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Solutions
Client
Solution and Das Global Business Philosophy:
Whether
we are completing a major merger or a large acquisition, Das Global
understands that success in business is a team
effort. Therefore, we would like to call upon all small
business enterprises and individual business enthusiast world-wide to
form a global strategic alliance with the Das Global business
philosophy of “Humanitarian Capitalism”. Helping people help
themselves to make the world a better place for all humanity for our global
economic economic growth. When approaching our clients base with our business
services, we do not do with individual wit or wonder, we approach each
opportunity, each challenge with a group of competent, successful thinkers
moving in tandem to revitalize, reshape, inspire and create an outcome
that is clearly defined and commonly shared.
Whether
Das Global is providing vision planning, financial analysis
or offering a capital injection, the goal is always the same, we grow
Das Global when we grow you. Our solutions are goal oriented,
success driven, and situation specific, with detailed plans to achieve
one thing - grow your company. Whether we are buying or selling, manufacturing
or brokering, we will custom design a strategic plan to make any business
we agree to call client a living, breathing profit-generating machine.
Solutions Showcase
Consulting
We bring fresh faces and fresh ideas to achieve fresh results.
Leadership
Development
When you grow the leaders it will always grow the company.
Financial
Planning
Numbers in the right hands create a roadmap to success.
Strategic
Partnerships
Create the right alliance and you can awaken profit.
"Individuals
don't win in business, teams do."
- Sam Walton
Investment and Information Showcase:
Asset:
(1) Is a resource with economic value that an individual, corporation,
or country owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide
future benefit. (2) A balance sheet item that reflects what a firm owns.
In the context of accounting, assets are either current or fixed.
(2)
Asset-Backed Security (ABS)
A
financial security backed by a loan, a lease and receivables other than
real estate and mortgage backed securities. Asset backed securities are
an alternative to investing in corporate debt.
Bank
Guarantee:
A guarantee issued by a financial institution ensuring that a liability
of a debtor will be met. In other words, if the debtor fails to settle
a debt, the bank will cover it.
Banker’s
Acceptance (BA):
A short-term credit investment created by a non-financial firm and guaranteed
by a bank.
Blue
Chip Stock:
Is an established strong stock of a financially sound company that has
demonstrated an ability to pay dividends in both good and bad times. These
stocks are less risky than other stocks and usually closely tracks the
S&P 500 Index.
Bond:
Is a debt instrument in which an investor lends money to the issuing entity,
(corporation or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period
at a fixed interest rate. Bonds are used by companies, municipalities,
states, U.S. and foreign governments to finance a variety of projects
and activities. Bonds are commonly referred to as fixed income securities
and one of three main asset categories, which includes stocks and cash
equivalents.
Bonds
can be callable; Corporate Bond; Convertible Bond; Junk Bond and Governmental
Bond: yield to maturity.
Bond
Rating:
It is a grade assigned to bonds that indicate its credit worthiness/quality.
Private institutional rating services, such as; S&P, Moody’s
and Fitch evaluate a Bond issuer financial strength, or it’s ability
to pay principal and interest in a timely fashion and then give a bond
its rating. Or a bond can be issued by an entity with no financial strength
but with tangible assets and be underwritten by a financial institution,
an insurance company or a blue chip corporation to earn a higher rating
of the underwriter.
(AAA
or AA highest rating to higher quality investment grade) (A, BBB, medium
quality investment grade) (BB, B CCC to C (“Junk”) low credit
quality noninvestment grade). (“D” default for nonpayment
of principal and or interest).
Book
Value:
In accounting principal, it is the value at which an asset is carried
on a balance sheet and the cost of an asset minus accumulated depreciation.
(Tangible and Intangible Asset).
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Broker
Dealer:
Is a person or firm that is in the business of buying and selling securities
and operating as both a broker and dealer, depending on the transaction.
Bull
Market:
Is a financial market condition in which security prices are rising or
are expected to rise. It is a term most often used to refer to the stock
market or whatever is tradable, such as bonds, currencies and commodities.
