Advertising and IMC Principles and Practice 10th Edition Moriarty Test Bank - Download

February 15, 2018 | Author: farwa | Category: Option (Finance), Financial Markets, Business, Finance (General)
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Advertising and IMC Principles and Practice 10th Edition Moriarty Test Bank - Download full download: https://goo.gl/rj...

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Quintis has confirmed a hedge fund investor pulled the trigger on a $37 million put option, endangering the future of the sandalwood grower. Davidson Kempner elected on Friday to exercise its right to sell 400 hectares of Indian sandalwood trees back to the company at the agreed price of $37 million. It has held that put option since it acquired the plantation interest in 2014 and rolled it as recently as December 15, 2017 as the former TFS negotiated a months-long rescue via recapitalisation. Under the terms of the deal, Davidson Kempner is supposed to see the cash by February 2. But Quintis is suffering liquidity problems and has relied on the goodwill of its bondholders for financing after it missed an interest payment in August 2017. One of the conditions of a forbearance agreement keeping the company operating was that the put option is waived or deferred. That condition now appears to have been breached. "The company is considering its position in light of the exercise notice and will update the market as soon as practicable in relation to its next course of action," Quintis said in an ASX statement.

Shares of Quintis have not traded since May 2017 and it is fighting battles on multiple fronts. It was facing the prospect of an extraordinary general meeting to unseat the three most senior board members including its current CEO, has jousted with growers over governance, engaged in a legal dispute with its founder and former boss Frank Wilson, and is targeted in two separate shareholder class actions. Last week, it partially concluded its 2017 harvest of Indian sandalwood logs fetching the lowest prices in four years. But the presence of Davidson Kempner has loomed as the biggest risk to the company's intensive rescue plan. Davidson Kempner was unmasked as the holder of the option in June 2017 but the liability lurked within Quintis' balance sheet for years. Had Davidson Kempner held onto the put instead of exercising it on the last day of its applicable window on Friday, it was entitled to an escalated $US34 million ($42 million) payout if there were a change of control event at the company, any time before December 31, 2018. When Davidson Kempner rolled the put option in April 2017, it extracted more favourable terms from Quintis by securing an increased strike value. The investor purchased the lots in June 2014 and the put was repeatedly extended, having been initially set to expire on June 30, 2016, when the contract was valued at $30.5 million. That show of faith from the hedge fund followed an attack on Quintis' business model from short-seller Glaucus in March last year. Glaucus published its assertion that the company's stock was worth zero and made the contested claim that aspects of the business were akin to a ponzi scheme. Glaucus' findings rocked the Quintis share price and led to the exit of Mr Wilson, who resigned with the intent to mount a privatisation plan and return to the business. He is a backer of the EGM proposal currently before the board, and remains the company's largest shareholder.

The stock was halted from trading in May 2017 after it emerged that Quintis did not disclose the loss of a high-profile oil supply contract and the market lost confidence in the group.

Before the sun rose on Saturday over a Washington gripped by gridlock, pink hats and poster-board signs already were emerging around the world. The second iteration of the Women's March began in cities such as Rome, where crowds raucously rallied on a clear, sunny morning. "Came for the carbonara, stayed for the resistance," read one of the thousands of signs that protesters carried throughout the day. From Beijing to Buenos Aires, from Denver to Dallas, from California to the Carolinas, hundreds of thousands of activists once again took to the streets to protest the policies and presidency of Donald Trump. The number of participants might not have eclipsed the millions who marched in cities a year ago, but the "resistance" still brought out swarms of people from Los Angeles to Philadelphia. Saturday's march made clear how a movement that began as a protest has evolved. A year of the Trump presidency, coupled with the galvanizing experience of the #MeToo moment, has made activists eager to leave a mark on the country's political system. As a result, a key component of Saturday's demonstrations was an effort to harness the enthusiasm behind the Women's March and translate that into political sway at the polls this fall. Women's March participants in Boston. Women's March participants in Boston. AP "Last year it was about hope. This year it's about strength," said Diane Costello, 67, a retired teacher and member of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, a group that advocates for gun violence prevention, said as she marched through Manhattan. "2018 is going to be a great year to get more progressive people elected," said Julie Biel-Claussen, 59, executive director of the McHenry County Housing Authority in northwest Illinois, as she marched through a chilly Chicago morning.

