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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Cenová mapa obvyklého nájemného nebytových prostor ve vybraných lokalitách města Brna / A Price Map of Standard Rent of Commercial Spaces in Selected Areas of the City of Brno

Čechmaneková, Simona January 2013 (has links)
The thesis is focused on the creation of price maps commercial real estate lease in the areas of Brno, in selected urban areas. It is divided into two parts: The theoretical section explains the basic concepts related to the thesis, which are: the types of commercial spaces, types of prices in the valuation, introduces us to the situation on the commercial real estate market and the importance of price charts and the methodology to create. The practical part focuses on the formation of price charts, discussed the issue at its orign, the possibility of creating and mapping. The result is a textual and graphical price map, which is the use of the real estate market and facilitates orientation in the prices of renting commercial property types: office, shop and warehouse.
182

The association between published accounting data and the behaviour of share prices

Knight, Rory Francis Murphy 07 April 2020 (has links)
This dissertation presents a variety of empirical studies in financial accounting with an emphasis on the association between published accounting data and share prices. These studies are the first attempt at empirical research in accounting in South Africa. There has been an alarming lack of research in this discipline in this country and only 14 doctorates in the accounting field have ever been conferred by South African universities. The major aim of the dissertation is to contribute to the understanding of the usefulness of accounting data and the effect that certain financial disclosures (and non-disclosures) have on share prices and consequently on the wealth of the users and potential users of these data. An essential premise of this thesis is that the primary purpose of financial reporting is the provision of information useful for economic decision making.
183

Vertical restraints with heterogeneous retailers /

Boyd, David William January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
184

An empirical analysis of stock market price determinants /

Zimmer, Robert Keith January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
185

Reservation Prices and Willingness to Accept Price Offers for Nonindustrial Forest Landowners in Western Virginia

Kennedy, Nathan 12 August 2001 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to examine what motivates nonindustrial private forest landowners to accept bids of various levels for harvesting. Through the use of a survey we specifically consider what preferences and landowner characteristics effect these decisions. Landowners were randomly selected from counties in Southwest Virginia. The participants were presented a payment table in which they were asked to indicate the level of certainty with which they would accept bids of various levels for their timber. The information obtained for the survey was used in a LOGIT model to examine which variables were most important both in determining the certainty respondents attached to different bid levels, and the likelihood of accepting a bid of any size. Our most important results show that factors such as bequest motives, tract size, absentee status, and environmental preferences influence the bid acceptance decision for landowners in the sample. / Master of Science
186

An Analysis of Residential Electricity Supply and Demand in California During the Summer of 2000

Tuzun, Julia Ann 10 September 2002 (has links)
Prior to 1996, roughly 70% of electricity service in California was provided by investor owned utilities (IOUs). The IOUs operated as monopolies in their respective service territories, performing all of the functions necessary to generate and deliver electricity to the consumer. In exchange for service, the IOUs were paid a regulated rate which was designed to recover their cost of providing the service plus a reasonable return on their investment. In 1996, California changed the way electric service was provided in order to make it more competitive. Among the changes, utilities would procure their supplies at market prices in an auction or spot market; residential customers could choose their electric supplier; and residential rates were frozen at 10% below their June 1996 levels. The rate freeze was to remain in effect until the later of March 31, 2002, or the date the IOUs fully recovered certain expenses that were still on their books (i.e., stranded costs). The restructured market commenced operations on March 31, 1998. During the summer of 2000, California experienced record increases in wholesale prices and supply shortages that ultimately resulted in a number of rolling blackouts. Most of California?s residential customers were unaffected by the increased wholesale prices because their rates remained frozen. Regulators and others who have studied what went wrong during the summer of 2000 in California agree that the increase in wholesale prices was due to a combination of factors, one of which was the residential rate freeze. This thesis proposes to show how fixing the price of electricity resulted in excess demand and to quantify the size of the excess. This thesis also shows how much of a price increase would have been needed to prevent the shortages. / Master of Arts
187

Numerical solution of BSDE via binomial tree approximation : A comparative study with Black-Scholes model

Ummulbanin, Ummulbanin January 2024 (has links)
This thesis focuses on binomial tree approximation for solving Backward Stochastic Differential Equations (BSDEs), particularly in the context of option pricing. The numerical method iteratively solves the discrete-time version of the BSDE backward in time. The discretization process employs constructing a binomial tree representing possible future price movements of the underlying asset. At each node of the tree, the option value is computed based on the expected payoff at that node and the discounted option values from the subsequent nodes. Furthermore, we discusses an approximation for the control process Z,, and the replicating portfolio a,. Which is expressed as the conditional expectation of the ratio of future option value increment to Brownian motion increment and demonstrate how it relates to the Black Scholes model for continuous time. An important part of the thesis is to compare theoretical expressions from the Black-Scholes model and the binomial tree. Formulas from the binomial tree are explicitly calculated and validated by numerical experiments.
188

