3. Investment Planning - All Questions and Comprehensive Course Exam Flashcards

1
Q

Lesson 1. Fixed Income Securities

Lesson 1. Fixed Income Securities

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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2
Q

Match the key terms to the correct description.
Par
Coupon
Maturity
Call
* Ability of the borrower to payoff loan earlier than maturity.
* Length of the loan.
* Interest payments for the loan.
* Face value of the loan.

A
  • Par - Face value of the loan.
  • Coupon - Interest payments for the loan.
  • Maturity - Length of the loan.
  • Call - Ability of the borrower to payoff loan earlier than maturity.
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3
Q

Which of the following would typical fixed-income securities investors seek?
* Par
* Call Provision
* Maturity
* Coupon

A

Coupon
* Most bond investors are seeking a steady income generated from the coupon payments.
* Investors of high-yield bonds may also be seeking capital appreciation from the high volatility associated with those types of bonds.
* Par is the principal amount that investors will receive at maturity.
* Call provisions are more of an advantage for issuers.
* Maturity is the length of time before a fixed-income security will come due.

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4
Q

Which of the following contribute to the movement in the market price of a fixed-income security?
* Inflation
* Interest rates
* Coupon rates
* Call provision

A

Interest rates
* The movement of interest rates can cause existing fixed-income securities to be worth more or less than their original par value.
* Inflation causes the purchasing power of the future payments to decrease and affects the real return of the investment.
* Coupon rates are set when the issue is created.
* Call provision gives issuers the right to pay off their debt before maturity.

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5
Q

Assume an investor is considering purchasing a money market instrument with a $1,000,000 denomination quoted with a discount rate of 1.5%. Identify the investor’s real interest rate.
* 1.50%
* 1.52%
* 9.85%
* 0.15%

A

1.52%
* The investor will purchase the security for $985,000 ($1,000,000 x 0.985).
* The bank discount bases which is the investor’s real interest rate = $15,000 (discount rate x denomination)/$985,000 (purchase price) = 1.52%.

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6
Q

What does an investor seek when they purchase money market instruments? (Select all that apply)
* Potentially high returns from aggressive growth.
* A liquid investment that can be sold quickly at fair value.
* High quality investments with low risk.
* A long-term investment.

A

A liquid investment that can be sold quickly at fair value.
High quality investments with low risk.
* Money market instruments are fixed-income securities that are highly liquid. Since many businesses use them for business transactions, they are constantly traded in the secondary market as cash equivalents. Since they are issued in high denominations, the issuers typically have low credit risk. Their shorter-term maturity also partially shields them from interest rate risk. Since there is less risk associated with them, they would not provide a high return. The relatively lower return makes them less likely to overcome inflation risk than other securities for long-term investing.

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7
Q

Match the money market instrument to the correct description.
Commercial Paper
Bankers’ Acceptance
Certificate of Deposit
Repo
* Agreement to sell and repurchase assets
* Used for facilitating international trade
* Short-term promissory notes
* Large deposits with banks

A
  • Commercial Paper - Short-term promissory notes
  • Bankers’ Acceptance - Used for facilitating international trade
  • Certificate of Deposit - Large deposits with banks
  • Repo - Agreement to sell and repurchase assets
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8
Q

You own a 9-month T-Bill ($1,000 face value) with a discount rate of 3% that matures in 180 days. If you were to sell this T-Bill today, how much would you receive?
* $977.50
* $1,000
* $992.50
* $985

A

$985
* If your T-Bill were sold today, you would receive $985, calculated as follows:
$1,000 × [1 – ((180 ÷ 360) × 0.03)] = $985

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9
Q

Example (T-Bond/TIPS Side-by-side)

Let us compare the yield available on 10-year Treasury Bond to a TIPS equivalent. If the CPI is 3%, a 10-year Treasury Bond yielding 6.5% would have an approximate real yield (nominal yield minus inflation, or 6.5% - 3.0%) of 3.5%.
This means a 10-year TIPS should be paying __ ____??____ __%.

A

This means a 10-year TIPS should be paying 3.5%.

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10
Q

Example (The Logistics of TIPS)

An investor buys $100,000 of TIPS bearing a 3.5% coupon. For the next 6 months, the inflation rate averages 3% per year.
What will be the coupon payment made to the investor?

A

The coupon rate (3.5% in this case) is fixed.
The principal is adjusted every six months to reflect the inflation rate.

In this case the principal would be increased to $101,500 ($100,000 X 0.03 ÷ 2), and, therefore, the payment of the first coupon would be $1,776.25 ($101,500 X 0.035 ÷ 2).

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11
Q

What makes U.S. Government issued fixed-income securities safe relative to other issuers? (Select all that apply)
Inflation Protection
Stability of Government
Interest Rate Risk Protection
Power of Taxation
Prepayment Protection

A

Stability of Government
Power of Taxation
* U.S. Government Securities are either direct obligations that are required to be paid by either tax collecting or refunding, or they are backed by the full faith of the government. The government’s stability makes it less likely to default than less stable governments or borrowers of the private sector. Not all U.S. government issued securities are protected against inflation risk. All fixed-income securities are subject to interest rate risk, some more than others. And Government backed mortgage pass-throughs such as GNMAs and CMOs are susceptible to prepayment risks.

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12
Q

Match the type of U.S. Treasury on the left to the correct maturity.
T–Notes
T–Bonds
T–Bills
* 52 weeks or less
* 1 – 10 years
* 10 – 30 years

A

T–Bills - 52 weeks or less
T–Notes - 1 – 10 years
T–Bonds - 10 – 30 years

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13
Q

Bonnie, a resident of Ohio, has an effective tax rate of 36%. If risk was not an issue for Bonnie, which of the following choices would provide her the highest yield?
* Disney 30-year bond paying 7%
* Ohio 30-year GO municipal bond paying 5%
* 30-year T-bond paying 6%
* Ohio 30-year revenue municipal bond paying 5.5%

A

Ohio 30-year revenue municipal bond paying 5.5%
* The TEY for the revenue municipal bond = 0.055 ÷ (1 - 0.36) = 0.0859% (8.59%) which is a higher yield than the other choices. The TEY for the GO municipal bond = 7.81% which is still a higher equivalent yield than the taxable T-bond and Disney Bond.

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14
Q

Describe Tax Equivalent Yield (TEY) and it’s formula

A
  • The Tax Equivalent Yield (TEY) helps investors determine whether or not they are better off investing in the lower yielding but tax-free municipal bond or in a higher-yielding taxable bond.

TEY = Tax free rate ÷ (1- Marginal tax bracket)

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15
Q

What part of the municipal bond is tax-exempt at the federal level?
* Premium
* Discount
* Coupon
* Capital Appreciation

A

Coupon
* Coupon payments from municipal securities are tax-exempt from federal taxes.
* Premium and discount are ways to compare the price of the bond to its original price.
* Any capital appreciation that is recognized is taxable for municipal bonds.

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16
Q

Which of the following statements concerning municipal bonds are true? (Select all that apply)
* General obligation bonds are backed by the full faith of the issuing municipality.
* Revenue bonds are backed by the full faith of the issuing municipality.
* General obligations bonds are backed by the full extent of the municipality’s taxation power.
* Revenue bonds are backed by the entity’s incoming sales.

A

General obligation bonds are backed by the full faith of the issuing municipality.
General obligations bonds are backed by the full extent of the municipality’s taxation power.
Revenue bonds are backed by the entity’s incoming sales.
* General obligation bonds are more conservative because they are backed by the full faith and power of the municipality, namely the full extent of its taxing power.
* Revenue bonds are funded by the revenue generated by the designated project, authority, or agency. They are more risky because they are not backed by the full of faith and power of the municipality.

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17
Q

Match the items used to collateralize a bond with the matching them.
Mortgage
Collateral Trust
Equipment
Debenture
* Nothing
* Stocks
* Factory
* Machines

A
  • Mortgage - Factory
  • Collateral Trust - Stocks
  • Equipment - Machines
  • Debenture -Nothing
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18
Q

Example (Conversion Price Calculation)

If a convertible bond has a conversion ratio of 20 shares of stock per bond, then the conversion price would be equal to: __ ____??____ __/share.
As a result, it would only be beneficial for the bondholder to convert if the stock price __ ____??____ __.

A

If a convertible bond has a conversion ratio of 20 shares of stock per bond, then the conversion price would be equal to: $1000 ÷ 20 shares = $50/share.
As a result, it would only be beneficial for the bondholder to convert if the stock price rises above $50.

Exam Tip: Scenario-based questions may appear asking when it would be beneficial for a bondholder to convert bonds into stock.

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19
Q

If a bond’s conversion ratio is 50 shares of stock per bond and the price of the stock is $30, would it be beneficial for the bondholder to convert?
* Yes
* No
* Not enough information provided.

A

Yes
* If a stock is a suitable investment for the investor, then it would make sense to convert.
* Since the conversion price is $1,000/50, or, $20 per share, the investor can convert and sell the shares for $30, earning a $10 profit or $500 ($10 x 50 shares).

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20
Q

Why would an issuer decide to issue a corporate bond with collateral such as equipment or buildings? (Select all that apply)
* Increase coupon rate
* Decrease coupon rate
* Fund the coupon payments
* Lower risk of issue
* Increase quality of issue

A

Decrease coupon rate
Lower risk of issue
Increase quality of issue
* Adding collateral to a bond issue lowers the risk of the bond, which increases the quality of the issue and lowers investor’s demand for risk premium or coupon rate.
* Collateralized bonds would not increase coupon rate nor would it help to pay for the coupons.

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21
Q

Identify correct statement(s) regrading the following bond listing: (Select all that apply)
GE 6 1/2 25; 98 1/8
* Bond is trading at discount.
* Bond is trading at premium.
* Bond is paying annual coupon rate of $6.50.
* Bond is paying annual coupon of $650.
* Bond is paying coupon of $65.