Outside Washington, one of the biggest demonstrations on Saturday unfolded in New York. Hundreds of protesters streamed out of the subway stop at Broadway and West 72nd Street, heading toward the march route along Central Park West. The atmosphere was festive, with people chanting, "This us what democracy looks like!" Hawkers sold knitted pink "pussy hats," #MeToo buttons and American flags. Actress and comedian Whoopi Goldberg gave a short but fiery speech thanking the thousands of people who came out for the march. "I love the fact that I can't see the end of this," she said as she gestured toward the crowd stretching before her. "We started a movement that's still moving. We are here as women to say we're not going to take it any more." Deanna Santana, 60, of Hamden, Connecticut, a veteran and retired professional in children services, said she came to this year's march to voice her support for immigrants and the right to health care. "My family is half Mexican and half Puerto Rican, and I recently lost my husband to cancer," she said. "I'm doing this for him." Trump, who was celebrating the first anniversary of his inauguration on Saturday, weighed in on the marches from the White House. "Beautiful weather all over our great country, a perfect day for all Women to March," he tweeted. "Get out there now to celebrate the historic milestones and unprecedented economic success and wealth creation that has taken place over the last 12 months. Lowest female unemployment in 18 years!" Nearby, demonstrators gathered near the Lincoln Memorial and along the stillfrozen reflecting pool on the National Mall. The group heard from speakers such as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who told the crowd, "It is women who are holding our democracy together in these dangerous times." Although many protesters were returning for a second year, many came for the first time - some so young they had not been able to vote in the 2016 election.

Madeleine Greenberg, an 18-year-old from Newport Beach, California, went to the march in New York with her three roommates from New York University. She couldn't make it last year because she had high school exams. She said as excited as she was to join the march, she's just as excited to vote in November. "It's really important for people to recognize that every election matters, not just the big presidential election," Greenberg said. "I wasn't able to vote in the last election, so this will be the first election I'll be able to vote." Across the river in Morristown, New Jersey, a line of charter tour buses unloaded marchers behind the town hall, an overflow crowd that Police Chief Peter Demnitz estimated had reached 15,000 by 11:30 a.m., along with some counterprotesters. Organizers say they chose Morristown because of its Revolutionary War history as the winter encampment site of George Washington's army. Last year's event in Trenton drew an estimated 7,500. "If one man can build a wall, one girl can destroy it ALL!" read a large handmade sign being carried by a young girl making her way down South Street. Megan Hertlein, a 13-year-old middle school student from Vernon, New Jersey, took an hour-long train ride with her mother, Patti Hertlein, 44, a paralegal. Megan had stayed up late making a poster with a line borrowed from the musical "Hamilton": "Tell your [sister] that she's gotta rise up!" Nearby, Michael Shapiro, a 55-year-old resident of Belleville, New Jersey, was waving a "Make America Great Again" sign as several marchers tried to hold their signs in front of his. "I'm here to support President Trump," Shapiro said. By late morning, crowds in Chicago stretched from Jackson Street two blocks south to Buckingham Fountain in Grant Park, and clogged Congress Parkway to Michigan Avenue. Organizers claimed to have eclipsed the 250,000 marchers from last year, despite only 40,000 signing up online.

For some young people, the march was less about politics and more about the normalization of sexual harassment and the mistreatment of women during the Trump presidency. Emboldened Jane Bailey, a 15-year-old from the suburb of Indian Head Park, was marching because she said her rights have been threatened. She and her friends said since Trump was elected, boys at their high school have become more emboldened to bully girls online. "It really made me angry and want to fight," she said. The majority of signs protesters carried through Chicago focused on the Republican Party and Trump. Among them: "Ikea has better cabinets," "The GOP is responsible for making America hate again" and "GOP, OMG, WTF." At last year's march, Dana Hundrieser, 56, of Chicago was not allowed to carry a sign that displayed her political views because she was a federal employee. But she ended her 34-year career in April, when she retired from the Internal Revenue Service. She said Trump's election led to her decision to walk away from a job where she prosecuted large corporate tax cases. "I thought, 'It's not going to be better,' " she said. Her sign thanked late-night comedians - including Jimmy Kimmel and Trevor Noah - because she said they have provided "huge relief" since last January. "I never would have guessed my mental health depended on these people," she said.

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