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Mike and the Bike (Posted on 2003-07-26) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Mike wanted to buy a bike, and he found one he liked at $20, so he bought it. The next day, a friend saw it and offered $30 dollars for it so Mike agreed. He later bought it back for $40. Again someone saw it and offered $50 and again Mike sold it. Mike finally rebought the bike for good for $60. Mike then took it to a bike show where a man told him the bike was worth $40.

Deciding to keep it, did Mike gain or lose money on the transactions? Count the bikes worth in the problem.

See The Solution Submitted by Jon    
Rating: 2.2941 (17 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re: real answer - another way to look at it - semantics | Comment 40 of 42 |
(In reply to real answer by Steven Lu)

As Steven Lu states he initially had the bike for $20.  Had he sold it then for $40 he could have GAINED $20. Depending on semantics, if you perceive 'not gaining money when you have opportunity to' as 'losing money' then yes he lost $20.

It is like the stock market. People will say "Oh I just lost $1000 dollars because my stock went down". Well until they sell it they really have not lost the money.


  Posted by jduval on 2007-08-23 03:17:42
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