A

Bond is trading at discount.
Bond is paying coupon of $65.
* Based on the listing, the 6½ coupon GE bond due in 2025 is trading at $981.25 = $1,000 X 98.125%.
* Since $981.25 is less than $1,000 or par, then the bond is trading at a discount.
* The coupon rate is $65 = $1,000 X 6.5%.

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22
Q

Exam 1. Fixed Income Securities

Exam 1. Fixed Income Securities

A
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23
Q

Julian purchased a AAA-rated corporate bond with a 6.25% coupon at par. One year later, prevailing coupons on bonds of similar quality and time to maturity are 5.75%.
Julian’s bond can be categorized as a __ ____??____ __.
* par bond
* zero-coupon bond
* premium bond
* discount bond

A

premium bond
* When interest rates decrease below the stated interest of the debt (the coupon rate), the security will be worth more since new debt pays less interest. Therefore, the market price for the debt would be above par value, otherwise known as a premium bond.

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24
Q

Identify all Eurodollar CDs features: (Select all that apply)
* Denominated in U.S. dollars
* Issued by U.S. banks
* Negotiable
* Non-negotiable
* Issued by foreign banks
* Denominated in Euros

A

Denominated in U.S. dollars
Issued by foreign banks
Negotiable
* Eurodollar CDs are large, short-term CDs denominated in U.S. dollars and issued by banks outside the United States.
* In addition, Eurodollar CDs are negotiable, meaning that they can be traded.

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25
Q

Which of the following securities would be considered a money market security?
* Four-year AAA-rated bond
* Common Stock
* Preferred Stock
* Bankers’ Acceptance

A

Bankers’ Acceptance
* Money market securities are short-term instruments that typically mature in less than a year.

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26
Q

If prevailing rates are 5%, a bond with a 4% coupon is likely trading at __ ____??____ __.
* high-yield
* discount
* par
* premium

A

discount
* Rates have risen forcing the price of existing bonds lower (discount).

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27
Q

Calculate the Taxable Equivalent Yield of a Jersey City general obligation bond with a 5.27% yield when the taxpayer’s highest marginal tax rate is 22%.
* 11.59%
* 5.27%
* 6.76%
* 7.95%

A

6.76%
* The Tax Equivalent Yield (TEY) helps investors determine whether or not they are better off investing in the lower yielding but tax-free municipal bond or in a higher-yielding taxable bond.
TEY = Tax free rate ÷ (1- Marginal tax bracket)
0.0527 ÷ (1- 0.22) =
0.0527 ÷ 0.78 = 0.06756, or 6.76% (rounded)

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28
Q

If a bond’s conversion ratio is 75 shares of stock per bond and the price of the stock is $12.75, would it be beneficial for the bondholder to convert?
* Yes
* No
* Not enough information provided.

A

No
* Since the conversion price is $1,000/75, or, $13.34 per share, the investor can convert and sell the shares for $12.75. This would create a $0.59 loss per share or a total loss of $44.25 ($0.59 x 75 shares).
* Because the conversion would result in a loss, the bondholder should not convert.

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29
Q

What is adjusted on a Treasury Inflation Protected Security (TIPS) to accommodate for changes in inflation?
* Principal
* Interest
* Maturity
* Coupon

A

Principal
* TIPS’ principal is adjusted every six months to reflect the inflation rate.

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30
Q

Oran purchased a FMIC bond at par. Using the FIMC bond listing below, calculate the current yield on Oran’s bond.
Bond - FMIC 7 25
Volume - 10
Close - 922
Net Change - +1/2
* 8.25%
* 7.00%
* 7.59%
* 8.95%

A

7.59%
* The Current Yield on Oran’s bond is calculated as follows:

Annual Coupon Payment = Par x Coupon
= $1,000 x 0.07 = $70
Current Yield = Annual Coupon Payment ÷ Market Price
$70 ÷ $922 = 7.59%

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31
Q

A convertible bond can be converted into __ ____??____ __.
* the common stock of the issuer
* cash
* the new bonds of the issuer
* the preferred stock of the issuer

A

the common stock of the issuer
* Convertible bonds can be converted into the common stock of the issuer.

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32
Q

What is the taxable equivalent yield (TEY) of a municipal bond paying 4.25% for an investor in the 28% marginal tax bracket?
* 5.90%
* 4.25%
* 2.76%
* 6.30%

A

5.90%
* TEY = r(1 − t)
TEY = 0.0425 / (1 - 0.28) = 0.0425/0.72 = 0.059 = 5.90%

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33
Q

A municipal bond backed by the taxing authority of the issuer is known as a __ ____??____ __.
* revenue bond
* general obligation bond
* convertible bond
* industrial development bond

A

general obligation bond
* General obligation bonds are backed by the full faith and credit of the issuer. If the issuer were to miss a principal or interest payment, they would raise taxes to meet the obligation.

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34
Q

A corporation is planning to issue bonds to finance a project. Current rates are relatively high and the company feels that rates will be lower in the future, however, they can’t wait to raise the capital. What type of bond is the company likely to issue?
* Convertible Bond
* Callable Bond
* Putable Bond
* Premium Bond

A

Callable Bond
* The company will likely issue callable bonds so they can take advantage of the future low rates and refinance the debt.

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35
Q

When interest rates increase above the coupon rate of a bond, the bond price __ ____??____ __.
* remains the same
* increases
* decreases
* none of these

A

decreases
* When interest rates increase above the stated interest of the debt (the coupon rate), then new debt will be paying a higher rate than the existing debt. Therefore, in order for the existing debt to be as appealing to buyers in the secondary market, its market price must decrease below par value, otherwise known as a discount bond.

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36
Q

Lesson 2. Equities

Lesson 2. Equities

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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37
Q

Match the descriptions with the corresponding common shareholder.
Voting
Preemptive
Information
Dividends
* Regulation enforces full disclosure of all material and relevant information
* Maintain the same amount of control when company issues new shares
* Receive a share of the company’s profits
* The right to influence/control the company increases proportionately with the number of shares owned

A
  • Voting - The right to influence/control the company increases proportionately with the number of shares owned
  • Preemptive - Maintain the same amount of control when company issues new shares
  • Information - Regulation enforces full disclosure of all material and relevant information
  • Dividends - Receive a share of the company’s profits
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38
Q

Match the price or value to the correct definition or formula.
Par Value
Book Value
Bid Price
Ask Price
* The price that buyers pay for a stock.
* The price that sellers receive for a stock.
* Retained Earnings + Common Stock + Capital Contributed in Excess of Par
* The value of Common Stocks listed in Shareholder’s Equity

A
  • Par Value - The value of Common Stocks listed in Shareholder’s Equity
  • Book Value - Retained Earnings + Common Stock + Capital Contributed in Excess of Par
  • Bid Price - The price that sellers receive for a stock.
  • Ask Price - The price that buyers pay for a stock.
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39
Q

For any holding period, stocks will outperform all other investment vehicles.
* False
* True

A

False
* Stocks typically outperform other investments in the long run. However, stocks carry a lot of risk for shorter holding periods. Stock prices can drop below your original purchase and you would have received a better return from a bank CD or something less volatile within the same short-term holding period.

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40
Q

Identify the main characteristics of common stock. (Select all that apply)
* It is a security that represents ownership in a corporation.
* Holders may elect a board of directors and vote on corporate policy.
* Common shareholders have priority rights to a company’s assets.
* First in line to receive company profits.

A

It is a security that represents ownership in a corporation.
Holders may elect a board of directors and vote on corporate policy.
* Common stock is a security that represents ownership in a corporation. Holders of common stock elect board of directors and vote on corporate policy. They have rights to the company’s assets and earnings only after all preferred shareholders and debt holders have been paid in full.

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41
Q

Choose the correct statement(s). (Select all that apply)
* Cyclical stocks perform well when the economy is booming.
* Growth stocks consistently pay dividends from their earnings.
* Blue chip stocks are traded in the OTC market and are very volatile.
* Blue chip stocks are considered small cap stocks because of their size.
* Defensive stocks may perform better in economic downturns.

A

Cyclical stocks perform well when the economy is booming.
Defensive stocks may perform better in economic downturns.
* Cyclical stocks’ performance correlates with the economy. Defensive stocks are less sensitive to the movement of the economy. Growth stocks tend to keep earnings as retained earnings rather than paying dividends. Blue chip stocks are from large and well-established companies, therefore are likely to be traded in the NYSE as conservative large cap stocks.

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42
Q

Select the primary reason for an investor to purchase preferred stock.
* Right to vote
* Current income from dividends
* High potential return
* Callable feature

A

Current income from dividends
* The biggest benefit to investing in preferred stocks is their promise to pay dividends. Only some preferred stocks have the right to vote. Since some preferred stocks are likely to be called or converted, the potential capital appreciation is limited. The call feature is an advantage for the issuer, compensated through higher yield than non-callable shares, but would not be the most attractive feature to a preferred stock.

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43
Q

Match the description to the type of preferred stock.
Cumulative
Non-cumulative
Adjustable
Convertible
* Dividend rate changes
* Does not receive dividends in arrears
* Can exchange shares for common stock
* Receive dividends in arrears

A
  • Cumulative - Receive dividends in arrears
  • Non-cumulative - Does not receive dividends in arrears
  • Adjustable - Dividend rate changes
  • Convertible - Can exchange shares for common stock
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44
Q

Johnny has a warrant for shares of the Coffee Company with an exercise price of $5 per share. The share price of the Coffee Company is now $10 per share. What is(are) the best course(s) of action for Johnny? (Select all that apply)
* Buy the stock at $10 per share
* Sell the warrant
* Exercise the warrant
* Do nothing

A

Sell the warrant
Exercise the warrant
* If the market price of the underlying stock exceeds that of the warrant’s exercise price, the warrant holder would benefit from selling the warrant or exercising the warrant, then selling the shares at the open market.

