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Q566908 Ética na Administração Pública

O irmão do Superintendente do Banco T é responsável pelo relacionamento com os fornecedores. Por sugestão do superintendente, o irmão funda uma sociedade empresária (Sociedade X) com seu primo, para fornecer produtos e serviços necessários ao desenvolvimento regular da instituição financeira. Após as devidas formalizações jurídicas, a Sociedade X passa a ser fornecedora exclusiva do Banco T, e os antigos fornecedores passam a atuar através da intermediação da Sociedade X. Os preços praticados não sofreram valorização, sendo o lucro dessa Sociedade retirado das comissões pagas pelos antigos fornecedores.

Nos termos do Código de Ética do Banco do Brasil, o narrado

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Q566907 Atendimento (Escriturário)

Uma cultura corporativa pode ser compreendida quanto ao fato de serem ambientalmente adaptativas ou não adaptativas, apresentando para cada um dos tipos tanto comportamentos visíveis, quanto valores expressos.

Os gerentes de agência bancária cuja cultura é não adaptativa apresentam comportamentos nos quais

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Q566905 Atendimento (Escriturário)

O Pacto Global das Nações Unidas (UNGC) desempenha um relevante papel para estabelecer parâmetros centrais para o desenvolvimento de ações relacionadas à gestão da sustentabilidade, dentre outras dimensões.

É um princípio do UNGC, para as empresas, relacionado à dimensão sustentabilidade o(a)

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Q566904 Ética na Administração Pública

Um indivíduo está buscando inspiração para prosseguir nos seus estudos e se depara com um pensamento aristotélico assim desenvolvido: trata-se do produto dos usos e costumes; ela não existe nos homens naturalmente, pois nada do que é natural se adquire pelo costume.

Nesse caso, a referência do filósofo grego está relacionada à

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Q566903 Conhecimentos Bancários

Grande parte das nações indica apenas a meta na qual a autoridade monetária do país está mirando ao fixar os juros básicos. Outras estabelecem um intervalo de tolerância, [...], ao mesmo tempo em que sete países adotam o sistema igual ao do Brasil (meta central e intervalo de tolerância para cima e para baixo).

MARTELLO, A. Goveno fixa meta central de inflação... / Globo.com/G1, Brasília, 26 jun. 2015. Disponível em:<http://www.g1.globo.com/economia/noticia/20150/06/governo-fixa-meta-central-de-inflamacao...> . Acesso em: 13 ago. 2015. Adaptado

O intervalo de tolerância da meta de inflação, adotado pelo governo para 2017, sofreu uma alteração em junho de 2015.

A alteração foi no


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Q566902 Conhecimentos Bancários
As previsões para o desempenho da economia brasileira neste ano e no próximo continuam se deteriorando. As cerca de cem instituições que consultadas para o boletim Focus, divulgado pelo Banco Central (BC), projetam uma queda maior para Produto Interno Bruto (PIB) em 2015 [...]

Quanto à inflação, os analistas consultados pelo BC aguardam uma alta de 9,23% para o IPCA neste calendário, acima da taxa estimada antes, de 9,15% .

CAPRIOLI, G. Mercado vê inflação de 9,23% em 2015 e economia mais contraída. Valor Econômico, São Paulo, 27 jul. 2015. Disponível em: <http://www.valor.com.br/brasil/4150608/mercado-ve-inflacao-de-923-em-2015-e-economia-mais-contraida>. Acesso em: 10 ago. 2015. Adaptado.

Nesse contexto, representa uma medida efetiva que poderá ser adotada para conter a alta inflacionária:



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Q566901 Conhecimentos Bancários

A agência de classificação de risco Standard & Poor’s (S&P) rebaixou nesta sexta-feira os ratings em escala nacional de quatro instituições financeiras no Brasil [...]. As notas de 22 instituições financeiras foram afirmadas pela agência. Na visão da agência, as medidas de ajuste fiscal e aperto monetário adotadas pelo governo brasileiro “vão pressionar a renda disponível das famílias e resultar em uma contração da economia que, na nossa visão, vai enfraquecer a qualidade dos ativos do sistema bancário, [acentuar] as perdas de crédito e [reduzir] a rentabilidade”.

MARQUES, Felipe. S&P rebaixa notas de crédito de quatro bancos brasileiros. Valor Econômico, São Paulo, 17 abr. 2015. Disponível em:<http://www.valor.com.br/financas/4012780/sp-rebaixa-notas-de-credito-de-quatro-bancos-brasileiros> . Acesso em: 18 ago. 2015. Adaptado.

No contexto da notícia em pauta, para minorar os impactos previstos pela Standard & Poor’s sobre a rentabilidade de determinado banco com atuação em escala nacional, a recomendação adequada da diretoria aos gerentes das agências é

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Q566900 Conhecimentos Bancários

Semana passada, através da Resolução n° 4.410, de 28.05.2015, o Governo Federal, por meio do Banco Central, deu os primeiros passos para modificar [...] dois dos melhores investimentos em renda fixa atualmente: as Letras de Crédito do Agronegócio (LCAs) e as Letras de Crédito Imobiliário (LCIs).

Disponível em:<http://www.valoresreais.com/2015/06/01/...> .

Acesso em: 17 ago. 2015. Adaptado.

A Letra de Crédito Imobiliário (LCI), por possuir lastros em créditos imobiliários, representa uma importante fonte de financiamento e recursos ao setor. É, ainda, um título muito demandado por pessoas físicas por contar com a isenção do Imposto de Renda.

Recentemente, foram alteradas as regras para aquisição desse produto, dentre as quais a(o)

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Q566899 Conhecimentos Bancários

De acordo com a Figura abaixo, observa-se que o mercado financeiro está basicamente segmentado em quatro grandes mercados: mercado monetário, mercado de crédito, mercado de câmbio e mercado de capitais.

Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Caracteriza um mercado de capitais ser o

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Q566895 Matemática Financeira

Uma instituição financeira efetua o desconto de um título de valor de face de R$ 25.000,00 dois meses antes do vencimento, utilizando taxa de desconto simples bancário (por fora) de 9% ao mês. A instituição exige o pagamento de 2% do valor de face do título como taxa de administração no momento de desconto do título.

A taxa bimestral de juros realmente cobrada é de

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Q566893 Matemática
Fábio possui certa quantia aplicada em um fundo de investimentos. Pensando em fazer uma viagem, Fábio considera duas possibilidades: resgatar 1/5 ou 1/4 da quantia aplicada. Optando pelo resgate maior, Fábio terá R$ 960,00 a mais para arcar com os custos de sua viagem.

Qual é, em reais, o saldo do fundo de investimentos de Fábio? 

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Q566892 Matemática

Um investimento rende à taxa de juros compostos de 12% ao ano com capitalização trimestral.

Para obter um rendimento de R$ 609,00 daqui a 6 meses, deve-se investir, hoje, em reais,

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Q566890 Matemática
Um cliente foi a um banco tomar um empréstimo de 100 mil reais, no regime de juros compostos, a serem pagos após 3 meses por meio de um único pagamento. Para conseguir o dinheiro, foram apresentadas as seguintes condições:

I - taxa de juros de 5% ao mês, incidindo sobre o saldo devedor acumulado do mês anterior;

II - impostos mais taxas que poderão ser financiados juntamente com os 100 mil reais.

Ao fazer a simulação, o gerente informou que o valor total de quitação após os 3 meses seria de 117.500 reais.

O valor mais próximo do custo real efetivo mensal, ou seja, a taxa mensal equivalente desse empréstimo, comparando o que pegou com o que pagou, é de
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Q566889 Matemática

A empresa ALFA tomou um empréstimo no valor de 100 mil reais, em janeiro de 2015, a uma taxa de juros de 12% ao ano, no regime de juros compostos, a serem pagos em 3 parcelas anuais, consecutivas e postecipadas. A primeira parcela, a ser paga em janeiro de 2016, corresponderá a 20% do valor do empréstimo; a segunda parcela, um ano após a primeira, será igual a 30% do valor do empréstimo, e a terceira parcela a ser paga, em janeiro de 2018, liquidará a dívida.

A quantia, em milhares de reais, que mais se aproxima do valor da terceira parcela é igual a

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Q566888 Português

                       

A concordância do verbo destacado obedece ao que determina a norma-padrão da Língua Portuguesa em:
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Q566887 Português

                       

A colocação do pronome destacado atende às exigências da norma-padrão da Língua Portuguesa em:
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Q566881 Português

                       

O sinal indicativo da crase é obrigatório, de acordo com a norma-padrão da Língua Portuguesa, na palavra destacada em:

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Q485566 Inglês
Why Millennials Don’t Like Credit Cards
by Holly Johnson
Cheap, easy credit might have been tempting to young people in the past, but not to today’s millennials. According to a recent survey by Bankrate of over 1,161 consumers, 63% of adults ages 18 to 29 live without a credit card of any kind, and another 23% only carry one card.
The Impact of the Great Recession
Research shows that the environment millennials grew up in might have an impact on their finances.
Unlike other generations, millennials lived through economic hardships during a time when their adult lives were beginning. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Great Recession caused millennials to stray from historic patterns when it comes to purchasing a home and having children, and a fear of credit cards could be another symptom of the economic environment of the times.
And there’s much data when it comes to proving that millennials grew up on shaky economic ground.
The Pew Research Center reports that 36% of millennials lived at home with their parents in 2012. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for people ages 16 to 24 was 14.2% (more than twice the national rate) in early 2014, according to the BLS. With those figures, it’s no wonder that millennials are skittish when it comes to credit cards. It makes sense that young people would be afraid to take on any new forms of debt.
A Generation Plagued with Student Loan Debt
But the Great Recession isn’t the only reason millennials could be fearful of credit. Many experts believe that the nation’s student loan debt level might be related to it. According to the Institute for College Access & Success, 71% of millennials (or 1.3 million students) who graduated from college in 2012 left school with at least some student loan debt, with the average amount owed around $29,400.
With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card
debt to the pile. After all, many adults with student loan debt need to make payments for years, and even decades.
How Millennials Can Build Credit Without a Credit Card
The fact that millennials are smart enough to avoid credit card debt is a good thing, but that doesn’t mean the decision has its drawbacks. According to Experian, most adults need a positive credit history in order to qualify for an auto loan or mortgage. Even worse, having no credit history is almost as bad as having a negative credit history in some cases.
Still, there are plenty of ways millennials can build a credit history without a credit card. A few tips:
    • Make payments on installment loans on time. Whether it’s a car loan, student loan or personal loan, make sure to mail in those payments on time and pay at least the minimum amount required.
    • Put at least one household or utility bill in your name. Paying your utility or household bills on time can help you build a positive credit history.
    • Get a secured credit card. Unlike traditional credit cards, the funds secured credit cards offer are backed by money the user deposits.
Signing up for a secured card is one way to build a positive credit history without any risk.
The fact that millennials are leery of credit cards is probably a good thing in the long run. After all, not having a credit card is the perfect way to stay out of credit card debt. Even though it might be harder to build a credit history without credit cards, the vast majority of millennials have decided that the plastic just isn’t worth it.
Available at: <http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/ my-money/2014/11/04/why-millennials-dont-like-credit-cards>
The sentence of the text “With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card debt to the pile” conveys the idea that millenials have

In the sentence of the text “Still, there are plenty of ways millennials can build a credit history without a credit card” (lines 52 – 53), the quantifier plenty of can be replaced, with no change in meaning, by
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Q485565 Inglês
Why Millennials Don’t Like Credit Cards
by Holly Johnson
Cheap, easy credit might have been tempting to young people in the past, but not to today’s millennials. According to a recent survey by Bankrate of over 1,161 consumers, 63% of adults ages 18 to 29 live without a credit card of any kind, and another 23% only carry one card.
The Impact of the Great Recession
Research shows that the environment millennials grew up in might have an impact on their finances.
Unlike other generations, millennials lived through economic hardships during a time when their adult lives were beginning. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Great Recession caused millennials to stray from historic patterns when it comes to purchasing a home and having children, and a fear of credit cards could be another symptom of the economic environment of the times.
And there’s much data when it comes to proving that millennials grew up on shaky economic ground.
The Pew Research Center reports that 36% of millennials lived at home with their parents in 2012. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for people ages 16 to 24 was 14.2% (more than twice the national rate) in early 2014, according to the BLS. With those figures, it’s no wonder that millennials are skittish when it comes to credit cards. It makes sense that young people would be afraid to take on any new forms of debt.
A Generation Plagued with Student Loan Debt
But the Great Recession isn’t the only reason millennials could be fearful of credit. Many experts believe that the nation’s student loan debt level might be related to it. According to the Institute for College Access & Success, 71% of millennials (or 1.3 million students) who graduated from college in 2012 left school with at least some student loan debt, with the average amount owed around $29,400.
With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card
debt to the pile. After all, many adults with student loan debt need to make payments for years, and even decades.
How Millennials Can Build Credit Without a Credit Card
The fact that millennials are smart enough to avoid credit card debt is a good thing, but that doesn’t mean the decision has its drawbacks. According to Experian, most adults need a positive credit history in order to qualify for an auto loan or mortgage. Even worse, having no credit history is almost as bad as having a negative credit history in some cases.
Still, there are plenty of ways millennials can build a credit history without a credit card. A few tips:
    • Make payments on installment loans on time. Whether it’s a car loan, student loan or personal loan, make sure to mail in those payments on time and pay at least the minimum amount required.
    • Put at least one household or utility bill in your name. Paying your utility or household bills on time can help you build a positive credit history.
    • Get a secured credit card. Unlike traditional credit cards, the funds secured credit cards offer are backed by money the user deposits.
Signing up for a secured card is one way to build a positive credit history without any risk.
The fact that millennials are leery of credit cards is probably a good thing in the long run. After all, not having a credit card is the perfect way to stay out of credit card debt. Even though it might be harder to build a credit history without credit cards, the vast majority of millennials have decided that the plastic just isn’t worth it.
Available at: <http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/ my-money/2014/11/04/why-millennials-dont-like-credit-cards>
The sentence of the text “With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card debt to the pile” conveys the idea that millenials have

