CHAPTER 10 Flashcards

1
Q

Corporate bonds offered the lowest overall return over the past eighty years.

A

NO

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2
Q

Treasury Bills offered the lowest overall return over the past eighty years.

A

YES

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3
Q

Corporate bonds had the largest fluctuations overall return over the past eighty years.

A

NO

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4
Q

Small stocks had the largest fluctuations overall return over the past eighty years.

A

YES

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5
Q

If the return is riskless and never deviates from its mean, the variance is equal to
one.

A

NO

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6
Q

If the return is riskless and never deviates from its mean, the variance is equal to zero.

A

YES

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7
Q

The variance increases with the magnitude of the deviations from the mean.

A

YES

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8
Q

Two common measures of the risk of a probability distribution are its variance and standard deviation.

A

YES

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9
Q

The variance is the expected squared deviation from the mean.

A

YES

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10
Q

The standard deviation is the square root of the variance.

A

YES

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11
Q

While the variance and the standard deviation are the most common measures of risk, they do not differentiate between upside and downside risk.

A

YES

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12
Q

Because investors dislike only negative resolutions of uncertainty, alternative measures that focus solely on downside risk have been developed, such as the semi-variance and the expected tail loss.

A

YES

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13
Q

While the variance and the standard deviation both measure the variability of the returns, the variance is easier to interpret because it is in the same units as the returns themselves.

A

NO

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14
Q

While the variance and the standard deviation both measure the
variability of the returns, the standard deviation is easier to interpret because it is in the same units as the returns themselves.

A

YES

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15
Q

The average annual return of an investment during some historical period is
simply the average of the realized returns for each year.

A

YES

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16
Q

If you hold the stock beyond the date of the first dividend, then to compute you
return you must specify how you invest any dividends you receive in the
interim.

A

YES

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17
Q

The expected return is the return is the return that actually occurs over a
particular time period.

A

NO

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18
Q

The realized return is the total return we earn from dividends and capital gains,
expressed as a percentage of the initial stock price.

A

YES

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19
Q

The 95% confidence interval for the expected return is defined as the Historical
Average Return plus or minus three standard errors.

A

NO

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20
Q

The 95% confidence interval for the expected return is defined as the Historical Average Return plus or minus two standard errors.

A

YES

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21
Q

We can use a security’s historical average return to estimate its actual expected return.

A

YES

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22
Q

The standard error provides an indication of how far the sample average might deviate from the expected return.

A

YES

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23
Q

If a stock pays dividends at the end of each quarter, with realized returns of R1, R2, R3, and R4 each quarter, then the annual realized return is calculated as Rannual = (1 + R1)(1 + R2)(1 + R3)(1 + R4) - 1

A

YES

24
Q

The excess return if the difference between the average return on a security and the average return for a broad based market portfolio like the S&P 500 index.

A

NO

25
Q

The excess return if the difference between the average return on a security and the average return for Treasury Bills.

A

YES

26
Q

The excess return if the difference between the average return on a security and the average return for a portfolio of securities with similar risk.

A

NO

27
Q

The excess return if the difference between the average return on a security and the average return for Treasury Bonds.

A

NO

28
Q

Investments with higher volatility should have a higher risk premium and
therefore higher returns.

A

YES

29
Q

Investments with higher volatility have rewarded investors with higher average
returns.

A

YES

30
Q

Volatility seems to be a reasonable measure of risk when evaluating returns on
large portfolios and the returns of individual securities.

A

NO

31
Q

Riskier investments must offer investors higher average returns to compensate
them for the extra risk they are taking on.

A

YES

32
Q

The risk of a key employee being hired away by a competitor is a diversifiable risk.

A

YES

33
Q

The risk that oil prices rise, increasing production costs is a diversifiable risk.

A

NO

34
Q

The risk that the CEO is killed in a plane crash is a diversifiable risk.

A

YES

35
Q

The risk of a product liability lawsuit is a diversifiable risk.

A

YES

36
Q

When firms carry both types of risk, only the firm-specific risk will be diversified
when we combine many firms’ stocks into a portfolio.

A

YES

37
Q

Firm specific news is good or bad news about the company itself.

A

YES

38
Q

Firms are affected by both systematic and firm-specific risk.

A

YES

39
Q

The risk premium for a stock is affected by its idiosyncratic risk.

A

NO

40
Q

The risk premium for a stock is affected by its systematic risk.

A

YES

41
Q

Fluctuations of a stock’s returns that are due to firm-specific news are common
risks.

A

NO

42
Q

Fluctuations of a stock’s returns that are due to firm-specific news are not common risks.

A

YES

43
Q

The volatility in a large portfolio will decline until only the systematic risk
remains.

A

YES

44
Q

The risk premium of a security is determined by its systematic risk and does not
depend on its diversifiable risk.

A

YES

45
Q

When we combine many stocks in a large portfolio, the firm-specific risks for
each stock will average out and be diversified.

A

YES

46
Q

A common assumption is that the project has the same risk as the firm.

A

YES

47
Q

To determine a project’s cost of capital we need to estimate its beta.

A

YES

48
Q

Because the risk that determines expected returns is unsystematic risk, which is
measured by beta, the cost of capital for an investment is the expected return
available on securities with the same beta.

A

NO

49
Q

Because the risk that determines expected returns is systematic risk,
which is measured by beta, the cost of capital for an investment is the
expected return available on securities with the same beta.

A

YES

50
Q

The Capital Asset Pricing Model is the most important method for estimating the
cost of capital that is used in practice.

A

NO

51
Q

Suppose that in the coming year, you expect Exxon-Mobil stick to have a volatility of 42% and a beta of 0.9, and Merck’s stock to have a volatility of 24% and a beta of 1.1. The risk free interest rate is 4% and the market’s expected return is 12%.
Merck has the highest systematic risk since it has a higher Beta.

A

YES

52
Q

If the market portfolio were not efficient, investors could find strategies that
would “beat the market” with higher average returns and lower risk.

A

YES

53
Q

The market portfolio is an efficient portfolio.

A

YES

54
Q

Efficient capital markets is a much stronger hypothesis than the CAPM.

A

NO

55
Q

The CAPM states that the cost of capital depends only on systematic risk.

A

YES