Results 251 to 260 of about 1,172,217 (295)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

NEW METHOD TO MAXIMIZE LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS

EKONOMIKA I UPRAVLENIE: PROBLEMY, RESHENIYA, 2020
What to invest in, whether short-term or long-term investments are better, how to make an investment decision were some of the main topics of Business Intelligence Systems. If we look historically at investments in world stock markets, then long-term investment meant inevitable profit. Of course, if our investment portfolio is diversified.
N. TANISH   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Short-term maximal electrical stimulation for urinary retention

Urology, 1984
Six patients with spinal cord lesions from C5-T4, in whom urinary retention developed, were treated with short-term maximal electrical stimulation (MES) of the pelvic floor muscles. After MES, 5 patients were able to provoke reflex micturition for eight to fourteen months.
S, Plevnik, G, Homan, P, Vrtacnik
openaire   +2 more sources

Maximizing Long-Term Cumulative Returns

The Journal of Wealth Management, 2004
Maximizing long-term returns is widely ignored by mainstream financial theory, which focuses mainly on mean variance optimization. To maximize long-term cumulative returns, investors need only maximize the geometric expected return of their portfolio.
openaire   +1 more source

Identification of Maximal Affine Term Structure Models

The Journal of Finance, 2008
ABSTRACTBuilding on Duffie and Kan (1996), we propose a new representation of affine models in which the state vector comprises infinitesimal maturity yields and their quadratic covariations. Because these variables possess unambiguous economic interpretations, they generate a representation that is globally identifiable.
PIERRE COLLIN‐DUFRESNE   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Maximal predictability under long-term mean reversion

Journal of Empirical Finance, 2017
Abstract I analyse the relationship between two stylized empirical facts for stock returns: Unconditional long-term mean reversion and predictability by variables such as the dividend-price ratio or the short-term interest rate. In particular, I show that if one imposes that returns satisfy long-term mean reversion, this implies an upper bound on the
openaire   +1 more source

Maximization of long-term productivity in a rat colony

Laboratory Animals, 1972
Maximization of intensive breeding in the animal colony can be approached using a simple mathematical treatment of the production-time curve. It has been found that in a colony of specified-pathogen-free albino rats whose breeding dams were averaging litters of 11 at 6-week intervals, the stock should be entirely replaced at intervals of 27-28 weeks ...
N T, Gridgeman, J M, Taylor
openaire   +2 more sources

Maximizing Short-Term Stock Prices through Advertising

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2010
This paper provides evidence that managers use firm advertising, in part, to maximize short-term stock prices. First, this paper shows that increased advertising spending is associated with individual investors' intensified buying activities, as well as a contemporaneous rise in abnormal stock returns that is subsequently reversed.
openaire   +1 more source

Nonlinear boundary value problems with maximal monotone terms

Aequationes Mathematicae, 2000
The authors consider a second-order nonlinear differential equation with maximal monotone terms and nonlinear, possibly multivalued boundary conditions. Using the theory of maximal monotone operators and the Leray-Schauder alternative the authors establish the existence of solutions.
Halidias, Nikolaos   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Short‐Term Energy Maximization of Egret Foraging

Ecology, 1979
min = 0.1X and 'the inequality becomes: 4.8 kJ/ min X > 0.313 kJ/min 0.X or X < 4.99 kJ/min. Therefore it should rob if the cost of robbing is less than 4.99 kJ/min. While the actual foraging costs are not available, they can be approximated using a form of Kleiber's (1975) metabolic equation: metabolic rate (MR) = kW75f.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy