Foram encontradas 70 questões.
Disciplina: Direito Empresarial (Comercial)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BNDES
Uma sociedade empresária postulou a um banco de desenvolvimento empréstimo vinculado a normas especiais para a área de inovação empresarial, apresentando todos os balanços existentes que revelavam lucros em ascensão. Ao analisar a postulação, a área técnica apresentou exigências quanto à comprovação da responsabilidade corporativa no plano social.
Em conformidade com as práticas ASG, essa sociedade empresária deverá apresentar elementos que comprovem
Provas
O departamento jurídico de um banco constatou que determinada sociedade empresária, cliente assídua, com várias operações financeiras em curso, estaria cumprindo, com atraso, os pagamentos vinculados a diversos contratos. Diante disso, designa advogado para contatar a devedora, notadamente seus advogados, para analisar a situação e apresentar possíveis soluções, com o intuito de resolver o problema, sugerindo acordo aos credores reconhecidos. ,
Nos termos da Lei nº11.101/2005, é possível a recuperação extrajudicial que tenha a seguinte característica:
Provas
Um advogado recebeu convite do chefe de departamento de um banco para organizar fundo de investimento e observar as regras instituídas pela legislação sobre o tema, com o objetivo de levantar fundos para propiciar desenvolvimento econômico para vários setores vitais da economia.
Nos termos da Lei nº 13.874/2019, a condição suficiente para garantir a sua publicidade e a oponibilidade de efeitos em relação a terceiros consiste na elaboração dos regulamentos dos referidos fundos e o seu
Provas
Disciplina: Direito Empresarial (Comercial)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BNDES
Dois empreendedores resolvem constituir sociedade vinculada a novas tecnologias e realizam prospecção sobre possíveis financiamentos. Após consultar advogado, o mesmo sugeriu que, diante do negócio apresentado, deveriam constituir sociedade para criar um CNPJ, o que facilitaria a obtenção de empréstimos para atividades inovadoras. Com o sucesso da empreitada e o aumento do volume de contratos, recebem sugestão de constituir sociedade por ações.
Nos termos da Lei nº 6.404/1976, as ações, conforme a natureza dos direitos ou vantagens que confiram a seus titulares, são ordinárias, preferenciais, ou de
Provas
Disciplina: Direito Empresarial (Comercial)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BNDES
Um advogado, integrante de equipe vinculada a um banco de fomento que atua em diversos segmentos econômicos, foi designado para representar a instituição financeira em companhia da área industrial. Após marcada a assembleia geral da sociedade, os sócios encaminharam várias propostas para análise.
Nos termos da Lei n° 6.404/1976, cabe à assembleia geral
Provas
Regeneration: Why businesses are moving beyond sustainability and thinking about regrowth
1 Sustainability is out, regeneration is in. According
to a 2019 survey by ReGenFriends, nearly 80%
of US consumers prefer “regenerative” brands to
“sustainable” brands. Gen Y and Z consumers find
the notion of “sustainability” too passive. They want
to buy from regenerative businesses that embody
and practice the three noble qualities found in all
living systems: renewal, restoration and growth.
Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating
a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.
2 Sustainable brands strive to just do less harm
to the planet. Regenerative businesses go beyond
sustainability and fight to do more good to society
and the planet. Specifically, regenerative firms seek
to boost the health and vitality of people, places and
the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner.
In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to
suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve
far better financial performance and impact than their
sustainability-focused peers.
3 In the Amazon, we find an example of how
regeneration works in practice. The murumuru is
a palm tree that grows in the Amazon forest. The
Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree
down and use its wood to produce and sell items
such as brooms. As it happens, we can obtain a
highly moisturizing butter from the seeds of this palm
tree, which is very efficient at repairing and renewing
damaged hair. The value of these seeds is seven
times greater than that of this palm tree’s wood. As
such, people in the Amazon can generate seven times
more economic value by preserving the murumuru
tree than cutting it. Businesses are taking notice.
Natura, a Brazilian cosmetics firm, is collaborating
with Amazonian Indigenous people to ethically source
murumuru butter for a variety of hair care products,
using their traditional farming techniques. This
mutually beneficial collaboration means indigenous
communities are regenerating themselves and the
planet along three complementary dimensions:
economic, socio-cultural and environmental.
4 But it’s not just natural ecosystems that can benefit
from prioritizing regeneration. Human ecosystems,
too, stand to benefit. Regenerative businesses also
strive to boost the health and vitality of individuals
and communities, especially in aging societies.
Take Japan, a country that is aging rapidly. 30% of
its population is already over 65. The average life
expectancy of its citizens is 84 years. Sadly, longevity
doesn’t promise vitality.
