Investments Flashcards

1
Q

Systematic Risk (nondiversifiable risk)

A
Purchasing power risk
Reinvestment rate risk
Interest rate risk
Market risk
Exchange rate risk

Systematic risk is inescapable because no matter how well you’re invested, overall market cannot be avoided

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2
Q

Unsystematic risk (diversifiable risk or nonsystematic risk)

A

Business Risk

Financial Risk

Investors can construct a diversified portfolio and eliminate the unsystematic or diversifiable risk. After the unsystematic risk is eliminated, systematic risk remains

Unsystematic risk can be reduced through diversification by owning securities of companies in different industries with low positive (or zero, or negative) correlations

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3
Q

Yield Ladder

A

Discounted Bonds - Pay $500 for a $1,000 par bond
Yields higher than coupon

Y
M
C
A
C
M
Y

Yields lower than coupon
Premium Bonds -Pay $2,000 for $1,000 par bond

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4
Q

Current yield

A

Annual interest in dollars/Bonds market price

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5
Q

Bonds market (selling price)

A

=annual interest in dollars/current yield

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6
Q

HPR question example

A

Joe purchased a $1,000 par bond for $900 with a 5% coupon. He sold the bond after one year when it was paying him a current yield of 4%. What is Joe’s holding period return?

HPR = (1250 + 50) - 900/900 = 400/900 = 44.4%

Bonds market price = annual interest in dollars/ current yield = 50/.04 = 1,250

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7
Q

EE Bonds

A

Non-traded debt of the U.S. government, savings bonds are nonmarketable, nontransferable, and nonnegotiable and cannot be used for collateral. THEY ARE ISSUED AT FACE VALUE. Term is for 20 years. No more paper bonds are issued.

EEs in UTMA Account EE “Education” Bonds

  • Owned by the child. -Normally owned by the parent
  • Taxed at ordinary income at redemption. -Tax free if the parent’s AGI is less than the phaseout at redemption

Owner has the option of having interest taxed each year, althought most investors prefer not to.
Interest is not subject to state or local taxes

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8
Q

STRIPS

A

Treasuries version of a zero-coupon bond
Direct obligation of the federal government
Discount on STRIPS is treated as taxable (phantom) income, earned annualy. STRIPS product phantom income

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9
Q

TIPS

A

Investor taxed annually on the interest payment plus the appreciation in face value
Increase in value produces phantom income and is not collectable until sold or maturity
However, income is taxable in the year it is accrued
TIPS interest not subject to state or local taxes

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10
Q

HH Bonds

A

2 potential questions

Mrs Cain held her EE bonds until they no longer paid any interest (30 years), and in 2001 exchanged them to HH bonds.
Did she have to pay tax on the gains? No, it is deferred until she cashes in the HH bonds
DId this imrpove her cash flow? Yes, the HH bonds pay her interest semiannually

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11
Q

I bonds

A

Inflation- indexed accrual securities issues by the US government
Non-marketable, nontransferable, and nonnegotiable and cannot be used for collateral
Sold at face value
Interest compounded semi annually

2 parts:
A fixed base rate
Inflation adjustment additional amount(updated ever 6 months to keep up with CPI)

May qualify for education bond status

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12
Q

GNMA

A

Ginnie Mae securities purchase a pool of FHA/VA guaranteed mortgages. GNMAs are guaranteed by the federal government

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13
Q

FNMA/FHLMC

A

Federal National Mortgage (Fannie Mae) and Federal Home Loan (Freddie Mac) are NOT guaranteed
The have been taken over by the federal government
They are placed into conservatorship of the FHFA (Federal Housing Finance Agency)

You can get Fucked

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14
Q

CMOs (mortgage-backed pools)

A

Mortgage payments received are distributed on a “cash flow” basis.
Different tranches are created
Z tranche most likely tested.
Tranches: A (first pay), M (medium pay), Y(slow pay) plus a Z tranche that bears no coupon (most risk) but receives the cash flow from the collateral remaining after the other tranches are satisfied
Z Tranche carrier no coupon. It functions like a zero coupon bond. It produces no cash flow

