4,818 research outputs found
Factors Affecting Capital Structure and Stock Prices of Agricultural and Mining Companies
The purpose of this study was to analyze the influence of business risk, asset growth, sales growth, earning per share, and asset structure to capital structure and share price.
This study involved mining and agriculture companies listed on IDX within the period of 2010-2017. The analysis employed eViews 9.
Based on the hypothesis testing, it was found that that business risk, sales growth, and asset structure do not have a significant effect on capital structure. However, asset growth has a significant influence. Furthermore, sales growth and EPS do not have a significant effect on share price, but the asset structure has a significant influence.
This research is a development of previous research by adding earnings per share as an independent variable and covering the period 2010 - 2017 in order to show the most actual conditions.
Company management can make the results of this study a consideration in determining the optimal capital structure. This study only examined the mining and agricultural sectors on the Indonesian stock exchange
Quantum spherical spin models
A recently introduced class of quantum spherical spin models is considered in
detail. Since the spherical constraint already contains a kinetic part, the
Hamiltonian need not have kinetic term. As a consequence, situations with or
without momenta in the Hamiltonian can be described, which may lead to
different symmetry classes. Two models that show this difference are analyzed.
Both models are exactly solvable and their phase diagram is analyzed. A
transversal external field leads to a phase transition line that ends in a
quantum critical point. The two considered symmetries of the Hamiltonian
considered give different critical phenomena in the quantum critical region.
The model with momenta is argued to be analog to the large-N limit of an SU(N)
Heisenberg ferromagnet, and the model without momenta shares the critical
phenomena of an SU(N) Heisenberg antiferromagnet.Comment: 22 page
Bath Assisted Cooling of Spins
A suitable sequence of sharp pulses applied to a spin coupled to a bosonic
bath can cool its state, i.e., increase its polarization or ground state
occupation probability. Starting from an unpolarized state of the spin in
equilibrium with the bath, one can reach very low temperatures or sizeable
polarizations within a time shorter than the decoherence time. Both the bath
and external fields are necessary for the effect which comes from the
backreaction of the spin on the bath. This method can be applied to cool at
once a disordered ensemble of spins. Since the bath is crucial for this
mechanism, the cooling limits are set by the strength of its interaction with
the spin(s).Comment: 4 pages. Accepted in PR
Robustness of cultural communities in an open-ended Axelrod's model
We consider an open-ended set of cultural features in the Axelrod's model of
cultural dissemination. By replacing the features in which a high degree of
consensus is achieved by new ones, we address here an essential ingredient of
societies: the evolution of topics as a result of social dynamics and debate.
Our results show that, once cultural clusters have been formed, the
introduction of new topics into the social debate has little effect on them,
but it does have a significant influence on the cultural overlap. Along with
the Monte-Carlo simulations, we derive and numerically solve an equation for
the stationary cultural overlap based on a mean-field approach. Although the
mean-field analysis reproduces qualitatively the characteristic phase
transition of the Axelrod's model, it underestimates the cultural overlap,
highlighting the role of the local interactions in the Axelrod's dynamics, as
well as the correlations between the different cultural features.Comment: 6 pages and 5 figure
A networked voting rule for democratic representation
We introduce a general framework for exploring the problem of selecting a
committee of representatives with the aim of studying a networked voting rule
based on a decentralized large-scale platform, which can assure a strong
accountability of the elected. The results of our simulations suggest that this
algorithm-based approach is able to obtain a high representativeness for
relatively small committees, performing even better than a classical voting
rule based on a closed list of candidates. We show that a general relation
between committee size and representatives exists in the form of an inverse
square root law and that the normalized committee size approximately scales
with the inverse of the community size, allowing the scalability to very large
populations. These findings are not strongly influenced by the different
networks used to describe the individuals interactions, except for the presence
of few individuals with very high connectivity which can have a marginally
negative effect in the committee selection process.Comment: Submitted for publicatio
Analysis of a networked social algorithm for collective selection of a committee of representatives
A recent work by Hern\'andez et al. introduced a networked voting rule
supported by a trust-based social network, where indications of possible
representatives were based on individuals opinions. Individual contributions
went beyond a simple vote-counting and were based on proxy voting. These
mechanisms generated a high level of representativeness of the selected
committee, weakening the possibility of relations of patronage. By
incorporating the integrity of individuals and its perception, here we address
the question of the trustability of the resulting committee. Our results show
that this voting rule provides high representativeness for small committees
with a high level of integrity. Furthermore, the voting system displays
robustness to a strategic and untruthful application of the voting algorithm.Comment: 7 pages and 8 figures. Submitted for publication. arXiv admin note:
text overlap with arXiv:1801.0539
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