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45
Q

Identify the purpose of issuing rights.
* Pay debt
* Honor preemptive rights
* Lower financing expense
* Exercise a call

A

Honor preemptive rights
* A right is issued to give existing shareholders a chance to purchase shares of a new issue of stock before they are available to the public.
* It honors the preemptive right of shareholders.
* Rights are not related to paying debt, lowering interest expense or being callable.

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46
Q

Warrants and rights are both similar to what type of investment vehicle?
* Stock
* Bond
* Money Market
* Call Option

A

Call Option
* Warrants and rights are both similar to call options in that they give the holder the right to purchase shares of the underlying security at a stated price.
* Warrants and rights derive their value from the underlying security.
* They do not resemble stocks, bonds or money market instruments.

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47
Q

The DJIA, one of the most widely followed indices, is a price-weighted index.
* False
* True

A

True
* The DJIA, one of the most widely followed indices, is a price-weighted index. It involves the prices of 30 stocks that generally represent large-size firms.
* Dow Jones calculates stock market indices for each of several countries as well as an Asia/Pacific index and two World Indices, one with and one without the United States.

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48
Q

Which of the following methods are used to calculate the S&P 500 index?
* Price Weight
* Equal Weight
* Value weighting or capitalization weighting
* Geometric

A

Value weighting or capitalization weighting
* S&P 500 uses the value weight method to calculate its index.
* This method adjusts for the weight of each stock’s market value within the composite along with their prices.
* Price Weight method is used by the DJIA. Its divisor must be adjusted to compensate for the lack of value weighting.
* Equal Weight looks at today’s price relative to that of the previous day’s. This method is employed by the Value Line Composite (Arithmetic) Index.
* The Value Line Composite (Geometric) Index uses the geometric method to determine its value.

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49
Q

Exam 2. Equities

Exam 2. Equities

A
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50
Q

Which of the following is a characteristic of a warrant?
* Issued by the firm
* Cannot be traded after issuance
* Provides the holder the right to sell shares
* Very short expiration

A

Issued by the firm
* Warrants are issued by the firm and allow the holder the ability to purchase additional shares of the company’s stock.

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51
Q

A Japanese company’s stock performance would be best compared with the __ ____??____ __ for benchmarking purposes.
* S&P 500
* Wilshire 5000
* Nikkei
* DJIA

A

Nikkei
* It is important to match the appropriate index with a particular stock or a portfolio of stocks.
* The Nikkei index that is comprised of companies listed on the Japanese stock exchange, would be the best alternative for a Japanese company.

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52
Q

The Dow Jones Industrial is a __ ____??____ __ index.
* capitalization-weighted
* value-weighted
* price-weighted
* broad-based market capitalization-weighted

A

price-weighted
* The Dow Jones Industrial is a price-weighted index. The DJIA takes into consideration only the price of the stocks rather than the market value of the company.

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53
Q

The exercise price is typically set above the stock’s market price at issuance for a __ ____??____ __ and below it for a __ ____??____ __.
* warrant; right
* right; warrant

A

warrant; right
* The exercise price is typically set above the stock’s market price at issuance for a warrant and below it for a right.

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54
Q

Which of the following benchmarks are price-weighted?
* Standard and Poor’s 500 (S&P 500)
* Value Line Index
* Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
* NASDAQ

A

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
* The DJIA is the only price-weighted index.

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55
Q

Owners of __ ____??____ __ preferred stock are entitled to a fixed rate of cash dividends.
* money market
* cumulative
* participating
* convertible

A

participating
* Owners of participating preferred stock are entitled to a fixed rate of cash dividends. They may receive higher than normal dividend payments if the company turns a larger than expected profit.

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56
Q

The __ ____??____ __ of a stock is dependent on the demand and supply of its shares.
* intrinsic value
* par value
* book value
* market value

A

market value
* The market value of a stock is dependent on the demand and supply of its shares.

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57
Q

A common stock is split 2-for-1, if a holder has 125 shares worth $30 each, how many shares at what price will the shareholder have post-split?
* 250 shares worth $30 each
* 125 shares worth $60 each
* 125 shares worth $15 each
* 250 shares worth $15 each

A

250 shares worth $15 each
* A 2-for-1 stock split will double the number of shares and halve the value per share. The total value of the shares remains the same, in this case $3,750.
* $3,750 ÷ 250 (doubled shares) = $15 per share

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58
Q

A common stock is split 2-for-1, if an investor holds 300 shares worth $15,000, what is the value of their holdings after the split?
* $15,000
* $30,000
* $7,500
* Cannot determine from the information provided.

A

$15,000
* After a split, the total value of an investor’s holdings will remain the same.

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59
Q

__ ____??____ __ stocks are common stocks that are issued by large companies with solid dividend growth records.
* Growth
* Blue chip
* Income
* Value

A

Blue chip
* Blue chip stocks are common stocks that are issued by large companies with solid dividend growth records.
* Examples of blue chip stocks include Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B).

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60
Q

Identify the type of preferred stock that pays shareholders missed dividends first.
* Cumulative Preferred
* Participating Preferred
* Non-Cumulative Preferred
* Adjustable-Rate Preferred

A

Cumulative Preferred
* Cumulative preferred stock gives the owner the right to accumulate dividend payments skipped due to financial problems.

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61
Q

Each of the following are benefits of stock investing EXCEPT:
* Marketability
* Risk Reduction
* Long-Term Return
* First Liquidation Priority

A

First Liquidation Priority
* Good stocks tend to outperform all other investment vehicles over longer holding periods.
* Stock investing is a necessity for outpacing inflation for long-term investment objectives.
* Unsystematic risks can be reduced through common stock diversification.
* A healthy secondary market ensures that you may find buyers for most common stocks.
* In the event of liquidation, however, holders of common stock are paid last.

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62
Q

Which of the following is NOT a stockholder right?
* Voting Rights
* Right to Convert to Fixed Income
* Right to Sell
* Right to Receive Dividends

A

Right to Convert to Fixed Income
* There is no conversion right for stockholders.

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63
Q

Existing stockholders the right-of-first-refusal on any new stock the corporation issues and are guaranteed the right to maintain their previous fraction of total outstanding shares and prevents dilution of ownership control.
This stockholder right is referred to as __ ____??____ __.
* preemptive right
* voting right
* right to information
* right to buy and sell

A

preemptive right
* The preemptive right grants existing stockholders the right-of-first-refusal on any new stock the corporation issues.
* This means that existing investors are guaranteed the right to maintain their previous fraction of total outstanding shares and prevents dilution of ownership control.

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64
Q

Dividends are paid to shareholders that hold the stock on the __ ____??____ __ date.
* payment
* ex-dividend
* record
* declaration

A

record
* Dividends are only paid to shareholders on record as of the record date.

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65
Q

Where are initial public offerings (IPOs) initially traded?
* Fourth Market
* Third Market
* Primary Market
* Secondary Market

A

Primary Market
* IPOs are traded initially on the primary market.

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66
Q

Identify the rights held by preferred stock owners. (Select all that apply)
* Right to Buy/Sell
* Priority to Dividends
* Right to Information
* Assumed Right to Vote
* Dividend Arrears

A

Right to Buy/Sell
Priority to Dividends
Right to Information
Dividend Arrears

Preferred Stock
* Right to Information
* Right to Buy/Sell
* Dividend Arrears
* Priority to Dividends

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67
Q

Exchanges such as NYSE, AMEX, and the OTC are a part of the __ ____??____ __ market.
* third
* fourth
* secondary
* primary

A

secondary
* NYSE, AMEX, and the OTC are a part of the secondary market.

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68
Q

A common shareholder is considered a(n) __ ____??____ __.
* owner
* lender
* director
* borrower

A

owner
* Common stock represents ownership in a firm.

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69
Q

Which of the following is NOT considered a valuation method for a stock?
* Par Value
* Book Value
* Bond Value
* Market Value

A

Bond Value
* Market, book, and par values are all valuation methods.

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70
Q

Lesson 3. Pooled Investments

Lesson 3. Pooled Investments

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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71
Q

Example (NAV Calculation)

An investment company holds two common stocks (Company A and Company B). At the end of the day, Company A’s stock traded at $10/share and Company B’s stock traded at $20/share. The investment company holds 10 shares of each stock.
* So the total assets of the investment company at the end of the day was __ ____??____ __.
* If the investment’s total liabilities for the day was $50, then the net asset value would be __ ____??____ __.
* The per share NAV is __ ____??____ __ at the close of the day.

A

NAV Per Share
(Assets – Liabilities) ÷ Shares Outstanding = NAV

  • So the total assets of the investment company at the end of the day was $300 = ($10 x 10 shares) + ($20 x 10 shares).
  • If the investment’s total liabilities for the day was $50, then the net asset value would be $250 = $300 - $50.
  • The per share NAV is $12.50 ($250 / 20 shares) at the close of the day.
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72
Q

Which of the followng are advantages of investing in a pooled investment over buying individual securities? Click all that apply.
* The ability to control capital gains tax
* The ability to save money on transaction costs and get a better price of securities
* The ability to sell shares back to an issuer who stands ready to buy them back
* The ability to pick and choose which securities to buy and sell
* The ability to take advantage of more risk
* The ability to lower risk by investing in a greater variety of securities at once

A

The ability to save money on transaction costs and get a better price of securities
The ability to sell shares back to an issuer who stands ready to buy them back
The ability to lower risk by investing in a greater variety of securities at once
* Investing in mutual funds provides investors with many benefits. For instance, by investing in more than one company, the fund increases its diversification, creating less risk for investors. Investing in mutual funds is also more cost efficient, and provides individual investors with both volume discounts and exposure to a wider variety of stocks. Another benefit to investors is that open-end funds stand ready to buy back sahres, making it easy fo investors to sell their shares.

