subject
Business, 18.11.2019 22:31 zahwaahmaf

Sheridan corp. has been selling electrical supplies for the past 20 years. the company’s product line has changed very little in the past five years, and the company’s management does not expect to add any new items for the foreseeable future. last year, the company paid a dividend of $4.15 to its common stockholders. the company is not expected to increase its dividends for the next several years. if your required rate of return for such firms is 14 percent, what is the current value of this company’s stock? (round answer to 2 decimal places, e. g. 15.25.)

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 07:50
In december of 2004, the company you own entered into a 20-year contract with a grain supplier for daily deliveries of grain to its hot dog bun manufacturing facility. the contract called for "10,000 pounds of grain" to be delivered to the facility at the price of $100,000 per day. until february 2017, the supplier provided processed grain which could easily be used in your manufacturing process. however, no longer wanting to absorb the cost of having the grain processed, the supplier began delivering whole grain. the supplier is arguing that the contract does not specify the type of grain that would be supplied and that it has not breached the contract. your company is arguing that the supplier has an onsite processing plant and processed grain was implicit to the terms of the contract. over the remaining term of the contract, reshipping and having the grain processed would cost your company approximately $10,000,000, opposed to a cost of around $1,000,000 to the supplier. after speaking with in-house counsel, it was estimated that litigation would cost the company several million dollars and last for years. weighing the costs of litigation, along with possible ambiguity in the contract, what are three options you could take to resolve the dispute? which would be the best option for your business and why?
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:00
In mexico, many garment or sewing shops found they could entice many young people to work for them if they offered clean, air conditioned work areas with high-quality locker rooms to clean up in after the work day. typically, traditional garment shops had to offer to get workers to apply for the hard, repetitive, and somewhat dangerous work. a. benchmark competitive wages b.compensating differentials c. monopoly wages d. wages based on human capital development of each employee
Answers: 3
question
Business, 23.06.2019 00:20
According to the naeyc curriculum is effective when all of the following occur except
Answers: 2
question
Business, 23.06.2019 00:30
It's possible for a debt card transaction to bounce true or false
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Sheridan corp. has been selling electrical supplies for the past 20 years. the company’s product lin...
Questions
question
English, 04.08.2019 16:30
question
Social Studies, 04.08.2019 16:30
Questions on the website: 13722362