Liquidity means, ease with which an asset can be converted into cash. so in given case, when cash received from accounts receivable, firms liquidity will increase
what happens to a firms liquidity when an acconts receivable is collected?
When EBIT is high, what happens to a more levered firms EPS?
(5 pts) When firms choose quantities of output, as in the Cournot model, what happens to the marginal revenue of the firm when the rival increases its quantity? When firms choose prices, as in the Bertrand model with differentiated products, what happens to the marginal revenue of the firm when the rival increases its price? How is this related to the slopes of the reaction functions in the Cournot and Bertrand models?
what happens to the demand curve when an emission fee is levied against polluting firms?
4. Explain what happens in the long run when firms in an industry are earning positive profit, and why economists assume normal profit in competitive industries is 0. 5. Explain price discrimination and how it can increase efficiency.
If you issue a long term note payable (5 years), what happens to liquidity and solvency? (up or down)
with the aid of a diagram, illustrate what happens to the equilibrium number of firms, prices, and average cost when one country opens up to trade (integrates its market) with another country. Explain whether consumers in the original country are better off, and specifically how.
12.)In the market for corn, what happens to demand when the price of corn increases? What happens to supply? What happens to equilibriuim price? What happens to equilibrium quantity? A.) A new technology to produce corn is invented. This technology dominates the current technology. It is costless for firms to switch technologies. What happens to demand for corn? What happens to supply? What happens to equilibriuim price? What happens to equilibrium quantity? B.) What happens to demand in the present...
What happens to the firms operating under monopolistic competition if international trade is open? Explain in terms of their demand, price and quantity.
1. What does a firm’s liquidity measure? Why do investors analyze liquidity? How does liquidity relate to risk? 2. What does a firm’s solvency measure? Why is a high level of debt relative to equity considered riskier? 3. How do firms report assets on the balance sheet under IFRS?
what happens when electrons are shared equally? what happens when they are shared unequally? which has more energy?