http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
重化學工業機械의 國産化方案에 關한 硏究 : 特히 窯業에 있어서의 燒成爐, 粉碎機, 排風機, 冷却機, 電氣集마器 自動枰量供給器 等의 製作을 目的으로
趙哲衡,朴碩喆,丁太權,宋鐵,桭達福,金基玉,朴煥奎,趙煥從,朴善鐘,金種一,李茂錫 朝鮮大學校 1977 綜合論文集 Vol.1977 No.-
This is to investigate the posibility of home manufacturing of heavy chemical industry machines, such as rotary kiln, crusher, blower, cooler, electrostatic precipitator and weighing feeder of cement plant. It is concluded that even though we can not make all of them (some of them are made now and some others are going to be made in the near future, some of them are made whole and some others are made partially), we can build or export the cement plant by importing the important machines which we can not make now and by substituting them with ours gradually.
서규석,박선종 한국기업법학회 2003 企業法硏究 Vol.13 No.-
Investors often vest broker with discretionary power any transactions of purchase or sale of securities. And broker receives a commission for its services. The churning of a securities account occurs when a broker abuses his customer's confidence by initiating transactions which, in light of the customer's financial resources and character of the account, are excessive in size or frequency. This activity is undertaken by the broker without regard to the customer's investment interests for the sole purpose of gaining commissions based on the volume of trades. Essentially, churning involves a conflict of interest in which a broker seeks to maximize its remuneration in disregard of the interests of the customer. The broker is most likely to have the control over the customer's account to exploit this conflict of interest when the customer has granted to the broker discretionary authority to trade. Courts generally require a customer to prove three elements to recover under a churning claim: (1) the broker exercised control over the trading in the account; (2) the trading in the account was excessive given the customer's investment objectives; and (3) the broker acted with an intent to defraud or with willful and reckless disregard of the customer's interest. A determination of whether the broker exercised control over the trading in the account involves a subjective analysis based on the totality of the circumstances including such factors as age, experience, and education of the customer. Whether trading was excessive is an issue that must be resolved by an examination of many criteria, including turnover rate, proportion of the account's commissions relative to its size, and the customer's financial objectives and goals. The object of this article in particular is how to measure excessive trading and attempts to establish more coherent guidelines to determine whether excessive trading has occurred in broker-managed accounts.