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73
Q

Which of the following are the advantages of mutual funds? (Select all that apply)
* Minimal transaction costs
* Marketability
* Flexibility
* Service
* Taxation

A

Minimal transaction costs
Marketability
Flexibility
Service
* The advantages of mutual funds are diversification, professional management, minimal transaction costs, marketability, flexibility, and service.
* Distributed capital gains from mutual funds could lead to unplanned tax payments.

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74
Q

The Net Asset Value (NAV) is the market value of all securities owned by a mutual fund, minus its total liabilities, then divided by the number of shares issued.
* False
* True

A

True
* When calculating the net asset value of securities, the total liabilities of a mutual fund are deducted from the market value of all securities owned. The difference is then divided by the number of shares issued. NAV is an important measure of how investment companies perform.

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75
Q

Which of the following is true about a Fund that has a NAV of $9 and a market price of $10? (Click all that apply)
* It is a premium
* It is a discount
* Its demand is greater than its supply
* Its supply is greater than its demand

A

It is a premium
Its demand is greater than its supply
* The Fund is at premium because its market price is greater than its NAV. Therefore, its demand is greater than its supply.

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76
Q

If closed-end fund shareholders want to sell their shares, they would go to the __ ____??____ __.
* primary market
* secondary market
* fund company
* issuer

A

secondary market
* Closed-end funds are traded in the secondary market after the initial public offering.
* When the company is initially offered, it is sold in the primary market.
* From then on, the shares are traded through brokers in the open market. The fund company/issuer can only engage in the trading of its shares through the secondary market.

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77
Q

When an investor decides to purchase or sell shares of a closed-end fund, the price is based on which of the following?
* Supply and demand
* Fund assets minus liabilities
* NAV
* Public offering price

A

Supply and demand
* In the case of a closed-end fund, the fund’s price is determined by its supply and demand in the open (secondary) market.
* The net asset value becomes a benchmark to tell whether or not the shares are trading at a discount or premium.
* The public offering price is the price that the shares are originally offered to the market from the fund.

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78
Q

A share of a closed-end fund that has an NAV of $10, is selling in the market at a discount of 10% or $9, with an equivalent open-end fund selling at an NAV of $10. Both the closed-end and the open-end fund paid a $1 dividend.
Which statement(s) is(are) true regarding this close-end fund? (Select all that apply)
* The effective dividend yield would be lower than the equivalent open-end fund.
* The effective dividend yield will be greater than the equivalent open-end fund.
* The investor’s overall return may be less than the equivalent open-end fund.
* The investor’s overall return may be more than the equivalent open-end fund.

A

The effective dividend yield will be greater than the equivalent open-end fund.
The investor’s overall return may be more than the equivalent open-end fund.
* Since the fund is selling at a discount, $1/$9 (closed-end fund) is a greater dividend yield than $1/$10 (open-end fund).
* Holding all other factors the same, as the price of the shares increases, the return will be greater for the lower cost basis of the discounted closed-end shares.

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79
Q

Which of the following specialized funds has more risks:
* International Fund
* Japan Fund

A

Japan Fund
* The Japan Fund is more aggressive because the risks associated with Japan specifically cannot be diversified away by investing in companies of other countries.
* An International Fund can spread country specific risks among several countries.

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80
Q

Which of the following statements are true regarding the differences between open-end and closed-end funds?
* Open-end funds are traded in the secondary market.
* Closed-end funds are traded in the secondary market.
* Open-end funds are limitless in the number of new shares they issue.
* Closed-end funds are limitless in the number of new shares they issue.

A

Closed-end funds are traded in the secondary market.
Open-end funds are limitless in the number of new shares they issue.
* Closed-end funds are traded in the secondary market whereas open-ended funds are bought and sold from the issuer.
* Open-end funds can issue as many shares as they choose assuming they can find appropriate investments in which to invest.
* Closed-end funds issue a finite number of shares.

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81
Q

Match descriptions to the correct loads or fees.
Front Load
CDSC
12b-1
Redemption Fee
* Charge for leaving fund before certain holding period, proceeds go back to the pool
* Fee to cover marketing expenses
* Commission collected when purchasing a fund
* Commission collected when selling fund before certain holding period, proceeds go to distributor

A
  • Front Load - Commission collected when purchasing a fund
  • CDSC - Commission collected when selling fund before certain holding period, proceeds go to distributor
  • 12b-1 - Fee to cover marketing expenses
  • Redemption Fee - Charge for leaving fund before certain holding period, proceeds go back to the pool
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82
Q

Match the investment objective to the correct fund.
Acme Money Fund
Massachusetts Municipal Bond Fund
S&P Index Fund
Jackson Internet Fund
* Long-term growth by investing in stocks of one industry
* Tax-free income
* Safety and liquidity
* Long-term growth by mimicking the performance of the market

A
  • Acme Money Fund - Safety and liquidity
  • Massachusetts Municipal Bond Fund - Tax-free income
  • S&P Index Fund - Long-term growth by mimicking the performance of the market
  • Jackson Internet Fund - Long-term growth by investing in stocks of one industry
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83
Q

What can an investor learn from studying historic performance figures?
* Future returns
* Average returns earned by the fund over various time periods.
* Hypothetical returns of $10,000 investment over a specific period.
* Percentile ranks of the fund’s average return relative to all mutual funds.

A

Average returns earned by the fund over various time periods.
Hypothetical returns of $10,000 investment over a specific period.
Percentile ranks of the fund’s average return relative to all mutual funds.
* Performance figures can show historical trends and allow investors to know how well the fund has performed in the past. Hypothetical $10,000 investments can help investors to understand the historic performance figures. By comparing historic performance of a fund to its peers and its benchmark, investors can see how well the fund managers did against other funds with similar objectives. Historic performance is not indicative of future returns.

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84
Q

Which of the following is NOT included in Morningstar’s analysis of a fund’s rating?
* Average return of fund over time
* Average return of index over time
* Average return of peer group over time
* Downside risk
* Projected returns for the next 12 months

A

Projected returns for the next 12 months
* Morningstar’s Mutual Fund analysis compares a fund’s average ratings with the average rating of an index and a peer group. The rating is risk-adjusted to factor in the downside risk of the fund. The rating does not project future returns of any kind.

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85
Q

Morningstar ratings include an extensive look at the fund in comparison to its peer group and identify the most appropriate index for comparison.
* False
* True

A

False
* There are several caveats to the Morningstar ratings. Morningstar categories are sometimes more broad and may match some funds against others that do not have the same investment approach.
* Morningstar also uses limited number of indexes for benchmark. The indices used may not be the best benchmark for some funds.

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86
Q

What are the sources of return for REIT investors?
* Rent
* Property Value
* Mortgage
* Revenue generated from property
* Revenue generated from equipment

A

Rent
Property Value
Mortgage
Revenue generated from property
* REITs generate return to investors from income and gains associated with the underlying properties. A REIT that owns apartment buildings will pass the rent to investors as income. A REIT that owns mortgages will pass mortgage payments to investors. A REIT that owns equity in properties will pass the profits of the property. A change in the property value would increase the price of the REIT that owns it. REITs invest in real estate and therefore would not own equipment.

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87
Q

As a limited partner of a limited partnership, you have the right to receive profits and can deduct losses from your personal taxes. You also have the right to vote on the partnership’s management decisions.
* False
* True

A

False
* Limited partners will receive profits before tax. They are able to deduct losses from operations from their income tax that are proportionate to their investment.
* However, their limited liability is dependent on their passivity in general partners’ management decisions.

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88
Q

Your friend just mentioned to you that she has invested in a hedge fund. When you asked her what type of hedge fund, she replies, “I’m not sure. My broker just told me the hedge fund invested in other hedge funds.”
What type of hedge fund does your friend own?
* Fundamental Long/Short Fund
* Quantitative Long/Short Fund
* Funds of Funds
* Macro Funds

A

Funds of Funds
* A Funds of Funds invests in a variety of other hedge funds. Risk is controlled through the diversification of holding other funds.

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89
Q

Exam 3. Pooled Investments

Exam 3. Pooled Investments

A
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90
Q

Which of the following hedge fund segments aims to take advantage basic mispriced securities using a high degree of leverage?
* Arbitrage/Relative Value Funds
* Macro Funds
* Funds of Funds
* Quantitative Long/Short Funds
* Fundamental Long/Short Funds

A

Arbitrage/Relative Value Funds

Arbitrage/Relative Value Funds
* Investment Strategy: Seek out basic mispriced securities.
* Use of Leverage: A high degree of leverage is used to capitalize on otherwise small pricing differences.
* Risk Control: Necessary to eliminate broad market risk in order to capitalize on relative mispricing.

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91
Q

Match the investment objective to the correct fund.
Money Market Fund
Los Angeles Municipal Bond Fund
S&P Index Fund
Valley Technology Fund
* Long-term growth by mimicking the performance of the market
* Tax-free income
* Safety and liquidity
* Long-term growth by investing in stocks of one industry

A
  • Money Market - Fund Safety and liquidity
  • Los Angeles Municipal - Bond Fund Tax-free income
  • S&P Index Fund - Long-term growth by mimicking the performance of the market
  • Valley Technology Fund - Long-term growth by investing in stocks of one industry
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92
Q

The JAM Investment Company had the following statistics at market close:
$750 Assets
$200 Liabilities
30 Outstanding Shares
Calculate the Net Asset Value (NAV).
* $18.34
* $6.67
* $31.67
* $25.00

A

$18.34

  • NAV Per Share
    (Assets – Liabilities) ÷ Shares Outstanding = NAV
    ($750 - $200) ÷ 30 = $18.34
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93
Q

Each of the following are advantages of investing in mutual funds EXCEPT:
* Diversification
* Taxes
* Liquidity
* Professional Management

A

Taxes
* When mutual funds sell securities within their portfolios for a profit, the majority of the capital gain is distributed to the shareholders. There is a lack of control of the holding period, so the distributed gains can have more short-term gains (which are taxed as income) than long-term gains (which are taxed at a lower fixed percentage).
* Therefore, taxation is a potential disadvantage of mutual fund investing.