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15
Q

Convertible Bond Formula

A

Must memorize

Conversion value = par/cp x Ps

CP=Conversion price
Ps = current market price of underlying stock
PAR= Par value of bond )typically, but not necessarily, $1,000)

Find out bond PV*
FV typically 1000
Pmt is interest received x 2
Time will be years x 2
Interest will be yield /2
Solve for OV

Use conversion for stock price

Chose higher

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16
Q

Put bonds

A

Put bond permits the holder to sell the instrument back to the issuer. If effect, firm must redeem bond at a specified date for its principal amount (par). If, after put bonds were issued, interest rates were to rise and thereby drive the price of the bonds down, the investor should excercise the put option at the specified redemption date. In return for the put priviledge, a bond buyer sacrifices some yield (PUT DOWN)

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17
Q

Preferred stock

A

Maturity is infinite
Price flucations in preferred stock often exceed those of even long-term bonds

Typical purchaser of preferred shares is a corporate treasurer with excess funds. If treasurer were to purchase bonds, all of the interest is taxable. If the corporation’s treasuer buys preferred stock, than at least 50% of the dividends received are excluded from tax

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18
Q

ADRs

A

Prices are quoted in US dollars, and dividends are PAID in US dollars. Because the dividends are DECLARED in the foreign currency, some exchange-rate risk remains. Investors also get a foreign tax credit.

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19
Q

Fixed Unit Investment Trusts (UIT)

A

Typically an unmanaged security portfolio offered by a sponser and handled by independent trustee
Passive invesment because its assets are not traded, but frozen
No new securities are purchased, and securities originally purchased are rarely sold.

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20
Q

Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GICs)

A

Issued by insurnace companies
Issued for 2 to 5 years and bear a guaranteed rate of interest
GICs value does not fluctuate with interest rate changes, their value does, however, depend on financial strength of issuer (default risk)
Insurance company takes all market, credit, and interest rate risks on the GICs, but can profit if its returns exceed the guaranteed amount

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21
Q

Intrinsic Value question for property

A

Must use NOI (not cash flow) and divide it by cap rate to determine a property’s intrinsic value

If individual uses cash to purchase property and cap rate is given, woudl be equal to rate of return

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22
Q

REITs

A

Equity REITs
Invest in operating rental properties (for growth). Net income from property (rents less operating expenses) should exceed the REIT’s borrowing costs, producing income for shareholders

Mortgage REITs
Invest mainly in mortgages and construction loans. Interest earned on the mortgages and construction loans should exceed the REITs borrowing costs. These REITs are highly leveraged. They make their income from the “spread” between the lending rate and borrowing rate. Inflation is bad for mortgage REITs

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23
Q

Tax Rules to Achieve Conduit Status

A

At least 75% of REITs income must come from real estate investments (15% can come from securities, like GNMAs)
If REIT distributes a minimum of 90% of net investment income of more, it only pays tax on the undistributed portion.
If the REIT fails to distribute 90%, then all the net investment income is taxable to the REIT as an entity
REITs generally operate as pass-through arrangements, so distributions are ordinary dividends and may qualfy for QBI deduction of up to 20% of that income.

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24
Q

LEAPs (Long term Equity Anticipation)

A

Expiration ranges from 9 months to 3 years

Once LEAP is excercised, investor must hold the shares of the stock for more than 12 months in order to pay LTCG rate

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25
Q

Private Placement (Reg D)

A

Not subject to all of the registration requirements associated with public offerings, exempt from registration
Can be offered to 35 “non-accredited” investors and unlimited accreddited investors
Full disclosure must still be given to investors through an “offering memorandDum”

Accreddited investor is institutional investor, 1M of worth (excluding personal residence), 200k income or 300k jt income
1-2-3
Non accreddited investors (35) must be “sophisticated: Such investors sign an “investment letter”
If they cannot evalutate the issue on their own, the rule requires the use of a puchaser representative (a lawyer or accountant)

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26
Q

Liquidity vs. Marketability

A

Liquidity

Sold/redeemed or purchased without delay and without substantial change in price. Considers both speed and stability of price