5 Meiji Yasuda is Japan’s oldest largest life
insurance firm. During Covid-19, the firm realized that
its true mission should be to boost people’s vitality
rather than protect them from death. In April 2020,
the firm launched a 10-year plan to evolve the life
insurance firm into a life regeneration company. This
strategy calls for prolonging the healthy life expectancy
of its clients and vitalizing local communities across
Japan where the firm operates. Meiji Yasuda is
investing in new partnerships and technologies
to promote preventive healthcare in Japan. For
instance, it teamed up with the National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center in Japan to develop new digital
tools that can help its clients anticipate and prevent
cardiovascular problems.
6 To get buy-in from internal and external
stakeholders, businesses should explain how
their triple regeneration strategy – the synergistic
revitalization of people, places and the planet –
could yield great economic and social value for all
stakeholders. Visionary food companies and apparel
makers like Danone, General Mills, Eileen Fisher,
Illycaffè and Patagonia are investing in regenerative
agriculture. They are doing it not only because it
drastically reduces water use and emissions, boosts
soil fertility and improves animal welfare, but also
because it enhances the livelihoods of financially-
challenged farmers.
7 Promising place-based economic development
initiatives exist in disadvantaged communities
across the US that use a holistic approach to
regenerate people, places and the biodiversity
altogether. By joining these initiatives, businesses
can accelerate their own transition to a regenerative
model. For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a
multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize
abandoned coal mines and restore the natural
ecosystems in Appalachia. RI is supporting the
Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative, while
also creating jobs and economic opportunities in the
region.
8 Given the climate urgency, it is time that
businesses think and act beyond sustainability. They
must evolve into regenerative businesses that renew,
restore and grow people, places and the planet
synergistically.
Available at: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/06/businesses-are-moving-beyond-sustainability-welcome-to-the-age-ofregeneration/. Retrieved on: Jun 14, 2024. Adapted.
In the fragment of paragraph 7 “For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize abandoned coal mines and restore the natural ecosystems in Appalachia”, the term “for instance” establishes cohesion by means of indicating a/an
Provas
Regeneration: Why businesses are moving beyond sustainability and thinking about regrowth
1 Sustainability is out, regeneration is in. According
to a 2019 survey by ReGenFriends, nearly 80%
of US consumers prefer “regenerative” brands to
“sustainable” brands. Gen Y and Z consumers find
the notion of “sustainability” too passive. They want
to buy from regenerative businesses that embody
and practice the three noble qualities found in all
living systems: renewal, restoration and growth.
Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating
a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.
2 Sustainable brands strive to just do less harm
to the planet. Regenerative businesses go beyond
sustainability and fight to do more good to society
and the planet. Specifically, regenerative firms seek
to boost the health and vitality of people, places and
the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner.
In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to
suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve
far better financial performance and impact than their
sustainability-focused peers.
3 In the Amazon, we find an example of how
regeneration works in practice. The murumuru is
a palm tree that grows in the Amazon forest. The
Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree
down and use its wood to produce and sell items
such as brooms. As it happens, we can obtain a
highly moisturizing butter from the seeds of this palm
tree, which is very efficient at repairing and renewing
damaged hair. The value of these seeds is seven
times greater than that of this palm tree’s wood. As
such, people in the Amazon can generate seven times
more economic value by preserving the murumuru
tree than cutting it. Businesses are taking notice.
Natura, a Brazilian cosmetics firm, is collaborating
with Amazonian Indigenous people to ethically source
murumuru butter for a variety of hair care products,
using their traditional farming techniques. This
mutually beneficial collaboration means indigenous
communities are regenerating themselves and the
planet along three complementary dimensions:
economic, socio-cultural and environmental.
4 But it’s not just natural ecosystems that can benefit
from prioritizing regeneration. Human ecosystems,
too, stand to benefit. Regenerative businesses also
strive to boost the health and vitality of individuals
and communities, especially in aging societies.
Take Japan, a country that is aging rapidly. 30% of
its population is already over 65. The average life
expectancy of its citizens is 84 years. Sadly, longevity
doesn’t promise vitality.
5 Meiji Yasuda is Japan’s oldest largest life
insurance firm. During Covid-19, the firm realized that
its true mission should be to boost people’s vitality
rather than protect them from death. In April 2020,
the firm launched a 10-year plan to evolve the life
insurance firm into a life regeneration company. This
strategy calls for prolonging the healthy life expectancy
of its clients and vitalizing local communities across
Japan where the firm operates. Meiji Yasuda is
investing in new partnerships and technologies
to promote preventive healthcare in Japan. For
instance, it teamed up with the National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center in Japan to develop new digital
tools that can help its clients anticipate and prevent
cardiovascular problems.
