Posts Tagged ‘money guide’

Looking for the path to right debt management March 3rd, 2010

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There are two possibilities here, either management will attempt to acquire all the equity with their own money or, more likely, with traditional bank finance; or if the buy-out is an EPO, a specialist EPO financier will provide both equity and debt support. To prepare your company for this type of buy-out you need to be aware of the following:

Where the management is buying your business without any borrowings, the central issue is whether the business is attractive enough for them to offer you your asking price. In these circumstances, the transaction is more like a trade sale than a management buy-out.

Where the management is putting up some of the purchase price only and is borrowing the rest, the business will still need to comply with the traditional MBO, because the business assets will be security for the borrowings. This is very important because, from my experience, most management/employee buy-outs that fail do so because they are unable to acquire the finance they need.

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Expand your business with web standards conformance. November 15th, 2009

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44Web standards allow you to increase the searchability of your financial sites. Google has been dubbed the greatest blind user out there on the web, because it (as well as other search engines) are particularly partial to indexing standards-compliant sites.

Break the “build, break, re-build” cycle. It is important to ensure forward compatibility of every website regardless if it concerns loans, real estate or money in general, with any new browser releases: your CSS-based financial site will be displayed accurately in future versions of today browsers. With table-based sites you never know what may happen. Along with the constant evolution of (standards compliant) browsers the performance of non-standards sites decreases. This phenomen is often described as “perpetual obsolescence”.

You can also save money by simplifying your design requirements. Compliant financial websites have an improved chance of rendering properly on all resolution and monitor sizes, while still maintaining design integrity that was originally intended for them.

Not only can you improve your income but also accquire some good publicity along the way. Creating an attractive, well-functioning and standards-compliant financial website is becoming the benchmark of good design and development of a successful company.

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Deal with credit-specific issues in the past November 11th, 2009

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The bonds of Ericsson, Tyco and ABB. All three companies had credit-specific issues in the past and seemed to have overcome those at the time of writing (December, 2003). Their lowest prices were quoted almost at the same time (October, 2002) where risk tolerance reached the lowest level in a decade (measured by VIX). The important point to illustrate is that nonsystematic risks induced the first price falls in all three companies at different points in time. Idiosyncratic risks were responsible for the first massive downward price movement. In this situation, an assessment of the credit should not be based only on credit fundamentals but every credit portfolio manager has to evaluate what volatility his portfolio can sustain because the main task for a high-yield portfolio manager is to manage risk. Technical factors have to be considered because it is likely that market liquidity for a troubled bond will disappear quickly which will result in a “free fall” in price.

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Make money with web standards conformance of your site November 9th, 2009

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Designing your financial website with conformance to current standards means that – by proxy – the documents will be smaller. As a result, the pages will be displayed much faster for the users seeking data on latest currency values and loans interest. Moreover, download times have proven to be an important factor in usability of financial websites. Users often look for latest financial information (for example from stock exchange) and any perceivable delay will harm the evaluation of your website. Users tend to rate sites with slow financial data display as less interesting and offering lower quality content. Additionally, they claim that delays tend to severely interfere with task continuity, their ability to remember financial details from your site, and use flow. Really slow display of stock market information can lead users to believe some kind of error has occurred. Finally, users correlate site performance and security: financial sites that are constantly slow are considered to be less secure resources, and this is extremely important if you deal with matters such as banking, loans or forex.

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