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Contact [7]
2 years ago
6

1. Sony has 12 core segments in its business. Is this too many or not enough? Are today’s companies diversified like they used t

o be a few decades ago? Can Sony’s 12-segment business model be sustainable?
2.The Future Lab Program, which is a part of Sony’s investment in R&D, embraces an approach to technological R&D that emphasizes an open creative environment and direct lines of communication with society, with the end goal being to co-create new lifestyles and customer value. Does Sony create significant customer value? Does Sony create new lifestyles?
Business
1 answer:
mestny [16]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

1) This question is about whether diversification is good or bad for a large corporation. Whether diversification can be considered good or bad depends on the corporation itself, there is no one answer fits all. In this case, Sony is divided into 12 segments or divisions and each of them generates their own cash flows and offers their own products or services.

High tech companies generally tend to diversify a lot because they need to continuously produce innovative products or improve their existing ones. E.g. Google got so large and diversified that it turned into Alphabet which owns more than 200 companies (most of them through acquisitions). Sony's largest revenue sources are gaming services, financial services and home entertainment.

When we think about Sony we probably think about consumer electronics, the Playstation or even movies, but in order to be profitable, Sony had to expand and diversify. Sony's revenues are shifting from consumer electronics to services (including financial, gaming, network, music and movies), so that means that their diversification model actually worked.

2) Sony's goal with Future Lab is to create customer value and new lifestyles, whether they are able to do so depends on how well they work it out. Future Labs is based on San Francisco, and it should serve as a place where innovative prototypes should be tested by real users. The goal is that Sony can learn from actual real life user experiences in order to improve their products and services. The real life customers and users that want to participate in Sony's program must pay a fee for doing so, but they can also experience prototypes before anyone else.

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A middle-aged widowed customer has an investment objective of stable income and would also like to receive occasional "extra" in
Illusion [34]

Answer: Participating preferred

Explanation:

Participating preferred is a stock which pays specific dividends rate to their customers and also receives additional dividends, this is made known Board of Directors and paid by the company, this meets up with the objectives a customers has for investing and having a stable income. It is so known as performance preferred and it gives the holder the benefit of collecting extra dividends.

6 0
1 year ago
Divided Furniture Inc. has 11,000 bonds outstanding with a market price of $104 per bond. The firm also has 35,000 preferred sha
mote1985 [20]

Answer:

Market Value of equity = Price of equity*Number of shares outstanding

Market Value of equity = 36*45000

Market Value of equity = 1620000

Market Value of Bond = Par value*bonds outstanding*%age of par

Market Value of Bond = 100*11000*1.04

Market Value of Bond = 1144000

Market Value of Bond of Preferred equity=Price*Number of shares outstanding

Market Value of Bond of Preferred equity=52*35000

Market Value of Bond of Preferred equity = 1820000

Market Value of firm = Market Value of Equity + Market Value of Bond+ Market Value of Preferred equity

Market Value of firm = 1620000+1144000+1820000

Market Value of firm = 4584000

Weight of equity = Market Value of Equity/Market Value of firm

Weight of equity = 1620000/4584000

Weight of equity = 0.3534

Weight of debt = Market Value of Bond/Market Value of firm

Weight of debt = 1144000/4584000

Weight of debt = 0.2496

Weight of preferred equity = Market Value of preferred equity/Market Value of firm

Weight of preferred equity = 1820000/4584000

Weight of preferred equity =0.397

Cost of equity

Price= Dividend in 1 year/(cost of equity - growth rate)

36 = 2.2/ (Cost of equity - 0.04)

Cost of equity% = 10.11

After tax cost of debt = cost of debt*(1-tax rate)

After tax cost of debt = 8*(1-0.4)

After tax cost of debt = 4.8

Cost of preferred equity

Cost of preferred equity = Preferred dividend/price*100

Cost of preferred equity = 2.2/(52)*100

Cost of preferred equity = 4.23

WACC = After tax cost of debt*W(D)+cost of equity*W(E)+Cost of preferred equity*W(PE)

WACC = 4.8*0.2496+10.11*0.3534+4.23*0.397

WACC = 6.45%

7 0
2 years ago
Masterson, Inc., has 4.1 million shares of common stock outstanding. The current share price is $84, and the book value per shar
Kitty [74]

Answer:

The answer is "8.37%".