6 To get buy-in from internal and external
stakeholders, businesses should explain how
their triple regeneration strategy – the synergistic
revitalization of people, places and the planet –
could yield great economic and social value for all
stakeholders. Visionary food companies and apparel
makers like Danone, General Mills, Eileen Fisher,
Illycaffè and Patagonia are investing in regenerative
agriculture. They are doing it not only because it
drastically reduces water use and emissions, boosts
soil fertility and improves animal welfare, but also
because it enhances the livelihoods of financially-
challenged farmers.
7 Promising place-based economic development
initiatives exist in disadvantaged communities
across the US that use a holistic approach to
regenerate people, places and the biodiversity
altogether. By joining these initiatives, businesses
can accelerate their own transition to a regenerative
model. For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a
multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize
abandoned coal mines and restore the natural
ecosystems in Appalachia. RI is supporting the
Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative, while
also creating jobs and economic opportunities in the
region.
8 Given the climate urgency, it is time that
businesses think and act beyond sustainability. They
must evolve into regenerative businesses that renew,
restore and grow people, places and the planet
synergistically.
Available at: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/06/businesses-are-moving-beyond-sustainability-welcome-to-the-age-ofregeneration/. Retrieved on: Jun 14, 2024. Adapted.
In the section of paragraph 3 “The Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree down and use its wood to produce and sell items such as brooms.”, the pronoun “its” refers to
Provas
Regeneration: Why businesses are moving beyond sustainability and thinking about regrowth
1 Sustainability is out, regeneration is in. According
to a 2019 survey by ReGenFriends, nearly 80%
of US consumers prefer “regenerative” brands to
“sustainable” brands. Gen Y and Z consumers find
the notion of “sustainability” too passive. They want
to buy from regenerative businesses that embody
and practice the three noble qualities found in all
living systems: renewal, restoration and growth.
Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating
a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.
2 Sustainable brands strive to just do less harm
to the planet. Regenerative businesses go beyond
sustainability and fight to do more good to society
and the planet. Specifically, regenerative firms seek
to boost the health and vitality of people, places and
the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner.
In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to
suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve
far better financial performance and impact than their
sustainability-focused peers.
3 In the Amazon, we find an example of how
regeneration works in practice. The murumuru is
a palm tree that grows in the Amazon forest. The
Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree
down and use its wood to produce and sell items
such as brooms. As it happens, we can obtain a
highly moisturizing butter from the seeds of this palm
tree, which is very efficient at repairing and renewing
damaged hair. The value of these seeds is seven
times greater than that of this palm tree’s wood. As
such, people in the Amazon can generate seven times
more economic value by preserving the murumuru
tree than cutting it. Businesses are taking notice.
Natura, a Brazilian cosmetics firm, is collaborating
with Amazonian Indigenous people to ethically source
murumuru butter for a variety of hair care products,
using their traditional farming techniques. This
mutually beneficial collaboration means indigenous
communities are regenerating themselves and the
planet along three complementary dimensions:
economic, socio-cultural and environmental.
4 But it’s not just natural ecosystems that can benefit
from prioritizing regeneration. Human ecosystems,
too, stand to benefit. Regenerative businesses also
strive to boost the health and vitality of individuals
and communities, especially in aging societies.
Take Japan, a country that is aging rapidly. 30% of
its population is already over 65. The average life
expectancy of its citizens is 84 years. Sadly, longevity
doesn’t promise vitality.
5 Meiji Yasuda is Japan’s oldest largest life
insurance firm. During Covid-19, the firm realized that
its true mission should be to boost people’s vitality
rather than protect them from death. In April 2020,
the firm launched a 10-year plan to evolve the life
insurance firm into a life regeneration company. This
strategy calls for prolonging the healthy life expectancy
of its clients and vitalizing local communities across
Japan where the firm operates. Meiji Yasuda is
investing in new partnerships and technologies
to promote preventive healthcare in Japan. For
instance, it teamed up with the National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center in Japan to develop new digital
tools that can help its clients anticipate and prevent
cardiovascular problems.
6 To get buy-in from internal and external
stakeholders, businesses should explain how
their triple regeneration strategy – the synergistic
revitalization of people, places and the planet –
could yield great economic and social value for all
stakeholders. Visionary food companies and apparel
makers like Danone, General Mills, Eileen Fisher,
Illycaffè and Patagonia are investing in regenerative
agriculture. They are doing it not only because it
drastically reduces water use and emissions, boosts
soil fertility and improves animal welfare, but also
because it enhances the livelihoods of financially-
challenged farmers.