Marketability

Only refers to speed of a transaction

27
Q

Devaluation

A

Lowering of the value of a currency relative to the currencies of one or more other nations
Can also result from a rise in value of other currencies relative to the currency of a particular country

28
Q

Revaluation

A

Increaase in the currency’s value

29
Q

Covariance vs. Correlation Coefficient

A

Covariance analysis may produce virtually infinite # of outcomes while the correlation coefficent is expressed in a more manageable range from +1 to -1

30
Q

Perfectly positively

A

Securities share a value of +1. Securities move exactly together, and there is no reduction of portoflio risk. Only when the correlation coefficient (pij) is the standard deviation of the portfolio equal to the weighted average of the standard deviation of the 2 assets..

MAXIMUM RISK

31
Q

Coefficient between 0.0 and 1.0

A

The risk of the portfolio as a whole is less than the risk of the individual assets

32
Q

Perfectly negatively correlated

A

Have a value of -1.0.. These securities move exactly opposite of one another. In theory, risk is completely eliminated. Standard deviation is 0.
However, perfectly negative correlated securites are seldon found in actual portfolios

33
Q

Standard Deviation vs. Beta

A

Standard Deviation
Measures variability of returns used in a NONDIVERSIFIED portfolio and is a measure of TOTAL risk

Beta
Measures volatility of returns in a DIVERSIFIED portfolio and is a measure of SYSTEMATIC risk

34
Q

Beta

A

Exactly 1, means stock moves exactly with market as a whole
<1, means the stock’s return fluctuates less than the market as a whole
>1, means the stock fluctuates more than the market as a whole

35
Q

Risk Tolerance vs. Risk Capacity

A

Risk Tolerance
Amount of risk that the investor is comfortable to take

Risk Capacity
Amount of risk the investor MUST take to reach financial goals

36
Q

Geometric mean/Time-weighted return

A

Evaluates performance of a portfolio manager

Shotcut to calculate
Multiply each return, use it as your FV, -1 PV, n= years, solve for i

** for negatives we will use 1- the number and positives 1+ the number

Factors percentages

37
Q

Dollar Weighted Return/arithmetic mean

A

Measures changes in total dollar value in investment or portfolio
Factors CASH FLOW

38
Q

Duration

A

Measures the weighted average maturity of the bond’s cash flow on a present value basis

Remember. — coupon and yielf are INterest rates and are INversly related

Years to maturity (positively related to duration)
Annual coupon (inversly related)
YTM, the current yield on comparative bonds (duration is inversly related)

Calculation (SHORTCUT)
Look at maturity, duration needs to be less than that (coupon paying) if answer is too close, go to next lowest one

39
Q

Zero coupon

A

Duration equal to maturities
No coupon interest, yet produces phantom income
No reinvestment rate risk
Sold at deep discount to par
fluctuate more than coupon bonds with same maturities

40
Q

Using Duration to manage bond portfolio

A

Interest rate expected to rise, SHORT duration (IR rise, shorten duration UP shortern UPS
Buy high coupon bonds with short maturities

Interest rate expected to FALL, LENGTHEN duratioon (FALL LEN. FALLEN)
Buy low coupon bonds with long maturities

41
Q

Flucuation to Bond Prices

A

The smaller the coupon, greater the relative price flucuation

The longer the term to maturity, greater the relative price flucuation

The lower the market interest rate, greater the relative price flucuation

42
Q

ROE

A

EPS/Common equity

ROPES over the common people

43
Q

Dividend payout ratio

A

Common dividends paid/EPS

44
Q

Efficient Market Hypothesis

A

Strong - Nothing can produce superior returns

Semi Strong Form- Inside information only way to outperform

Weak Form - Fundamental analysis may produce superior results

45
Q

Risk Adjusted Measures of Performance

A

Look for low r2 or non diversified portfolio
Look for highest Sharpe #

Look for high r2 (60+) or diversified portfolio
Look for highest positive alpha
If not alpha given then look for highest Treynor #

