A) he would be willing to accept a coin-flip bet that would result in him winning $300 if the result was "heads" or losing $300 if the result was "tails."
B) the pain of losing $300 of his wealth would equal the pleasure of adding $300 to his wealth.
C) the pain of losing $300 of his wealth would exceed the pleasure of adding $300 to his wealth.
D) the pleasure of adding $300 to his wealth would exceed the pain of losing $300 of his wealth.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) 5 percent
B) 4 percent
C) 7 percent
D) 3 percent
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Multiple Choice
A) $8,225.06.
B) $7,920.94.
C) $7,672.58.
D) $6,998.98.
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Multiple Choice
A) Speculative bubbles could arise, in part, because the price that people pay for stock depends on what they think someone else will pay for it in the future.
B) Economists almost all agree that the evidence for stock market irrationality is convincing and the departures from rational pricing are important.
C) Some evidence for the existence of market irrationality is that informed and presumably rational managers of mutual funds generally beat the market.
D) The value of the stock depends only on the stream of future dividend payments.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Al
B) Ralph
C) Stan
D) They all retire with the same amount.
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