Intangible Asset
In: Intangible Asset - Branding the Store, RetailBiz, May 2004
5095 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Intangible Asset - Branding the Store, RetailBiz, May 2004
SSRN
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "GAO reviewed the U.S. Marshals Service's (USMS) asset forfeiture programs, focusing on: (1) controls over selected categories of seized assets--namely vehicles, vessels, real property, financial instruments, and general property--at four large USMS districts: the Central District of California, the Southern District of Florida, and the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York; and (2) whether selected seized assets at the test locations under USMS control were accurately accounted for and safeguarded against theft, loss, and deterioration."
BASE
In: Finance and capital markets series
This paper examines portfolio choice and asset pricing when some assets are nontraded, for instance when a country cannot trade claims to its output on world capital markets, when a government cannot trade claims to future tax revenues, or when an individual cannot trade claims to his future wages. The close relation between portfolio choice with and implicit pricing of nontraded assets is emphasized. A variant of Cox, Ingersoll and Ross's Fundamental Valuation Equation is derived and used to interpret the optimal portfolio. Explicit solutions are presented to the portfolio and pricing problem for some special cases, including when income from the nontraded assets is a diffusion process, not spanned by traded assets, and affected by a state variable.
BASE
In: The women's review of books, Band 15, Heft 10/11, S. 7
"It is the purpose of this book to identify - and to attack - the areas in which the Government has failed to keep control of the bureaucracy, in which it has failed to close the taps through which the wealth of the nation is pouring into the drain, and in which it has failed to preserve a country and an administration which is fully entitled to be called 'clean'." (Aus dem Vorwort)
World Affairs Online
In: Social work: a journal of the National Association of Social Workers, Band 43, Heft 6, S. 588-589
ISSN: 1545-6846
In: Plains anthropologist, Band 41, Heft 155, S. 102-102
ISSN: 2052-546X
In: Tinbergen Institute research series 226
In: Research series
In: Evaluation and Program Planning, Band 24, Heft 3, S. 287-295
In: NBER Working Paper No. w2774
SSRN
Working paper
A series of experiments, in which nine participants trade an asset over 15 periods, test the hypothesis that an initial imbalance of asset/cash will influence the trading price over an extended time. Participants know at the outset that the asset or "stock" pays a single dividend with fixed expectation value at the end of the 15th period. In experiments with a greater total value of cash at the start, the mean prices during the trading periods are higher, compared with those with greater amount of asset, with a high degree of statistical significance. The difference is most significant at the outset and gradually tapers near the end of the experiment. The results are very surprising from a rational expectations and classical game theory perspective, because the possession of a large amount of cash does not lead to a simple motivation for a trader to bid excessively on a financial instrument. The gradual erosion of the difference toward the end of trading, however, suggests that fundamental value is approached belatedly, offering some consolation to the rational expectations theory. It also suggests that there is a time scale on which an evolution toward fundamental value occurs. The experimental results are qualitatively compatible with the price dynamics predicted by a system of differential equations based on asset flow. The results have broad implications for the marketing of securities, particularly initial and secondary public offerings, government bonds, etc., where excess supply has been conjectured to suppress prices.
BASE
In: Journal of Property Valuation and Investment, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 427-437
Examines the origins, objectives and achievements of the European
Group of Valuers of Fixed Assets. Discusses the principles and contents
of the European Guidance Notes on the Valuation of Fixed Assets.
Concludes that there is now a consensus among valuation professionals
involved internationally that they must work to a commonality of
valuation certificate.