7 Promising place-based economic development
initiatives exist in disadvantaged communities
across the US that use a holistic approach to
regenerate people, places and the biodiversity
altogether. By joining these initiatives, businesses
can accelerate their own transition to a regenerative
model. For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a
multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize
abandoned coal mines and restore the natural
ecosystems in Appalachia. RI is supporting the
Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative, while
also creating jobs and economic opportunities in the
region.
8 Given the climate urgency, it is time that
businesses think and act beyond sustainability. They
must evolve into regenerative businesses that renew,
restore and grow people, places and the planet
synergistically.
Available at: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/06/businesses-are-moving-beyond-sustainability-welcome-to-the-age-ofregeneration/. Retrieved on: Jun 14, 2024. Adapted.
In the fragment of paragraph 2 “regenerative firms seek to boost the health and vitality of people, places and the planet simultaneously”, the term “simultaneously” means
Provas
Regeneration: Why businesses are moving beyond sustainability and thinking about regrowth
1 Sustainability is out, regeneration is in. According
to a 2019 survey by ReGenFriends, nearly 80%
of US consumers prefer “regenerative” brands to
“sustainable” brands. Gen Y and Z consumers find
the notion of “sustainability” too passive. They want
to buy from regenerative businesses that embody
and practice the three noble qualities found in all
living systems: renewal, restoration and growth.
Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating
a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.
2 Sustainable brands strive to just do less harm
to the planet. Regenerative businesses go beyond
sustainability and fight to do more good to society
and the planet. Specifically, regenerative firms seek
to boost the health and vitality of people, places and
the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner.
In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to
suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve
far better financial performance and impact than their
sustainability-focused peers.
3 In the Amazon, we find an example of how
regeneration works in practice. The murumuru is
a palm tree that grows in the Amazon forest. The
Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree
down and use its wood to produce and sell items
such as brooms. As it happens, we can obtain a
highly moisturizing butter from the seeds of this palm
tree, which is very efficient at repairing and renewing
damaged hair. The value of these seeds is seven
times greater than that of this palm tree’s wood. As
such, people in the Amazon can generate seven times
more economic value by preserving the murumuru
tree than cutting it. Businesses are taking notice.
Natura, a Brazilian cosmetics firm, is collaborating
with Amazonian Indigenous people to ethically source
murumuru butter for a variety of hair care products,
using their traditional farming techniques. This
mutually beneficial collaboration means indigenous
communities are regenerating themselves and the
planet along three complementary dimensions:
economic, socio-cultural and environmental.
4 But it’s not just natural ecosystems that can benefit
from prioritizing regeneration. Human ecosystems,
too, stand to benefit. Regenerative businesses also
strive to boost the health and vitality of individuals
and communities, especially in aging societies.
Take Japan, a country that is aging rapidly. 30% of
its population is already over 65. The average life
expectancy of its citizens is 84 years. Sadly, longevity
doesn’t promise vitality.
5 Meiji Yasuda is Japan’s oldest largest life
insurance firm. During Covid-19, the firm realized that
its true mission should be to boost people’s vitality
rather than protect them from death. In April 2020,
the firm launched a 10-year plan to evolve the life
insurance firm into a life regeneration company. This
strategy calls for prolonging the healthy life expectancy
of its clients and vitalizing local communities across
Japan where the firm operates. Meiji Yasuda is
investing in new partnerships and technologies
to promote preventive healthcare in Japan. For
instance, it teamed up with the National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center in Japan to develop new digital
tools that can help its clients anticipate and prevent
cardiovascular problems.
6 To get buy-in from internal and external
stakeholders, businesses should explain how
their triple regeneration strategy – the synergistic
revitalization of people, places and the planet –
could yield great economic and social value for all
stakeholders. Visionary food companies and apparel
makers like Danone, General Mills, Eileen Fisher,
Illycaffè and Patagonia are investing in regenerative
agriculture. They are doing it not only because it
drastically reduces water use and emissions, boosts
soil fertility and improves animal welfare, but also
because it enhances the livelihoods of financially-
challenged farmers.
7 Promising place-based economic development
initiatives exist in disadvantaged communities
across the US that use a holistic approach to
regenerate people, places and the biodiversity
altogether. By joining these initiatives, businesses
can accelerate their own transition to a regenerative
model. For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a
multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize
abandoned coal mines and restore the natural
ecosystems in Appalachia. RI is supporting the
Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative, while
also creating jobs and economic opportunities in the
region.