Explanation:

\text{MV of equity} = \text{equity price}  \times \text{number of outstanding shares}

                     =84 \times 4100000\\\\=344400000

\text{MV of Bond1}=\text{Par value} \times \text{bonds outstanding} \times \text{age of percentage}

                      =1000 \times 70000 \times 0.98 \\\\=68600000

\text{MV of Bond2}=\text{Par value} \times \text{bonds outstanding} \times \text{age of percentage}

                      =1000 \times 50000 \times 1.08 \\\\=54000000

\text{MV of firm} = \text{MV of Equity} + \text{MV of Bond1}+ \text{MV of Bond 2}

                  =344400000+68600000+54000000\\\\=467000000

\text{Weight of equity W(E)} = \frac{\text{MV of Equity}}{\text{MV of firm}}

                                     = \frac{344400000}{467000000}\\\\=0.7375

\text{Weight of debt W(D)}= \frac{\text{MV of Bond}}{\text{MV of firm}}

                                  = \frac{122600000}{467000000}\\\\=0.2625

Equity charges

By DDM.  

\text{Price = new dividend} \times  \frac{(1 + \text{rate of growth})}{( \text{Equity expense-rate of growth)}}

84 = 3.95  \times  \frac{(1+0.05)}{(\text{Cost of equity}- 0.05)}\\\\84 = 3.95  \times  \frac{(1.05)}{(\text{Cost of equity} - 0.05)}\\\\84 = \frac{4.1475}{ (\text{Cost of equity} - 0.05)}\\\\\text{Cost of equity} -0.05 = \frac{4.1475}{84}\\\\\text{Cost of equity} -0.05 = 0.049375\\\\\text{Cost of equity}  = 0.049375 + 0.05\\\\\text{Cost of equity}  = 0.099375 \\\\\text{Cost of equity} \%  = 9.9375 \% \ \ \ or  \ \ \ 9.94 \%  \\\\

Debt expenses  

Bond1

K = N \times 2 \\\\

Bond \ Price = \sum  [ \frac{\text{(Semi Annual Coupon)}}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{2})^k}]     +   \frac{Par\  value}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{2})^{N \times 2}}

k=1\\\\K =20 \times 2\\\\980 = \sum  [ \frac {(5.1 \times \frac{1000}{200})}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{200})^k}] +   \frac{1000}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{200})}^{20 \times 2}\\\\k=1\\\\\ YTM1 = 5.2628923903\\\\Bond2\\

K = N \times 2

Bond \ Price = \sum  [ \frac{\text{(Semi Annual Coupon)}}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{2})^k}]     +   \frac{Par\  value}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{2})^{N \times 2}}

k=1\\\\K =12 \times 2\\\\

1080 =\sum [\frac{(5.6 \times \frac{1000}{200})}{(1 + \frac{YTM}{200})^k}] +\frac{1000}{(1 +\frac{YTM}{200})^{12 \times 2}} \\\\k=1\\\\YTM2 = 4.72\\\\

\text{Company debt costs} = YTM1 times \frac{(MV \ bond1)}{(MV \ bond1+MV \ bond2)}+YTM2 \times \frac{(MV \ bond2)}{(MV \ bond2)}\\\\

The cost of the debt for the company:

= 5.2628923903 \times \frac{(68600000)}{(68600000+54000000)}+4.72 \times \frac{(68600000)}{(68600000+54000000)}\\\\

Business debt cost=5.02 \% \\\\

after taxation cost of debt:  

= \text{cost of debt} \times (1- tax \ rate)\\\\= 5.02 \times (1-0.21)\\\\= 3.9658\\\\

WACC= \text{after debt charges} \times W(D)+equity cost  \times W(E) \\\\

            =3.97 \times 0.2625+9.94 \times 0.7375 \\\\ =8.37 \% \\\\

7 0
2 years ago
Analyzing the effects of transactions on the accounting equation.
Dmitry [639]

Answer:

I used an excel spreadsheet to record the accounts using the accounting equation.

What is the ending balance of cash after all transactions have been recorded?

$163,900

Download pdf
8 0
1 year ago
Rhashan wants to improve the readability of the documents used by his organization. In 5–10 sentences, describe ways in which Rh
slega [8]
Rhashan<span> can used a font like </span>Arial<span>. It is much easier on your eyes than a font that has curls at the end. He needs to very brief and to the point. Business and organizations do not want to publish rambling. Paragraphs longer than eight lines are not good for readability. To make his ideas look organized and to </span>assist<span> busy readers in finding key ideas, </span>Rhashan<span> needs to insert a “talking subhead” roughly every five paragraphs. Talking subheads tell a story. Something similar to newspaper headlines.</span>
3 0
2 years ago
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