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94
Q

Each of the following are potential disadvantages associated with investing in mutual funds EXCEPT:
* Unrealized Capital Gain
* Service Quality
* Overall Costs
* Estate Planning Utility

A

Service Quality
* Mutual funds can provide you with a number of services including book-keeping services, checking accounts and automatic systems which help you to add or withdraw from your account, as well as buy or sell over the phone or the Internet.
* Thus, service is an advantage of mutual fund investing.

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95
Q

Typically, __ ____??____ __ shares of an open-end fund are shares with CDSC charge plus a 12b-1 fee.
* Class C
* Class B
* Class A

A

Class B
* Typically, Class B shares of a fund are shares with CDSC charge plus a 12b-1 fee.
* After the CDSC’s term is up, the Class B share may convert to Class A shares.

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96
Q

Target funds are best categorized as __ ____??____ __ funds.
* flexible income
* asset allocation
* balanced
* exchange traded

A

asset allocation
* Asset allocation funds attempt to time the market but in doing so, focus on total return instead of current income.
* The most significant type of an asset allocation funds are target funds.
* These funds are targeted to a specific time horizon (e.g., PQR Mutual Fund 2025).
* Target funds are of particular interest for retirement and college funding goals.

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97
Q

As long as __ ____??____ __ of REIT income is distributed to shareholders, that income is free from taxation to the REIT.
* 60%
* 90%
* 75%
* 50%

A

90%
* As long as 90% of their income is distributed to shareholders, that income is free from taxation for the REIT.
* At least 75% of a REIT’s assets and income must be derived from real estate equity or mortgages.

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98
Q

Lesson 4. Derivatives, Insurance Securities, and Other Investments

Lesson 4. Derivatives, Insurance Securities, and Other Investments

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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99
Q

Match the descriptions with the corresponding option contract element.
Writer
Buyer
Premium
Underlying Asset
* The person purchasing the contract
* The price of the contract
* The contract derives its value from this
* The person selling the contract

A
  • Writer - The person selling the contract
  • Buyer - The person selling the contract
  • Premium - The price of the contract
  • Underlying Asset - The contract derives its value from this
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100
Q

Call Option: Example

The Widget Corporation’s stock is currently trading at $45 per share. Ben believes that the price of the stock will rise substantially over the next six months and wants to buy a call option. Wilma believes that the stock price will not rise above $50 over this time period. Wilma writes a 6-month naked call option for 100 shares of Widget stock with an exercise (strike) price of $50 per share. Ben buys the option for a premium of $3 per share, or $300 for the contract.

If the stock price rose to $60/share and Ben exercises the call option, then Wilma will need to purchase the stock in the market for $6,000 and sell them to Ben for $5,000. Netting the premium, Wilma will have a loss of $700. If Ben sells the shares for $6,000, then his total gain will be the same as Wilma’s loss, $700. Alternately, Ben can sell the option to someone else for $700 and thus pass the right to buy at $50 to the buyer.

Ben (Buyer) Wilma (Writer)
Premium ($300) Premium $300
Exercise option at strike price ($5,000) Buy stock at market price ($6,000)
Sells shares at market price $6,000 Payment for shares $5,000
Net Gain: $700 Net Loss: ($700)

Based on the facts presented on this page, assume that Widget Corporation’s stock is currently trading at $45 per share. What would happen if the stock price remained below $50?
* Ben would exercise the option.
* Ben would not exercise the option.

A

Ben would not exercise the option.
* If the price remained below $50, then Ben would not exercise the option. Wilma would make $300, the premium for the contract while Ben would lose $300 plus transaction costs.

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101
Q

ACTIVITY

The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) was founded in 1973 and is the largest clearing organization in the world for financial derivatives instruments. Go to their website optionsclearing.com and explore the “What is OCC?” section to learn more about its origin and purpose.
After reviewing the above link, you should be able to answer the following questions:
* What is the purpose of the OCC?
* What publications are available from the OCC?

A
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102
Q

The difference between option contracts and futures contracts is that a futures contract gives the right to exercise the contract, but an option contract is an obligation to deliver.
* False
* True

A

False

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103
Q

What does the futures market clearing house use to ensure it always has a sufficient security deposit to protect it from losses due to individual investors actions? Click all that apply.
* Daily marking-to-market procedure
* Reverse trades
* Margin requirements
* Breaking transaction

A

Daily marking-to-market procedure
Margin requirements
* A futures contract is replaced every day by adjusting the equity in the investor’s account and drawing up a new contract that has a purchase price equal to the current settlement price. The daily marking-to-market procedure, coupled with margin requirements, results in the clearinghouse’s always having a security deposit of sufficient size to protect it from losses owing to the actions of the individual investors.

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104
Q

If you expect the price to increase, list 3 things to do.

A
  1. Write a put
  2. Buy a call
  3. Buy a future
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105
Q

If you expect the price to decrease, list 3 things to do.

A
  1. Write a call
  2. Buy a put
  3. Sell a future
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106
Q

An option is a contract between two people wherein one person grants the other person the right to buy a specific asset at a specific price within a specific time period.
* False
* True

A

True
* An option is a contract between two people where one person grants the other person the right to buy a specific asset at a specific price within a specific time period. There are two parties to the contract, the seller, who agrees to sell an asset to another, the buyer, at an agreed price before the expiration of a certain date.

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107
Q

If you were expecting the price of a stock to increase because you think it will beat the market’s estimate of the company’s earnings, which of the following would you do? (Select all that apply)
* Write a call option on the stock
* Buy a call option on the stock
* Write a put option on the stock
* Buy a put option on the stock

A

Buy a call option on the stock
Write a put option on the stock
* If the price of a stock is expected to rise, then you would want to buy a call or write (sell) a put option. Buying a call option would give you the option to buy the stock at a set price. If the price of the stock increases, you will be able to buy it at a cheaper price.
* Put options allow the writer to sell you shares at a set price. If the price of the shares increases, the buyer would not exercise the contract because he or she can sell the shares at a higher price in the market.
* Writers of calls and buyers of puts expect the price to fall.

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108
Q

A July wheat futures contract sells 5,000 bushels at $4 per bushel. Which of the options would be the deposit if the initial margin were 5%?
* $1,000
* $2,000
* $3,000
* $4,000

A

$1,000
* A July wheat futures contract for 5,000 bushels at $4 per bushel would have a total purchase price of $20,000. If the initial margin requirement is 5%, buyer and seller would each have to make a deposit of $1,000 (0.05 X $20,000).

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109
Q

The initial margin for a July wheat futures contract for 10,000 bushels at $4 per bushel is $2,000, what is the maintenance margin if it were 65% of the initial margin?
* $1,800
* $1,700
* $1,600
* $1,300

A

$1,300
* If the maintenance margin is roughly 65% of initial margin, then the investor must have equity equal to or greater than 65% of the initial margin, or $2,000(0.65) = $1,300.

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110
Q

What generally are the prevailing characteristics of options trading? (Select all that apply)
* Exchanges begin trading a new set of options on a given stock every three months.
* Newly created options have roughly nine months before they expire.
* Exchanges may decide to introduce long-term options or LEAPS.
* Exchanges may decide to allow customized options or FLEX options for flexible exchange options.
* The positions are marked to market daily.

A

Exchanges begin trading a new set of options on a given stock every three months.
Newly created options have roughly nine months before they expire.
Exchanges may decide to introduce long-term options or LEAPS.
Exchanges may decide to allow customized options or FLEX options for flexible exchange options.
* In options trading, exchanges begin trading a new set of options on a given stock every three months. The newly created options have roughly nine months before they expire, and options might be introduced in January, April, July, and October, with expiration dates in, respectively, September, December, March, and June.
* The exchange might decide to introduce long-term options also called LEAPS by the exchanges for long-term equity anticipation securities that expire as far into the future as two years.
* The exchange might also decide to allow the creation of customized options called FLEX options for flexible exchange options, that have exercise prices and expiration dates of the investor’s choosing.
* Daily marking to market is a practice used for futures contracts.

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111
Q

Margin is a system that provides protection to the OCC to cover the writer’s inability to bear the net cost.
* False
* True

A

True
* The OCC has to see that the writer is able to fulfill the terms of the contract. The exchanges where the options are traded have set margin requirements, to relieve the OCC of this concern.
* In the case of a call, shares are to be delivered by the writer in return for the exercise price.
* In the case of a put, cash is to be delivered in return for shares.
* In either case the net cost to the option writer will be the absolute difference between the exercise price and the stock’s market value at the time of exercise.
* The OCC is at risk if the writer is unable to bear this cost. It has a system known as “margin” to protect itself from the actions of the writers.

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112
Q

If annuity payments continue beyond the life expectancy noted on IRS Table V, all income generated from the annuity is considered __ ____??____ __.

A

There are two basic types of annuities:
* Fixed
* Variable

Exam Tip: If annuity payments continue beyond the life expectancy noted on IRS Table V, all income generated from the annuity is considered taxable income.

