Financial ratios

Theoretical ex-rights price

Theoretical ex-rights price (TERP) is a situation where the stock and the right attached to the stock is separated. TERP is a calculated price for a company's stock shares after issuing new rights-shares, assuming that all these newly issued shares are taken up by the existing shareholders. The consequence would be that the price will be lower than the old shares but higher than the new issued shares. (Wikipedia).

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Percentage Change (3 of 4: Combining Increase & Decrease)

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From playlist Fractions, Decimals and Percentages

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FRM: Implied volatility

Using the market price for an option on Google's stock, I use Excel's GOAL SEEK function to estimate implied volatility. Implied volatility is a reverse-engineering exercise: we find the volatility that produces a MODEL VALUE = MARKET PRICE. For more financial risk videos, visit our websit

From playlist Volatility

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Solving an Absolute Value Equation

Lean how to solve absolute value equations. Absolute value of a number is the positive value of the number. For instance, the absolute value of 2 is 2 and the absolute value of -2 is also 2. To solve an absolute value equations we need to create the two cases: the positive case and the neg

From playlist Solve Absolute Value Equations

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Using parent graphs to understand the left and right hand limits

👉 Learn how to evaluate the limit of an absolute value function. The limit of a function as the input variable of the function tends to a number/value is the number/value which the function approaches at that time. The absolute value function is a function which only takes the positive val

From playlist Evaluate Limits of Absolute Value

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Solving an Absolute Value Equation and Checking for Extraneous Solutions

Learn how to solve absolute value equations with extraneous solutions. Absolute value of a number is the positive value of the number. For instance, the absolute value of 2 is 2 and the absolute value of -2 is also 2. To solve an absolute value problem, we first isolate the absolute value

From playlist Solve Absolute Value Equations

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Math 023 Fall 2022 090722 Absolute Values (continued)

Recall: what is the definition of the absolute value? Exercise: what is |-x| if x is negative? What is |x| if x is negative? Properties of the absolute value. Examples. Geometric interpretation of |x-y| as the distance between x and y. Examples: using that interpretation to describe

From playlist Course 1: Precalculus (Fall 2022)

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Set theoretic solutions of the Yang-Baxter equation and its associated structures by Eric Jespers

PROGRAM GROUP ALGEBRAS, REPRESENTATIONS AND COMPUTATION ORGANIZERS: Gurmeet Kaur Bakshi, Manoj Kumar and Pooja Singla DATE: 14 October 2019 to 23 October 2019 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Determining explicit algebraic structures of semisimple group algebras is a fund

From playlist Group Algebras, Representations And Computation

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How To Solve an Absolute Value Equation and Test Our Solutions when They Do Not Work

Learn how to solve absolute value equations with extraneous solutions. Absolute value of a number is the positive value of the number. For instance, the absolute value of 2 is 2 and the absolute value of -2 is also 2. To solve an absolute value problem, we first isolate the absolute value

From playlist Solve Absolute Value Equations

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Capital asset pricing model (CAPM, FRM T1-9)

The CAPM is a ex ante single-factor model where the single-factor is the market's excess return: it says that we should expect an excess return that is proportional to the stock's beta, which is the stock's exposure to market's excess return, as measured by the stock's beta. Beta can be re

From playlist Risk Foundations (FRM Topic 1)

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4 2 Risk neutral pricing Part 1

BEM1105x Course Playlist - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8_xPU5epJdfCxbRzxuchTfgOH1I2Ibht Produced in association with Caltech Academic Media Technologies. ©2020 California Institute of Technology

From playlist BEM1105x Course - Prof. Jakša Cvitanić

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Solving an absolute value inequality by switching the signs

👉 Learn how to solve absolute value inequalities. The absolute value of a number is the positive value of the number. For instance, the absolute value of 2 is 2 and the absolute value of -2 is also 2. To solve an absolute value inequality, we create the two cases of absolute value problems

From playlist Solve Absolute Value Inequalities

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11. Stocks

Financial Markets (ECON 252) The stock market is the information center for the corporate sector. It represents individuals' ownership in publicly-held corporations. Although corporations have a variety of stakeholders, the shareholders of a for-profit corporation are central since the

From playlist Financial Markets (2008) with Robert Shiller

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Learn How To Solve an Absolute Value Equation and Check Your Answers

Learn how to solve absolute value equations with extraneous solutions. Absolute value of a number is the positive value of the number. For instance, the absolute value of 2 is 2 and the absolute value of -2 is also 2. To solve an absolute value problem, we first isolate the absolute value

From playlist Solve Absolute Value Equations

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Holographic Approach to QCD matter (HQCD - Lecture 3) by Johanna Erdmenger

PROGRAM THE MYRIAD COLORFUL WAYS OF UNDERSTANDING EXTREME QCD MATTER ORGANIZERS: Ayan Mukhopadhyay, Sayantan Sharma and Ravindran V DATE: 01 April 2019 to 17 April 2019 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Strongly interacting phases of QCD matter at extreme temperature and

From playlist The Myriad Colorful Ways of Understanding Extreme QCD Matter 2019

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The Tolman Prize Fellowship: A Turning Point in My Scientific Career - A. Buonanno - 2/24/2015

Introduction by Hirosi Ooguri. Learn more about the Inaugural Celebration and Symposium of the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics: https://burkeinstitute.caltech.edu/workshops/Inaugural_Symposium Produced in association with Caltech Academic Media Technologies. ©2015 Californ

From playlist Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics - Dedication and Inaugural Symposium - Feb. 23-24, 2015

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François Petit (6/22/20): Ephemeral persistence modules and distance comparison

Title: Ephemeral persistence modules and distance comparison Abstract: Sheaf theoretic methods have been recently introduced to study persistent modules. Persistence homology studies filtered or multi-filtered topological spaces. The filtrations are indexed by the elements of an ordered

From playlist ATMCS/AATRN 2020

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Some new results on rationality (Lecture - 01) by Claire Voisin

Infosys-ICTS Ramanujan Lectures Some new results on rationality Speaker: Claire Voisin (College de France) Date: 01 October 2018, 16:00 Venue: Madhava Lecture Hall, ICTS campus Resources Lecture 1: Some new results on rationality Date & Time: Monday, 1 October 2018, 04:00 PM Abstra

From playlist Infosys-ICTS Ramanujan Lectures

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Making Decisions under Model Misspecification & Star-shaped Risk Measures - Maccheroni & Marinacci

Prof. Fabio Maccheroni & Prof. Massimo Marinacci - Making Decisions under Model Misspecification & Star-shaped Risk Measures Making Decisions under Model Misspecification (45min) Authors Simone Cerreia-Vioglio, Lars Peter Hansen, Fabio Maccheroni, Massimo Marinacci Abstract We use de

From playlist Uncertainty and Risk

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Calculus 8.4 Applications to Economics and Biology

My notes are available at http://asherbroberts.com/ (so you can write along with me). Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition by James Stewart

From playlist Calculus

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Obstructions to rationality: unramified cohomology (Lecture - 02) by Claire Voisin

Infosys-ICTS Ramanujan Lectures Some new results on rationality Speaker: Claire Voisin (College de France) Date: 01 October 2018, 16:00 Venue: Madhava Lecture Hall, ICTS campus Resources Lecture 1: Some new results on rationality Date & Time: Monday, 1 October 2018, 04:00 PM Abstra

From playlist Infosys-ICTS Ramanujan Lectures

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