Examples of Face in the following topics:
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- Consider a 3-year bond with a face value of $1,000 and an effective interest rate of 7%, sold at face value.
- Since the bond is sold at face value, the proceeds are $1,000.
- When a bond is issued at par value it is sold for the face value amount.
- Finally, it pays off the obligation by repaying the face amount and the last interest payment.
- It is created by recording a credit equal to the face value of all the bonds that are issued.
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- A fair die has an equal probability of landing face-up on each number.
- An example of a traditional die is a rounded cube, with each of its six faces showing a different number of dots (pips) from one to six.
- The other four Platonic solids are the most common non-cubical dice; these can make for 4, 8, 12, and 20 faces .
- There are several methods for creating loaded dice; these include round and off-square faces and (if not transparent) weights.
- A Platonic solids set of five dice; tetrahedron (four faces), cube/hexahedron (six faces), octahedron (eight faces), dodecahedron (twelve faces), and icosahedron (twenty faces).
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- Using the Venn diagram, verify P(face card) = 12/52 = 3/13.
- P(A) + P(B) = P(<>) + P(face card) = 12/52 + 13/52.
- P(A or B) = P(face card or <>)= P(face card) + P(<>) - P(face card and <>) (2.15)= 12/52 + 13/52 - 3/52= 22/52 = 11/26
- (b) Likewise, there are 12 face cards, so P(face card) = 12/52 = 3/13 = 0.231.
- 2.14: The Venn diagram shows face cards split up into \face card but not <>" and "face card and <>".
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- Par value is stated value or face value, with a typical bond making a repayment of par value at maturity.
- Par value, in finance and accounting, means the stated value or face value.
- Corporate bonds usually have par values of $1,000 while municipal bonds generally have face values of $500.
- Federal government bonds tend to have much higher face values at $10,000.
- F = face value, iF = contractual interest rate, C = F * iF = coupon payment (periodic interest payment), N = number of payments, i = market interest rate, or required yield, or observed/ appropriate yield to maturity, M = value at maturity, usually equals face value, P = market price of bond.
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- Individuals face opportunity costs when they choose one course of action over another.
- Individuals face opportunity costs in both economic and non-economic decisions.
- As economic actors, individuals face opportunity costs as well.
- Opportunity costs are an important consideration for economists and busnesspeople, but are faced by individuals even when they are not making classically economic decisions.
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- Social presence theory contends that CMC is incomplete compared to face-to-face communication in social context cues like facial expressions, posture, dress, social status indicators, and vocal cues (Sproull & Kiesler, 1991).
- If one defines a face-to-face class as the norm, then one must view a virtual class as "incomplete."
- It is certainly different, lacking some of the nuances possible in face-to-face meetings, yet also permitting a degree of thoughtfulness in one's comments not possible in face-to-face classes.
- Alavi and Leidner (2001) conclude that the internet will probably never replace face-to-face meetings for cultivation of primary group relationships, but it is possible that communities can be created that provide emotional support and companionship to support our traditional exchanges.
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- This double bond, and others having three different substituents at one carbon, have enantiotopic faces in the same sense that bromochloromethane has a pair of enantiotopic hydrogens.
- These enantiotopic faces are shown in the first diagram below.
- The sequence order is then determined to be a right or left turn (light blue arrow), and the viewing face is given the designation re or si, corresponding to the turn.
- An addition of a given reagent at the re face will necessarily give the enantiomer of the same addition at the si face, provided the new substituent is not identical to one of the three original groups.
- Clearly, to make hydroboration an enantioselective reaction, the rate of reaction at one of the faces must be increased over that at the other face.
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- Bond prices is the present value of all coupon payments and the face value paid at maturity.
- F = face value, iF = contractual interest rate, C = F * iF = coupon payment (periodic interest payment), N = number of payments, i = market interest rate, or required yield, or observed / appropriate yield to maturity, M = value at maturity, usually equals face value, P = market price of bond.
- In other words, bond price is the sum of the present value of face value paid back at maturity and the present value of an annuity of coupon payments.
- For bonds of different payment frequencies, the present value of face value received at maturity is the same.
- Bond price is the present value of all coupon payments and the face value paid at maturity.
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- A T-bill has a face value of $20,000 with a yield to maturity of 3%, and this bill matures in 270 days.
- A bond has a face value of $2,000, an interest rate of 10%,and pays interest twice a year.
- A bond has a face value of $2,000, an interest rate of 10% and pays interest twice a year.
- If the bond matures in 3 years with a face value of $5,000, calculate your yield-to-maturity (YTM).
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- Selective reduction of 4-tert-butylcyclohexanone (I) to a 10:1 mixture of trans- and cis-4-tert-butylcyclohexanol by LiAlH4 is an example of diastereoselectivity, reflecting a preference for hydride attack at the more hindered axial face of the carbonyl group.
- This selectivity can be reversed by using a larger hydride reagent, such as Li(sec-butyl)3BH; in which case severe hindrance to axial approach diverts the reaction to the equatorial face.
- In compound II the exo face of the prochiral carbonyl group is less hindered than the endo face.