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113
Q

Match the description to the correct term.
Liquidation period
Fixed annuity
Accumulation Period
Variable annuity
* A mutual fund with an insurance wrapper
* Principal builds through investments and returns on investments reinvested
* When benefit is distributed through lump sum or annuity
* Principal is always guaranteed while interest rate is guaranteed for a brief period, then becomes changeable

A
  • Liquidation period. When benefit is distributed through lump sum or annuity
  • Fixed annuity. Principal is always guaranteed while interest rate is guaranteed for a brief period, then becomes changeable
  • Accumulation Period. Principal builds through investments and returns on investments reinvested
  • Variable annuity. A mutual fund with an insurance wrapper
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114
Q

Which of the following are characteristics of variable annuities? (Select all that apply)
* Not dependent on market performance of a specified investment fund.
* Principal invested in a portfolio of securities.
* Value remains static irrespective of the changing value of the underlying securities.
* Future worth depends on the portfolio’s financial performance.

A

Principal invested in a portfolio of securities.
Future worth depends on the portfolio’s financial performance.
* The value of a variable annuity is dependent on market performance of a specified investment fund.
* The principal is invested in a portfolio of securities.
* The value of a variable annuity increases or decreases with the changing value of the underlying securities.
* The future worth of the annuity will depend on the portfolio’s financial performance. If it does poorly, you could lose some or the entire principal.

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115
Q

Which of the following is NOT a reason to invest in a GIC fund in 401(k)plans?
* Temporary holding place
* Safe haven from extreme market conditions
* Long-term growth
* Soon to begin withdrawals

A

Long-term growth
* Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GICs) are conservative by nature. Funds made up of GICs are sometimes called stable funds. They are ideal for very conservative objectives such as a temporary holding place, safe haven, or nearing distributions.
* They are not suitable for long-term growth because they do not provide sufficient yield to outpace inflation in the long-run.

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116
Q

What would cause a collectible such as a Star Wars figure to increase in price?
* Oversupply - there are more in production than demanded
* Revival - nostalgic trend led to a resurgence of interest in collecting beanie babies
* Limited edition - limited number were produces
* Retired - production ceased for the particular version

A

Revival - nostalgic trend led to a resurgence of interest in collecting beanie babies
Limited edition - limited number were produces
Retired - production ceased for the particular version
* The change in price of a collectible is driven by basic micro-economic factors. Price will increase due to scarcity caused by limited editions, discontinued versions, and increase in demand while quantity supplied remained the same. The premise of an Internet auction such as eBay runs on the basis of price movements caused by supply and demand.

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117
Q

Owners of an income-producing property enjoy tax savings.
* A. True
* B. False

A

True
* The IRS allows owners of income-producing property certain deductions, which result in tax savings.

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118
Q

Which of the following are advantages of holding gold company stocks, gold coins, bullion and certificates? (Select all that apply)
* A. Gold companies stock provides a current return in the form of annual dividends.
* B. Gold coins can be stored in bank safe deposit boxes.
* C. Commissions on gold certificates are higher than bullion or coins.
* D. Gold coins are standardized in weight and purity and can be purchased anywhere.

A

Correct Answer: A., B. and D.
* Explanation: There are certain advantages of holding gold coins, bullion and certificates.
* Gold companies stock provides a current return in the form of annual dividends.
* Gold coins can be stored in bank safe deposit boxes. They are standardized in weight and purity and can be purchased anywhere.
* Commissions on gold certificates are lower than bullion or coins.

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119
Q

Which of the following are drawbacks associated with investing in real estate?
* A. Majority of money for the investment has to come from the investor
* B. Not a very liquid asset
* C. Not well suited for novice investors
* D. Many tax advantages are associated with it

A

Correct Answer: B. and C.
* Explanation: A major draw for investing in real estate is the income the property can generate coupled with the opportunity for capital gains. The tax advantages that were available in the past are largely gone or are on the way out. Investment in real estate is illiquid. If you sell your property holdings, it may take months to find a buyer, and there’s no guarantee that you’ll actually get what you feel is a fair price. In addition, overbuilding in some areas has actually resulted in a decline of property prices. The bottom line is that real estate investment is not well suited to the novice investor.

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120
Q

Which of the following statements are true about ADRs vs. direct investment in foreign stocks?
* A. ADRs are certificates issued by U.S. banks that represent ownership in shares of foreign company stocks.
* B. ADRs are not reliable because foreign countries are not stringent with their financial statements.
* C. ADRs can increase the risk of a stock portfolio because they are highly correlated to U.S. stock market
* D. ADRs provide a means for domestic investors to access foreign stocks that they otherwise may not have been able to.

A

Correct Answer: A. and D.
* Explanation: ADRs are certificates issued by U.S. banks that represent ownership in shares of foreign company stocks. They provide investors access into foreign companies that they otherwise may not be able to.
* Regulation requires companies to follow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles to report financial information in order to qualify as ADRs.
* They lower the overall risk of a portfolio because their low correlation to the movement of U.S. markets.

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121
Q

Exam 4. Derivatives, Insurance Securities, and Other Investments

Exam 4. Derivatives, Insurance Securities, and Other Investments

A
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122
Q

John is considering adding to his coin and stamp collection. Which of the following is true?
* This is an efficient market.
* John would not be subject to the same elements of risk attributable to the stock market.
* Stamps and coins have a small bid-ask margin.
* Stamps and coins are more marketable than art and antiques.
* The return on physical assets is normally negatively correlated with returns on financial assets.

A

The return on physical assets is normally negatively correlated with returns on financial assets.
* Inflation, while bearish to stocks and bonds, may be beneficial for collectibles. That John would not be subject to the same elements of risk attributable to the stock market is a good answer, but the correct answer is better.

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123
Q

An ADR is which of the following?
* An instrument used to affect payment in import-export transactions.
* A corporation organized under the laws of a foreign country.
* A receipt for shares of a foreign-based corporation.
* An instrument that contracts in the futures market for a foreign currency.

A

A receipt for shares of a foreign-based corporation.

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124
Q

Because collectibles are generally neither liquid nor do they produce any income, why would a person purchase a collectible?
* For low acquisition cost and commissions.
* For enjoyment.
* For predictable price changes.
* For low capital gains rates when sold for a gain.

A

For enjoyment.
* With the exception of dealers, an investor who invests in collectibles realizes a gain subject to long-term capital gains rates of 28% upon sale (if held long-term). Acquisition and commissions are relatively high compared to alternative investments. Prices change frequently and unpredictably due to their markets.

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125
Q

Do ADRs satisfy the definition of “qualified foreign corporations” to get the 15% qualified dividend rate?
* Yes
* Generally
* No

A

Generally
* Most (but not all) ADRs satisfy the IRS definition of a “qualified foreign corporation”. Most ADRs fit the Internal Revenue Code, but some ADRs do not meet the definition.

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126
Q

If a portfolio manager of a S&P 500 fund is expecting to receive $10,000,000 in 90 days and is of the opinion that prices of large-cap stocks are about to increase, he could take advantage of the change by doing which of the following?
* Buying S&P 500 Index calls
* Buying additional S&P 500 Index stocks when the funds are received
* Writing S&P 500 Index covered calls
* Buying S&P 500 Index puts

A

Buying S&P 500 Index calls
* If the large-cap market were to rise, the manager could profit from increased prices by buying calls.

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127
Q

Which of the following is the riskiest option position?
* Selling a naked call.
* Buying in the money call.
* Buying an out of the money call.
* Selling a covered call.

A

Selling a naked call.
* If the price of the stock rises, the seller of the naked call is forced to buy the stock at the higher market price in order to supply it to the option buyer. This is the riskiest option because the stock may rise without limit.

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128
Q

Bob owns a variable annuity. The accrued gain for the year is 16% or $16,000. Is the gain tax-deferred?
* The gain for the year is ordinary income.
* The annuity is tax-deferred.
* Variable annuities pay capital gains tax.

A

The annuity is tax-deferred.
* This contract is owned by a natural person (Bob). Taxation is deferred.

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129
Q

A private placement can be purchased by which of the following?
I. An unlimited number of non-accredited investors
II. A limited number of non-accredited investors
III. 35 accredited investors
IV. An unlimited number of accredited investors
* II, IV
* II, III
* I, III
* I, IV

A

II, IV

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130
Q

Trudy, a 40-year old single executive, has about 75% of her net worth in U.S. common stock securities. She owns a downtown condo overlooking the scenic riverfront. She is not planning to get married and likes her style of living. She is well paid and receives a large bonus at year end. The potential for large stock market drops like those in 2002 and 2008 concern her. Which of the following investments would you suggest?
I. 2-year S&P 500 call index options
II. A large position in 9 month put options
III. A quality collectible
IV. A natural resource fund
V. A global fund
* I, IV
* II, V
* III, IV
* I, V
* III, V

A

III, IV
* Collectibles and natural resource funds are negatively correlated with the market.
* The collectible may be perfect with her style of living.
* The index option is correlated.
* The puts may expire.
* The global fund includes US stocks.

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131
Q

Which of the following statements is true about ADRs?
* ADRs facilitate trading of domestic securities in foreign countries.
* ADR holders receive foreign tax credits for income tax paid to a foreign country.
* ADR dividends are declared in U.S. dollars.
* ADR holders can vote for the Board of Directors.

A

ADR holders receive foreign tax credits for income tax paid to a foreign country.
* ADR holders cannot vote for the Board of Directors. Dividends are declared in local currencies but are paid in U.S. dollars.

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132
Q

The client feels the stock he owns is going to take a dive. He already has a substantial gain. Other than selling the stock, he wants to preserve his gain should the stock go down. Which of the following techniques should he use?
I. Sell a covered call
II. Buy a put
III. Use a stop-limit order
IV. Use a stop order
* I
* I, III, IV
* II, III, IV
* II

A

II
* If the client sells a call, he will receive premium income, but the stock may be called away. A stop-limit order is a specialized order in which a limit order and a stop order are combined. A stop-limit order to sell must have a stop-limit price below the security’s market price.
* Example: “Sell 100 GM 70 stop-limit.” Once the stock sells at or below $70, the order becomes a limit order to sell 100 shares at $70.
* Limit orders can also be placed on the buy side. The put protects the downside risk.

