Consolidated financial statements
... financial communication ............................................................................................................................ - 14 3. SIGNIFICANT EVENTS ........................................................................................................................... ...
... financial communication ............................................................................................................................ - 14 3. SIGNIFICANT EVENTS ........................................................................................................................... ...
Morningstar Asset Allocation Optimization Methodology
... second step, an optimization algorithm arrives at percentage allocations to different asset classes, and these allocations are known as the asset mix. In the third step, asset mix return and wealth forecasts are projected over various investment horizons and probabilities to illustrate potential out ...
... second step, an optimization algorithm arrives at percentage allocations to different asset classes, and these allocations are known as the asset mix. In the third step, asset mix return and wealth forecasts are projected over various investment horizons and probabilities to illustrate potential out ...
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Basel III: The Liquidity
... be procyclical if applied in circumstances of market-wide stress. Supervisors should seek to take these considerations into account on a consistent basis across jurisdictions. (a) ...
... be procyclical if applied in circumstances of market-wide stress. Supervisors should seek to take these considerations into account on a consistent basis across jurisdictions. (a) ...
The Impact of Turnover Ratios on Jordanian Services Sectors
... Introduction Financial statements report on both a firm’s position at a point in time and its operations over some past periods. However, the real value of financial statements lies in the fact that they can be used to help predict future earnings, dividends, and free cash flows. Profitability ratio ...
... Introduction Financial statements report on both a firm’s position at a point in time and its operations over some past periods. However, the real value of financial statements lies in the fact that they can be used to help predict future earnings, dividends, and free cash flows. Profitability ratio ...
Intermediary Asset Pricing
... of the model is that low specialist wealth states lead households to withdraw funds from intermediaries and indirectly reduce their participation in the risky asset market. This dynamic then drives up the risk premium on the risky asset. We calibrate our model to two scenarios. As noted above, inter ...
... of the model is that low specialist wealth states lead households to withdraw funds from intermediaries and indirectly reduce their participation in the risky asset market. This dynamic then drives up the risk premium on the risky asset. We calibrate our model to two scenarios. As noted above, inter ...
This PDF is a selection from a published volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research
... reason for the currency crisis. Crony capitalism and self-fulfilling expectations are typically presented as rival explanations. In fact, the two hypotheses may be linked. The extent of corruption in a country may affect that country’s composition of capital inflows in a way that makes it more vulner ...
... reason for the currency crisis. Crony capitalism and self-fulfilling expectations are typically presented as rival explanations. In fact, the two hypotheses may be linked. The extent of corruption in a country may affect that country’s composition of capital inflows in a way that makes it more vulner ...
influence of liquidity on profitability - e
... of company’s assets – is the ability to convert assets into cash in the shortest possible time, at the lowest possible costs and without losing their value. Appropriate resources of liquid elements of the assets, including cash, are the enterprise’s protection against the loss of financial liquidity ...
... of company’s assets – is the ability to convert assets into cash in the shortest possible time, at the lowest possible costs and without losing their value. Appropriate resources of liquid elements of the assets, including cash, are the enterprise’s protection against the loss of financial liquidity ...
Corruption and Policy Reform
... the data. First, the questions only capture low-level petty corruption experiences, not grand corruption by high-level officials. Second, differences in reported bribery rates might be driven in part by cultural differences in respondents’ willingness to report illicit behavior. Corruption is more o ...
... the data. First, the questions only capture low-level petty corruption experiences, not grand corruption by high-level officials. Second, differences in reported bribery rates might be driven in part by cultural differences in respondents’ willingness to report illicit behavior. Corruption is more o ...
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
... Because there is no demand for risky financial assets except to the extent that they comprise the tangency portfolio, and because, in equilibrium, the supply of financial assets must equal demand, the market portfolio consisting of all existing financial assets must coincide with the tangency portfo ...
... Because there is no demand for risky financial assets except to the extent that they comprise the tangency portfolio, and because, in equilibrium, the supply of financial assets must equal demand, the market portfolio consisting of all existing financial assets must coincide with the tangency portfo ...
Financial Innovation, Collateral and Investment
... Currently the outstanding notional value of CDS in the United States if far in excess of $50 trillion, more than three times the value of their underlying asset. ...
... Currently the outstanding notional value of CDS in the United States if far in excess of $50 trillion, more than three times the value of their underlying asset. ...
International asset recovery
International asset recovery is any effort by governments to repatriate the proceeds of corruption hidden in foreign jurisdictions. Such assets may include monies in bank accounts, real estate, vehicles, arts and artifacts, and precious metals. As defined under the United Nations Convention against Corruption, asset recovery refers to recovering the proceeds of corruption, rather than broader terms such as asset confiscation or asset forfeiture which refer to recovering the proceeds or instrumentalities of crime in general.Often used to emphasize the ‘multi-jurisdictional’ or ‘cross-border’ aspects of a corruption investigation, international asset recovery includes numerous processes such as the tracing, freezing, confiscation, and repatriation of proceeds stored in foreign jurisdictions, thus ""making it one of the most complex projects in the field of law"". Even considering the difficulties present, Africa specialist Daniel Scher counters that international asset recovery's ""potential rewards in developing countries make it a highly attractive undertaking"".Despite domestic legislation in some countries allowing for the confiscation and forfeiture of proceeds of corruption, it is improvements in finance, transportation, and communications technologies in the 20th century that have made it easier for corrupt leaders and other “Politically Exposed Persons’ to conceal massive amounts of stolen wealth in offshore financial centers.By taking advantage of differences in legal systems, the high costs in coordinating investigations, lack of international cooperation, and bank secrecy in some recipient countries, corrupt officials have been able to preserve much of their loot overseas.