of another entity.
Answers: 1
Business, 22.06.2019 07:10, firdausmohammed80
mark, a civil engineer, entered into a contract with david. as per the contract, mark agreed to design and build a house for david for a specified fee. mark provided david with an estimation of the total cost and the contract was mutually agreed upon. however, during construction, when mark increased the price due to a miscalculation on his part, david refused to pay the amount. this scenario is an example of a mistake.
Answers: 1
Business, 22.06.2019 10:50, milliebbbrown
Bill dukes has $100,000 invested in a 2-stock portfolio. $62,500 is invested in stock x and the remainder is invested in stock y. x's beta is 1.50 and y's beta is 0.70. what is the portfolio's beta? do not round your intermediate calculations. round the final answer to 2 decimal places.
Answers: 2
Business, 22.06.2019 11:00, ilovecatsomuchlolol
Down under products, ltd., of australia has budgeted sales of its popular boomerang for the next four months as follows: unit salesapril 74,000may 85,000june 114,000july 92,000the company is now in the process of preparing a production budget for the second quarter. past experience has shown that end-of-month inventory levels must equal 10% of the following month’s unit sales. the inventory at the end of march was 7,400 units. required: prepare a production budget by month and in total, for the second quarter.
Answers: 3
A business's balance sheet cannot be used to accurately predict what the business might be sold for...
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