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. The sustainable growth rate is the rate at which the firm can grow by changing its leverage ratio.2. If factories are

Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:08 am
by answerhappygod
. The sustainable growth rate is the rate at which the firm can grow by changing its leverage ratio.2. If factories are operating below full capacity, sales can increase without investment in fixed assets. 3. Financial planning is aimed to minimize the risks to take.4. The primary aim of financial planning is to obtain better forecasts of future cash flows and earnings.5. In a two-for-one stock split, each investor would receive one additional share for each share already held.6. Investors often take the stock split decision as a signal of management's confidence in the future.7. A two-for-one stock split results in a doubling of the number of outstanding shares, so they will affect the company's assets, profits, or total value.8. MM's dividend irrelevance proposition assumes that dividends do not affect investment or borrowing policies.9. Dividend policy may be defined as the trade-off between retaining earnings on the one hand and paying out cash and issuing shares on the other.
. The sustainable growth rate is the rate at which the firm can grow by changing its
leverage ratio.
2. If factories are operating below full capacity, sales can increase without
investment in fixed assets.
3. Financial planning is aimed to minimize the risks to take.
4. The primary aim of financial planning is to obtain better forecasts of future cash
flows and earnings.
5. In a two-for-one stock split, each investor would receive one additional share for
each share already held.
6. Investors often take the stock split decision as a signal of management's
confidence in the future.
7. A two-for-one stock split results in a doubling of the number of outstanding
shares, so they will affect the company's assets, profits, or total value.
8. MM's dividend irrelevance proposition assumes that dividends do not affect
investment or borrowing policies.
9. Dividend policy may be defined as the trade-off between retaining earnings on the
one hand and paying out cash and issuing shares on the other.