The sentence of the text “With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card debt to the pile” (lines 38 – 40) conveys the idea that millenials have
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Q485564 Inglês
Why Millennials Don’t Like Credit Cards
by Holly Johnson
Cheap, easy credit might have been tempting to young people in the past, but not to today’s millennials. According to a recent survey by Bankrate of over 1,161 consumers, 63% of adults ages 18 to 29 live without a credit card of any kind, and another 23% only carry one card.
The Impact of the Great Recession
Research shows that the environment millennials grew up in might have an impact on their finances.
Unlike other generations, millennials lived through economic hardships during a time when their adult lives were beginning. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Great Recession caused millennials to stray from historic patterns when it comes to purchasing a home and having children, and a fear of credit cards could be another symptom of the economic environment of the times.
And there’s much data when it comes to proving that millennials grew up on shaky economic ground.
The Pew Research Center reports that 36% of millennials lived at home with their parents in 2012. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for people ages 16 to 24 was 14.2% (more than twice the national rate) in early 2014, according to the BLS. With those figures, it’s no wonder that millennials are skittish when it comes to credit cards. It makes sense that young people would be afraid to take on any new forms of debt.
A Generation Plagued with Student Loan Debt
But the Great Recession isn’t the only reason millennials could be fearful of credit. Many experts believe that the nation’s student loan debt level might be related to it. According to the Institute for College Access & Success, 71% of millennials (or 1.3 million students) who graduated from college in 2012 left school with at least some student loan debt, with the average amount owed around $29,400.
With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card
debt to the pile. After all, many adults with student loan debt need to make payments for years, and even decades.
How Millennials Can Build Credit Without a Credit Card
The fact that millennials are smart enough to avoid credit card debt is a good thing, but that doesn’t mean the decision has its drawbacks. According to Experian, most adults need a positive credit history in order to qualify for an auto loan or mortgage. Even worse, having no credit history is almost as bad as having a negative credit history in some cases.
Still, there are plenty of ways millennials can build a credit history without a credit card. A few tips:
    • Make payments on installment loans on time. Whether it’s a car loan, student loan or personal loan, make sure to mail in those payments on time and pay at least the minimum amount required.
    • Put at least one household or utility bill in your name. Paying your utility or household bills on time can help you build a positive credit history.
    • Get a secured credit card. Unlike traditional credit cards, the funds secured credit cards offer are backed by money the user deposits.
Signing up for a secured card is one way to build a positive credit history without any risk.
The fact that millennials are leery of credit cards is probably a good thing in the long run. After all, not having a credit card is the perfect way to stay out of credit card debt. Even though it might be harder to build a credit history without credit cards, the vast majority of millennials have decided that the plastic just isn’t worth it.
Available at: <http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/ my-money/2014/11/04/why-millennials-dont-like-credit-cards>
The sentence of the text “With so much debt already under their belts, millennials are worried about adding any credit card debt to the pile” conveys the idea that millenials have

The word skittish, in the sentence of the text “With those figures, it’s no wonder that millennials are skittish when it comes to credit cards” (lines 24 – 26), can be replaced, with no change in meaning, by
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Respostas
3301: A
3302: C
3303: E
3304: B
3305: A
3306: A
3307: C
3308: E
3309: B
3310: B
3311: B
3312: B
3313: A
3314: E
3315: E
3316: B
3317: C
3318: E
3319: D
3320: A