Cenové mapy bytů / Apartment Price Heat Maps

Bolfová, Veronika January 2010 (has links)
The thesis is focused on the issue of Apartment price heat maps. The aim is to approach the topic of apartment price heat maps, methodology for the creation of price heat maps and its specifics. Theoretical knowledge is applied to two selected parts of Prague - Zizkov and Vinohrady. The final data of both areas are summarised to two specific price heat maps. The end of the thesis compares the processed results with officially published data of the czech national institution ČSÚ.
189

Pricing Strategy and the Formation and Evolution of Reference Price Perceptions in New Product Categories

Lowe, Benjamin, n/a January 2006 (has links)
This study examines how pioneer and follower pricing strategies affect the formation and evolution of reference price perceptions in new product categories. It contributes to our understanding of pricing new products by integrating two important research streams in the field of marketing - reference price theory and the theory of pioneer brand advantage. This is the first research to address reference price effects for radically new product categories. Prior research has focused solely on products in existing categories, typically in fast moving consumer goods categories. Using three experiments to causally establish the consequences of pioneer and follower pricing strategies on consumer perceptions, three critical research issues are addressed for the first time, consistent with calls for research in the literature: 1. Which reference price do consumers utilise in new product categories? 2. What is the role of consumer confidence in reference price for new product categories? 3. How do reference price perceptions form and evolve as a result of pioneer and follower pricing strategy? In the literature, a frequently cited issue is the fragmented operationalisation of reference price perceptions. With little theory to guide researchers in terms of which measures should be used, experiment 1 provides new theory, finding as hypothesised, that fair price perceptions as opposed to expected price perceptions are more likely to be evoked by consumers for new product categories. Experiment 1 also finds that using consumers' confidence in their reference price beliefs as an additional explanatory variable, does not improve over current reference price models. Overconfidence, a robust consumer behavioural phenomenon (Alba and Hutchinson 2000), might explain this result. Prior research has made several contributions to understanding reference price perceptions in established product categories. However, not much is known about how these reference price perceptions initially form and evolve. Experiments 2 and 3 address this gap by simulating an emerging market and examining the role of pioneership in shaping reference price perceptions. Experiment 2 found the pioneer, due to its perceptual prominence, is able to define the reference price and subsequently define perceptions of value. That is, the value consumers place on a product and their intentions to purchase the product are about the same whether the pioneer follows a penetration (initial low price) or skimming (initial high price) strategy. Experiment 3 extends experiment 2 by examining what happens in the emerging market when a follower brand enters. The follower enters at a large or small discount to the pioneer, and the pioneer completes its penetration or skimming strategy, converging to a 'regular' price. As predicted, the pioneer's initial price frames subsequent price and value perceptions, signifying the importance of the pioneer as a referent brand. Lower initial prices erode value perceptions, whereas higher initial prices substantiate value perceptions. The follower's pricing strategy does not have as much influence as the pioneer's pricing strategy. Other findings from experiment 3 related to reference price theory in general. Specifically, there was strong evidence of an averaging process when forming reference prices. This adds theory to the measurement debate about operationalising reference price as some past price such as last price paid or some average of past prices. Experiment 3 also provides a further measurement contribution by supporting the use of brand specific measures of reference price, rather than category based measures. More generally, because of the causal research design, this thesis provides strong evidence of the use of reference prices in consumer decision making: a key concern emphasised by one of the area's seminal articles (i.e., Kalyanaram and Winer 1995), which stresses the need to provide evidence that consumers actually use reference prices, and not just act as if they do.
190

Hedonic Price Analysis Of Office Rents: A Case Study Of The Office Market In Ankara

Ustaoslu, Eda 01 September 2003 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis analyzes variations in office rents in Ankara. The theoretical background of this study is related to the hedonic methodology, which is extensively applied for explaining price or rental price variations of the real property. Given this theoretical framework, hedonic regression model is utilized for the estimation of hedonic price indices by using the cross sectional data of the office market in Ankara for the year 2002. Hedonic price function is specified in the log linear functional form and is estimated with the Ordinary Least Squares technique for two models. The models include the same variables / however, Model 1 differs from Model 2 in including the location variables. The estimation results obtained from the models suggest that height and construction quality of the building act as proxies for the locational characteristics. Also, it is found from Model 1 that locational characteristics have the greatest effect on the rental prices of the office units. In order to verify this fact, Model 1 is tested against Model 2 and vice versa based on alternative tests for non-nested models. The results of non-nested tests indicate that Model 1 is preferred to Model 2. This result is important in the sense that locational characteristics are found to be significant in explaining the rental price variations. Besides location variables, the other variables related to physical attributes and lease characteristics of the office property are also evaluated from the estimation results of Model 1. From the empirical results, it is finally concluded that locational characteristics explain the spatial rent variations of the office property in Ankara to a large extent.

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