8 Given the climate urgency, it is time that
businesses think and act beyond sustainability. They
must evolve into regenerative businesses that renew,
restore and grow people, places and the planet
synergistically.
Available at: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/06/businesses-are-moving-beyond-sustainability-welcome-to-the-age-ofregeneration/. Retrieved on: Jun 14, 2024. Adapted.
In the sentence of paragraph 1 “Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.”, the words “deeper” and “wider” are formed by the addition of a suffix.
The same suffix is found in
Provas
Regeneration: Why businesses are moving beyond sustainability and thinking about regrowth
1 Sustainability is out, regeneration is in. According
to a 2019 survey by ReGenFriends, nearly 80%
of US consumers prefer “regenerative” brands to
“sustainable” brands. Gen Y and Z consumers find
the notion of “sustainability” too passive. They want
to buy from regenerative businesses that embody
and practice the three noble qualities found in all
living systems: renewal, restoration and growth.
Regeneration goes beyond sustainability by creating
a deeper and wider socioeconomic impact.
2 Sustainable brands strive to just do less harm
to the planet. Regenerative businesses go beyond
sustainability and fight to do more good to society
and the planet. Specifically, regenerative firms seek
to boost the health and vitality of people, places and
the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner.
In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to
suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve
far better financial performance and impact than their
sustainability-focused peers.
3 In the Amazon, we find an example of how
regeneration works in practice. The murumuru is
a palm tree that grows in the Amazon forest. The
Amazon’s indigenous peoples chop this palm tree
down and use its wood to produce and sell items
such as brooms. As it happens, we can obtain a
highly moisturizing butter from the seeds of this palm
tree, which is very efficient at repairing and renewing
damaged hair. The value of these seeds is seven
times greater than that of this palm tree’s wood. As
such, people in the Amazon can generate seven times
more economic value by preserving the murumuru
tree than cutting it. Businesses are taking notice.
Natura, a Brazilian cosmetics firm, is collaborating
with Amazonian Indigenous people to ethically source
murumuru butter for a variety of hair care products,
using their traditional farming techniques. This
mutually beneficial collaboration means indigenous
communities are regenerating themselves and the
planet along three complementary dimensions:
economic, socio-cultural and environmental.
4 But it’s not just natural ecosystems that can benefit
from prioritizing regeneration. Human ecosystems,
too, stand to benefit. Regenerative businesses also
strive to boost the health and vitality of individuals
and communities, especially in aging societies.
Take Japan, a country that is aging rapidly. 30% of
its population is already over 65. The average life
expectancy of its citizens is 84 years. Sadly, longevity
doesn’t promise vitality.
5 Meiji Yasuda is Japan’s oldest largest life
insurance firm. During Covid-19, the firm realized that
its true mission should be to boost people’s vitality
rather than protect them from death. In April 2020,
the firm launched a 10-year plan to evolve the life
insurance firm into a life regeneration company. This
strategy calls for prolonging the healthy life expectancy
of its clients and vitalizing local communities across
Japan where the firm operates. Meiji Yasuda is
investing in new partnerships and technologies
to promote preventive healthcare in Japan. For
instance, it teamed up with the National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center in Japan to develop new digital
tools that can help its clients anticipate and prevent
cardiovascular problems.
6 To get buy-in from internal and external
stakeholders, businesses should explain how
their triple regeneration strategy – the synergistic
revitalization of people, places and the planet –
could yield great economic and social value for all
stakeholders. Visionary food companies and apparel
makers like Danone, General Mills, Eileen Fisher,
Illycaffè and Patagonia are investing in regenerative
agriculture. They are doing it not only because it
drastically reduces water use and emissions, boosts
soil fertility and improves animal welfare, but also
because it enhances the livelihoods of financially-
challenged farmers.
7 Promising place-based economic development
initiatives exist in disadvantaged communities
across the US that use a holistic approach to
regenerate people, places and the biodiversity
altogether. By joining these initiatives, businesses
can accelerate their own transition to a regenerative
model. For instance, Reimagine Appalachia (RI) is a
multi-stakeholder coalition that aims to revitalize
abandoned coal mines and restore the natural
ecosystems in Appalachia. RI is supporting the
Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative, while
also creating jobs and economic opportunities in the
region.
8 Given the climate urgency, it is time that
businesses think and act beyond sustainability. They
must evolve into regenerative businesses that renew,
restore and grow people, places and the planet
synergistically.
Available at: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/06/businesses-are-moving-beyond-sustainability-welcome-to-the-age-ofregeneration/. Retrieved on: Jun 14, 2024. Adapted.
The main purpose of the text is to
Provas
Caderno Container