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133
Q

Futures: Maintenance Margin (Example)

Reconsider investors B and S, who had, respectively, bought and sold a July wheat futures contract at $4 per bushel. Each investor had made a deposit of $1,000 in order to meet the initial margin requirement. The next day the price of the wheat futures contract rose to $4.10 per bushel, or $20,500. Thus the equity of B increased to $1,500 while the equity of S decreased to $500. If the maintenance margin requirement is 65% of the initial margin, both B and S are required to have equity of at least $650 (0.65 X $1,000) in their accounts every day. Because the actual level of equity for B clearly exceeds that amount, B does not need to do anything. Indeed, B may withdraw an amount of cash equal to the amount by which the equity exceeds the initial margin. In this example, B can withdraw cash of $500.

However, S is under margined and will be asked to make a cash deposit of at least $500, because this will increase the equity from $500 to $1,000, the level of the initial margin. In the event that S refuses to make this deposit, the broker will enter a reversing trade for S by purchasing a July wheat futures contract. The result is that S will simply receive an amount of money approximately equal to the account’s equity, $500, and the account will be closed. Because S initially deposited $1,000, S will have sustained a loss of $500.

On the third day the price of the July wheat futures contract is assumed to settle at $3.95 per bushel, representing a $750 loss for B and a $750 gain for S. As a consequence, B is now under margined and will be asked to deposit $750 so that the equity in B’s account will be $1,000. (This example assumes that B had withdrawn the $500 in excess margin that had accumulated from the previous day’s price change.) Conversely, S can withdraw $750, because the equity in S’s account is over the $1,000 initial margin requirement by that amount. (Remember that S had added $500 to bring the account’s equity up to $1,000 at the end of the previous day.)

A
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134
Q

Roles of Exchange (OCC): Activity

The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) was founded in 1973 and is the largest clearing organization in the world for financial derivatives instruments. Go to their website optionsclearing.com and explore the About OCC section to learn more about its origin and purpose.

After reviewing the above link, you should be able to answer the following questions:
* What is the purpose of the OCC?
* What publications are available from the OCC?

A
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135
Q

American Deposit Receipts (ADR): Activity

There are an abundance of foreign companies that offer ADRs. Some household names include Nokia, Sony and Shell. Go to adr.com and look up a few foreign companies to see if they have ADRs in an American stock exchange. You can also explore ADRs by region, country and sector.

After reviewing the above link, you should be able to answer the following questions:
* What type of data is provided for an individual ADR?
* What are the most active ADRs from the Nikkei? How about Hong Kong?

A
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136
Q

Lesson 5. Investment Risks

Lesson 5. Investment Risks

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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137
Q

Which of the following are examples of business risk? Click all that apply.
Change the manufacturer process
* Reinvestment
* Inflation
* CEO charged with unethical business practices
* Interest rates
* Leverage buy out

A

Change the manufacturer process
CEO charged with unethical business practices
Leverage buy out
* Business specific risks are uniquely associated with the company or entity issuing the security. Change is processes may increase short-term expenses but improve a company’s efficiency in production in the lon-term. A company being bought out can be beneficial (company is broken up and sold in pieces). Charges for any illegal activities or business practices can be detrimental for the company’s stock.

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138
Q

Market risk results only from fluctuations in security prices due to changes in the market interest rate.
* False
* True

A

False
* Market risk is associated with overall market movements, not just changes in interest rate.
* The interest rate risk is, in fact, associated specifically with changes in the market interest rate.

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139
Q

Why would a company call its outstanding bond issues?
* Interest rates are rising
* Inflation rates are rising
* Interest rates are decreasing
* Exchanging rates are decreasing

A

Interest rates are decreasing
* When interest rates decrease, it gives a company incentive to exercise its right to call its outstanding bonds and issue new bonds in the current interest environment. This helps to lower the interest expense for the company and allow it to use the money on other things. Therefore when interest rates rise, companies would not call its debt because its existing interest expense is lower than current rates. Inflation and exchange rates have no direct relationship with the decision to call a bond issue.

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140
Q

Match the description with the risk.
Business Risk
Liquidity Risk
Financial Risk
Sovereign Risk
* Subject to foreign country seizing investment
* Associated with the use of debt by firms
* Inability to find a buyer at a fair market price
* Can be caused by management decisions

A
  • Business Risk - Can be caused by management decisions
  • Liquidity Risk - Inability to find a buyer at a fair market price
  • Financial Risk - Associated with the use of debt by firms
  • Sovereign Risk - Subject to foreign country seizing investment
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141
Q

Describe Coefficient of Determination

A
  • The correlation coefficient squared is called the coefficient of determination, “R2”, or “R-squared.” R-squared measures the portion of the asset’s performance that can be attributed to the returns of the overall market. Since the correlation of coefficient’’s value is between -1 and 1, R-squared’s values can only be between 0 and 1 (the square of anything less than zero will equal a positive number).
  • If R-squared = 1, then the asset’s return is perfectly correlated with the return of the market.
  • If R-squared = 0, then the asset’s return has nothing to do with the market’s return.
  • The closer to one that an asset’s R-squared value is, the more reliable its beta. if an asset’s R-squared is below .7, then Beta and everything that uses Beta (like the Treynor ratio and Jensen’s Alpha) would be a meaningless statistic.
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142
Q

François, a wholesaler for Les Bleus Funds, visits your office and presents two investment alternatives.
Lamarck Fund: R2 = 0.24, ß = 1.60
Montaigne Fund: R2 = 0.89, ß = 1.04
Which of these investments is more likely to provide returns that outperform the market during an expansion?
* Lamarck Fund
* Montaigne Fund

A

Montaigne Fund
* The Montaigne Fund is more likely to outperform the market during an expansion. With an R2 of 0.24, Lamarck Fund’s Beta is not reliable. As a result, the Montaigne Fund is more likely to outperform the market due to its reliable R2 of 0.89, and a Beta of 1.04 that suggests that it will outperform the market.

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143
Q

YOUTUBE - FP Formulas: Covariance

What is the formula for Co-variance?

A
  • Covariance Formula:
  • Multiply the standard deviation of asset I, by the standard deviation of asset J.
  • And then multiply by the correlation between asset I and J

Numbers will be provided. Just multiply.

Real trick with covariance is understanding what it actually measures.
Used in finance to measure how 2 assets change in value in comparison to one another

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144
Q

YOUTUBE - FP Formulas: Covariance

What does covariance actually measure?

A
  • Used in finance to measure how 2 assets change in value in comparison to one another

Positive – move in tandem
* Ex. Hot Summer – high temperatures, high usage of AC

Negative – move in opposite directions
* Ex. Hot Summer – sales down in coat sales, sales high for AC

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145
Q

YOUTUBE - FP Formulas: Covariance

Describe Modern Portfolio Theory & 2 problems with relying on covariance

A

Modern Portfolio Theory – portfolio managers will actually seek out negative correlated assets as a way to diversify their holdings and hedge their bets.
* When one loses, another would gain.

Two big problems with relying on covariance are:
1. Past performance does not predict future results.
2. Covariance only tells us that the 2 assets will move in the same direction.
It does not tell us how closely they will follow each other.
* One asset could increase by 5% and the other by 50% or 500%.
* Without more information, we won’t be able to make full use of that data.

That’s when we need to incorporate correlation.

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146
Q

What is the formula for standard deviation?

A

The standard deviation equals the square root of the variance.

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147
Q

The variance of an asset’s rates of return is a statistic that measures the asset’s __ ____??____ __.
The variance is represented by the symbols __ ____??____ __ and __ ____??____ __.

A

The variance of an asset’s rates of return is a statistic that measures the asset’s wideness.
The variance is represented by the symbols s2 and VAR(r).

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148
Q
  • __ ____??____ __% probability that the actual return you will obtain next year, will be plus / or minus one standard deviation from the mean (expected return).
  • __ ____??____ __% of the time, the actual return will be plus / or minus two standard deviations from the mean; and finally,
  • __ ____??____ __% of the time, the actual return will be plus / or minus three standard deviations from the mean.
  • These ranges (__ ____??____ __) are referred to as __ ____??____ __.
A
  • 68% probability that the actual return you will obtain next year, will be plus / or minus one standard deviation from the mean (expected return).
  • 95% of the time, the actual return will be plus / or minus two standard deviations from the mean; and finally,
  • 99% of the time, the actual return will be plus / or minus three standard deviations from the mean.
  • These ranges (68%, 95%, and 99%) are referred to as confidence intervals.
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149
Q

What’s the composiste of:
* 1 deviation – 68%
* 2 deviation – 95%
* 3 deviation – 99.7%

A
  • 1 dev – 68% = 34% + 34%
  • 2 dev – 95% = 13.5% + 13.5%
  • 3 dev – 99.7% = 2.35% + 2.35%
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150
Q

What is correlation and why is it important?

