Weekly Calendar

Weekly Calendar

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This is a weekly calendar template that you can use to plan or schedule your daily activities by entering your activities in the “event and holidays’ worksheet and see your activities arranged automatically in the “weekly” worksheet.

Author : R. Musadya

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Travel Packing Checklist

Travel Packing Checklist

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This is a travel and packing checklist spreadsheet that you can customize based on your travel. Having this spreadsheet template as your reminder checklist before you go on traveling will help you to carry all your belongings and save your preparation time.

Author : Popwuping.com

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Earnings per Share Calculator

Earnings per share

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Earnings per share (EPS) is a company profit’s allocation for outstanding share of common stock. This EPS value is usually being used as an indicator of the health of a company. Basic earnings per share are calculated by dividing the profit for the period attributable to equity shareholders of the Parent Company by the average number of ordinary shares in issue during the year. This EPS calculator will give you a brief description about that concept.

Author : David McNeely

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GMT Time Table

GMT Time Table

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This is a simple Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) Time Table to display the time difference in any time zone based on 24 hour period. You can see in this table, that in the same time and based on your time, the day of other time zone will be ahead or behind your current day.

Author : Greenwich2000.com

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Dividend Discount Model

Dividend Discount Model

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A dividend discount model is a financial model for valuing the price of a stock by using predicted dividends and discounting them back to present value. The idea is that if the value obtained from the DDM is higher than what the shares are currently trading at, then the stock is undervalued.

This model would typically be a discounted cash flow (DCF) using dividend forecasts over several stages. And how this model works is as follows :
1. The expected dividends are estimated for the high growth period, using the payout ratio for the high growth period and the expected growth rate in earnings per share.
2. The expected growth rate is estimated either using fundamentals: Expected growth = Retention Ratio * Return on Equity. Alternatively, you can input the expected growth rate. At the end of the high growth phase, the expected terminal price is estimated using dividends per share one year after the high growth period, using the growth rate in stable growth, the payout ratio in stable growth and the cost of equity in stable growth.
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