Its related terms are; Bear Market, Fundamental Analysis, Upstream and
Downstream and January Barometer.
Capital:
Though, a vague term in finance, however, it is a financial assets value
of an asset such as cash, machinery and equipment owned by a business
and used for operations and production. (Its
related terms are Capital structure; venture capital; capital. gain and
depreciation).
Capital
Gain:
It is an increase in the value of a capital asset. (e.g. investment or
real estate above its purchase price. Such gain is not realized until
the asset is sold and the profit is realized.
Cashflow:
Is a revenue or expense stream that changes a cash account over a specific
time period.
Cashflow
Statement:
It is a quarterly financial statement a publicly traded company is required
to disclose to the SEC and the public. It provides an aggregate data regarding
all cash inflows a company receives from both its ongoing operations and
its external investment sources as well as all cash outflows that pays
for business activities and investments during a specified business quarter.
Certificate
Of Deposit (CD):
A Bank savings instrument that guarantees to pay to the purchaser interest
and principal of maturity date.
CMO-Collateralized
Mortgage Obligation:
It is a mortgage-backed security that creates separate pools for pass
through rate for different classes of bondholders with varying maturities,
called tranches. The repayments from the pool of pass-through securities
are used to retire the bonds in the precise order specified by the bonds’
prospectus.
Commercial
Paper:
It is an unsecured, short-term debt instrument issued by a corporation,
typically for the financing of accounts receivable, inventories and short-term
liabilities.
Common
Stock:
Is a security that represents ownership in a corporations; holders of
common stocks exercise control by electing a board of directors and voting
on corporate policy.
Consulting:
We bring fresh faces and fresh ideas to achieve fresh results.
Cusip
Number:
An identification number assigned to all stocks and registered securities
by S&P.]
Committee
on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures (CUSIP) overseas the entire
Cusip system.
Debenture:
A debt instrument that is not secure by physical assets or collateral.
Debentures are generally backed only by the credit worthiness and reputation
of the issuer. Both corporations and governments frequently issue these
types of bonds to secure capital.
Derivatives:
It is a financial instrument whose performance is derived, at least in
part, from the performance of an underlying asset, security or index.
Stock options are referred to as derivative due to the changes in relation
to the price movement of the underlying stock. Derivative itself is a
future contract whose value is determine by the fluctuation of the underlying
assets, which could be stocks, bonds, currencies, interest rates, commodities
and market indexes.
Dilution:
A reduction in earnings per share of common stock that occurs as a result
of an issuance of additional shares or through the conversion of convertible
securities into additional common shares.
Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJIA):
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is the world most well known stocks index
that comprised of 30 stocks that represent leading companies in major
industries. Charles H. Dow founded the Dow Jones & Co. in 1896. It
is the oldest stock price measure in continuous use in the world and its
stocks are traded on the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ.
Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA):
Is a regulatory body created after the merger of the National Association
of Securities Dealers and the New York Stock Exchange’s regulation
committee. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority is responsible
for governing business between brokers, dealers and the investing public.
By consolidating these two regulators, FINRA aims to eliminate regulatory
overlap and cost inefficiencies.
Fundamental
Analysis:
It
is a valuation method that measures the intrinsic value of a security
by examining related economic, financial and other qualitative and quantitative
factors. Fundamental analysis study everything that could possibly affect
a security’s value, including macro-economic factors, (such as the
overall economy and industry conditions) and specific factors (such as
the financial condition and management of companies).
The
end goal of fundamental analysis is to produce a value that an investor
can compare with a security is underpriced or overpriced to figure out
whether the security is underpriced or overpriced. Fundamental analysis
is the opposite of technical analysis. TBC.
We
like to extend our profound gratitude to Webster’s New World Finance
and Investment Dictionary and to Cory Jensen and Cory Wagner for the
simplification of the wealth of information provided in their book,
Investopedia, published in 2009.
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