The risk that interest rates will increase, and that increase will lead to a decline in the prices of outstanding bonds, is called "interest rate risk," or "price risk."

Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)


True

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Ahrends Corporation makes 70,000 units per year of a part it uses in the products it manufactures. The unit product cost of this part is computed as follows:  Direct materials$17.80 Direct labor 19.00 Variable manufacturing overhead 1.00 Fixed manufacturing overhead 17.10 Unit product cost$ 54.90 An outside supplier has offered to sell the company all of these parts it needs for $48.50 a unit. If the company accepts this offer, the facilities now being used to make the part could be used to make more units of a product that is in high demand. The additional contribution margin on this other product would be $273,000 per year.If the part were purchased from the outside supplier, all of the direct labor cost of the part would be avoided. However, $8.20 of the fixed manufacturing

overhead cost being applied to the part would continue even if the part were purchased from the outside supplier. This fixed manufacturing overhead cost would be applied to the company's remaining products.What is the maximum amount the company should be willing to pay an outside supplier per unit for the part if the supplier commits to supplying all 70,000 units required each year? (Round your intermediate calculations to 2 decimal places.) A. $54.90 per unit B. $50.60 per unit C. $58.80 per unit D. $3.90 per unit

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It is possible to reference a data dictionary to determine what code is contained in a program unit.

Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)

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Companies typically respond to critical online customer feedback, but they ignore highly positive posts because the customer is already well satisfied

Indicate whether the statement is true or false

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A syllogism is

a. a misleading statement causing difficulty in problem analysis. b. a form of situational ethics. c. unrelated to moral reasoning. d. a pattern of deductive logic that contains a major or general premise, a minor or specific premise, and a conclusion, always in that order.

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