46
Q

Taxable Equivalent Yield (TEY) (Municipal securities)

A

TEY = r/(1-t)

=tax-exempt yield/1-marginal tax rate

Muni bonds are exempt from federal income tax but subject to state and local tax (unless purchased by a resident of that state)

47
Q

Tax exempt yield

A

Taxable yield * (1-marginal tax rate)

48
Q

Intrinsic Value

A

Put EM and Call ME

49
Q

CML

A

Macro

Common questions
What is the intersection of the CML called? Rf or risk free (100% T-bills)
What is point B called? The optimal risky portfolio, a proportional percentage of all risky assets, or the tangent of the CML and the Markowitz efficient frontier
What happens if the portfolio moves from point of tangency to Rf? The investor sells risky assets (like stocks and long-term bonds), and buys T-bills

50
Q

Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

A

EMH does not find value in technical analysis

Strong form - Neither fundamental analysis nor technical analysis can produce superior results over time

Semi-strong form - neither technical/fundemantal analysis can produce superior results, however inside information may consistently achieve superior results

Weak form (think Fidelity) funadmental analysis may produce superior results.. technical analysis will not produce superior results

51
Q

Anomalies (Active)

A

Exception to a rule or model

P/E effect
Small-firm effect
January effect
Neglected-firm effect
Value Line
52
Q

Technical Approaches

A
Dow Theory
Barron’s Confidence Index
Mutual fund cash position
Advance/Decline Line
Moving Acerage (200 day)
Investment advisro opinions
53
Q

Coefficient of determination (R²)

A

Describes the % of a fund’s movements that correspond to movements in the S&P 500
Index funds based on the S&P 500 will have R²of very close to 100% while sector funds will generally have very low R² (25%)

54
Q

Jensen (alpha)/Treynor

A

Risk measured in Beta
Volatility
Systematic risk only

Look for high R² (60+) or diversified portfolio
Look for highest positive alpha, if none, look for highest Treynor #

55
Q

Sharpe

A

Risk measured in terms of Standard deviation
Variability
Systematic and unsystematic risk

Look for low R² (less than 60) or non-diversified portfolio
Look for highest Sharpe #

56
Q

Tips for Jen/alpha/treynor/sharpe

A

Always look for R² #
Higher, lean towards alpha, then jensen, then treynor
Lower (than 60), look for highest Sharpe

*If R²s are mixed, chose the fund with the highest Sharpe #

57
Q

Ex dividend

A

In order to be listed on the corporation’s book as holder of record, the investor must purchase its stock BEFORE the ex - dividend date

T+2
Monday, Purchase Date
Tuesday, Ex Dividend Date
Wednesday, Date of Record

Purchased on Monday, will get the dividend

58
Q

Margin

A

Options are NOT marginable
Reg T sets “initial” margins (50%)
Second level of margin applied by exchanges, typically 25%

“At Margin” formula

1- initial margin %/1-maintenance margin %. X purchase price of stock

59
Q

Convertible debt

A

Conversion value = par / CP x Ps
CP= conversion price
Ps= current market price of underlying stock
PAR= par value of bond( typically, but not necessarilly, $1,000)

Intrinsic value calculation
FV=1000
PMT= Annual yield in dollars /2
N= years x 2
I= comparable debt yield /2
Solve for PV
60
Q

Standard deviation

A

68% of all return outcomes will fall within +/- one standard deviation of the average mean
95% of all return outcomes will fall within +/- two standard deviations of the average or mean return

61
Q

Which stock is riskier when given mean and SD

A

Divide sd by mean

Sd/mean, higher the number the riskier

62
Q

Simple/compound return/effective rate of return/arithmetic mean

A

Add all the %s, divide by how many they give you

63
Q

Black-Scholes option valuation model

A

Black-Scholes model considers five variables to value the option of a non-dividend-paying stock (Think CALL UP)
The exercise price (strike price) of the option
The time remaining to the expiration of the option
The interest rate
The volatility of the underlying stock
The price of the underlying stock

All the variables have a direct (up) relationship for calls except the exercise price