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What Every Investor Shoud Know About Accounting Fraud by Jeff Madura
What Every Investor Shoud Know About Accounting Fraud by Jeff Madura
Even while individual investors are acutely aware that accounting fraud is more pervasive than ever, they frequently don’t know how to spot it or even where to look. What Every Investor Needs to Know About Accounting Fraud provides a succinct, easy-to-understand explanation of typical accounting tricks, distortions, and blatant deceptions that intelligent investors must be able to identify and avoid. A book written by Professor Jeff Madura that is both understandable and educational and doesn’t talk down to the reader. It offers investors the following in a clear and thorough manner:
Techniques for spotting frauds that hide costs, manipulate profits, and more
investigations of notorious accounting scams and how they may have been prevented
A guideline of zero-tolerance investing that is good for safeguarding portfolios
Who the Author Is
Jeff Madura, Ph.D., is the director of the doctorate program and the SunTrust Bank Professor of Finance at Florida Atlantic University. Professor Madura has written several papers for scholarly journals as well as several of the most popular college textbooks. He resides in Florida’s Fort Lauderdale.
What is forex?
Quite simply, it’s the global market that allows one to trade two currencies against each other.
If you think one currency will be stronger versus the other, and you end up correct, then you can make a profit.
If you’ve ever traveled to another country, you usually had to find a currency exchange booth at the airport, and then exchange the money you have in your wallet into the currency of the country you are visiting.
Foreign Exchange
You go up to the counter and notice a screen displaying different exchange rates for different currencies.
An exchange rate is the relative price of two currencies from two different countries.
You find “Japanese yen” and think to yourself, “WOW! My one dollar is worth 100 yen?! And I have ten dollars! I’m going to be rich!!!”
When you do this, you’ve essentially participated in the forex market!
You’ve exchanged one currency for another.
Or in forex trading terms, assuming you’re an American visiting Japan, you’ve sold dollars and bought yen.
Currency Exchange
Before you fly back home, you stop by the currency exchange booth to exchange the yen that you miraculously have left over (Tokyo is expensive!) and notice the exchange rates have changed.
It’s these changes in the exchange rates that allow you to make money in the foreign exchange market.
Salepage : What Every Investor Shoud Know About Accounting Fraud by Jeff Madura
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