A
  • Correlation is a statistical measure that offers advisors information on the direction that assets move in relation to one another.
  • Correlation shows the strength of a relationship between two variables and is expressed numerically by the correlation coefficient.
  • The correlation coefficient’s values range between -1.0 and 1.0.
  • Understanding how to calculate the correlation coefficient as well as what it can tell us about an investment portfolio is key to success on both the CFP exam as well as a career as a CFP.
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151
Q

YOUTUBE - CFP Formulas: Correlation

What is the correlation formula?
Explain -1, 0 and +1

A
  • Correlation – part of the co-variance formula
  • Adjust the co-variance formula to make the Correlation formula
  • +1 – they behave exactly the same, ex. S&P 500 ETF and S&P 500
  • -1 – they behave completely opposite. When one goes up, the other goes down by the exact same amount, ex. Shorting a security
  • 0 – no relationship

Good to balance holdings in a portfolio

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152
Q

Describe the beta coefficient

A
  • The beta coefficient is an index of undiversifiable (market, systematic) risk. You can rank betas from different assets to compare the undiversifiable risk of the assets.
  • Since the beta of the market (Bm) equals 1, if the beta of the investment (Bi)= 1, then the asset has the same volatility as the market.
  • If Bi > 1, then the rates of return from the asset are more volatile than the returns from the market and the asset is classified as an aggressive asset. The return will be higher than the market if the market return increases. However, if the market return decreases, then the asset’s return will decrease more.
  • If Bi < 1, then the asset is a defensive asset. Its rates of return are less volatile than the market’s. The asset will earn a positive return when the market return increases, but not as much. Similarly, when the market does poorly, it will do less poorly than the market.
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153
Q

Describe the Asset’s Total Risk

A

An investment’s total risk, measured by its variance of returns, can be partitioned into two components:
* Unsystematic or Diversifiable risk
* Systematic or Nondiversifiable risk

By rearranging the characteristic line, you can attribute the returns that are diversifiable vs. nondiversifiable.

Total Return
Bi (rm, t) + (ai, t + ei, t) = ri, t

Undiversifiable + Diversifiable = Total Return of Period for Asset

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154
Q

How do you calculate nondiversifiable & diversifiable % of total risk?

A

The percentage of total risk that is diversifiable can be measured by subtracting the coefficient of determination or R-squared from one.

The percentage of total risk that is nondiversifiable can be measured by the coefficient of determination or R-squared.

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155
Q

If Coca-Cola’s correlation coefficient is 0.785, what portion of its risk during that period is nondiversifiable?
* 0.616
* 0.215
* 0.384
* 0.785

A

0.616
* The nondiversifiable portion would be the R2 or the correlation coefficient-squared (0.785)2 = 0.616, or 61.6%.
* Therefore, 61.6% of Coca-Cola’s return for that period is based on the, nondiversifiable, systematic risk.

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156
Q

List Systematic / Non - Diversifiable Risks

A

Systematic/Non-diversifiable
* Purchasing Power Risk (Inflation Risk)
* Reinvestment Rate Risk
* Interest Rate Risk
* Market Risk
* Exchange Rate Risk

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157
Q

List Unsystematic / Diversifiable Risks

A

Unsystematic/Diversifiable
* Business Risk
* Financial Risk
* Credit (Default) Risk
* Regulation Risk
* Sovereignty Risk

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158
Q

Which of the following terms refers to the weighted average of all the different rates of return in one probability distribution?
* Alpha
* Beta
* Expected rate of return
* Systematic risk

A

Expected rate of return
* The expected rate of return is defined as the weighted average of various rates of return in one probability distribution.
* Alpha is the value on the vertical axis where the characteristic line intersects that axis, while beta measures the slope of one asset’s characteristic line.
* Systematic risk is that portion of a stock’s risk that cannot be eliminated through diversification.

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159
Q

Which of the following is used to measure an investment’s beta and residual variance?
* Characteristic line
* Standard Deviation
* Undiversifiable risk
* Correlation coefficient

A

Characteristic line
* The characteristic line is a simple linear regression used to measure an investment’s beta and residual variance.
* The standard deviation is the square root of the variance.
* Undiversifiable risk is that portion of a stock’s risk or variability that cannot be eliminated through diversification.
* The correlation coefficient is a goodness-of-fit statistic that measures how well the data points fit a regression line.

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160
Q

What does the value of an asset’s variance, or the wideness of the probability distribution represent?
* Additional risk that is firm specific
* Undiversifiable risk that is market related
* How closely two assets move together
* The degree of risk associated with asset

A

The degree of risk associated with asset
* Variance represents the amount of risk associated with an asset.
* The higher the value (the wider the distribution) the more likely the actual return will vary from the expected return.
* Covariance describes the relationship between two or more assets.
* The characteristic line identifies the diversifiable and undiversifiable risks.

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161
Q

Which of the following statements are true? (Select all that apply)
* A stock with beta of 0.7 is an aggressive stock.
* A stock with R-squared of 70% has a return that was mostly caused by systematic risk.
* A stock with alpha of .04 had a better return than the market.
* A stock with R-squared of .7 is less correlated to the market than a stock with R-squared of .5.
* A stock with beta of 1.3 is a defensive stock.

A

A stock with R-squared of 70% has a return that was mostly caused by systematic risk.
A stock with alpha of .04 had a better return than the market.
* R-square represents the portion of return attributed to undiversifiable or systematic risk.
* Positive alpha values represent a better return than market, while negative ones denote that the market performed better.
* If beta is greater than 1, then the stock is aggressive and if it is less than 1, then the stock is defensive.
* The closer to 1 R-squared is, the more correlated to the market it is.

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162
Q

What does beta > 1 mean?
What does beta <1 mean?

A

If beta is greater than 1, then the stock is aggressive.

If it is less than 1, then the stock is defensive.

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163
Q

The closer to 1 R-squared is, the more correlated to the market it is.
* True
* False

A

True
* The closer to 1 R-squared is, the more correlated to the market it is.

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164
Q

If an asset’s distribution has excess kurtosis greater than 0, and is also positively skewed, then
* the distribution is skewed to the left and will have fat tails
* the distribution is skewed to the right and will have thin tails
* the distribution is skewed to the left and will have thin tails
* the distribution is skewed to the right and will have fat tails

A

the distribution is skewed to the right and will have fat tails
* A positively skewed distribution is skewed to the right and a negatively skewed distribution is skewed to the left.
* Excess kurtosis greater than 0 describes a Leptokurtic distribution and will have fat tails.

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165
Q

Exam 5. Investment Risks

Exam 5. Investment Risks

A
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166
Q

If a fund has a beta of 2.4 in relation to the S&P 500, how much would the fund be expected to move if the S&P 500 decreased by 10%?
* Lose 14%
* Lose 76%
* Lose 4%
* Lose 10%
* Lose 24%

A

Lose 24%
* 10% x 2.4 = 24%

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167
Q

Which of the following is not a source of systematic risk?
* Purchasing power risk
* Exchange rate risk
* Interest rate risk
* Liquidity risk
* Market risk

A

Liquidity risk

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168
Q

The risk quantified by standard deviation is which of the following?
I. Variability
II. Nondiversified portfolio
III. Total risk
IV. Volatility
V. Diversified portfolio
* IV, V
* I, III, IV
* III, IV, V
* I, II, III
* II, III, IV

A

I, II, III
* Answers IV and V are the risk level quantification of Beta.

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169
Q

Which of the following investments has the highest standard deviation?
Year Stock #1 (RoR) Stock #2 (RoR)
1 10% 8%
2 6% 12%
3 12% 16%
4 -5% -8%
* Stock #1
* Stock #2

A

Stock #2

HP 12C
8 Σ +
12 Σ +
16 Σ +
8 CHS Σ +
g key, x̄ (0 key)
g key, S (. key)

Stock #1 has a mean of 5.75% and a standard deviation 7.59%.

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170
Q

A stock has an average (mean) return of 5.75% with a standard deviation of 7.59%. Within what range could an investor expect its return to fall 68% of the time?
* 1.84 to 13.34%
* 7.59% to 13.34%
* 5.75% to 13.34%
* -1.84% to 13.34%

A

-1.84% to 13.34%
* Mean = 5.75%, SD = 7.59%

1σ = 5.75% - 7.59% = -1.84%
1σ = 5.75% + 7.59% = 13.34%

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171
Q

U.S. Treasury securities are subject to which of the following risks?
I. Credit Risk
II. Purchasing Power Risk
III. Marketability Risk
V. Default Risk
* I, II, III, IV
* I, IV
* II
* II, III

A

II
* At this time very little credit, marketability, and default risk exists.

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172
Q

Stock ABC has an average (mean) return of 16% with a standard deviation of 16%. Within what range could an investor expect a return to fall 68% of the time?
* 16% to 32%
* 32%
* -16% to 32%
* 0% to 16%
* 0% to 32%

A

0% to 32%
* 16% ± 16%

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173
Q

If a security has a beta of 0.6, how much will it move up or down on average as the market moves as a whole?
* +40%
* +1.40%
* +1.60%
* +60%
* -0.60%

A

+60%

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174
Q

If a fund has a beta of 1.05 in relation to the S&P 500, how much would the fund be expected to increase if the S&P 500 increased by 15%?
* 14.25%
* 15.75%
* 22.5%
* 15%

A

15.75%
* 15% x 1.05 = 15.75%

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175
Q

At the beginning of the year, one U.S. dollar could buy 80 Japanese yen. At the end of the year, one U.S. dollar could buy 100 Japanese yen. What happened to the U.S. dollar during the year?
* The U.S. dollar was deflated.
* The U.S. dollar was inflated.
* The U.S. dollar was revalued.
* The U.S. dollar was devalued.

A

The U.S. dollar was revalued.
* By definition, the U.S. dollar was revalued.
* Revaluation refers to an increase in the currency’s value.

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176
Q

What type of risk is associated with the S&P index?
* Unsystematic risk
* Nonsystematic risk
* Diversifiable risk
* Non-diversifiable risk

A

Non-diversifiable risk
* The S&P index would have a systematic risk.
* Actually, all of the other answers refer to unsystematic risk (diversifiable risk).

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177
Q

Which of the following statements is/are correct concerning unsystematic risk?
I. It is related to factors such as business risk and financial risk.
II. The risk can be significantly reduced by owning 15+ different but highly correlated tech stocks.
III. A labor strike at an individual firm is a business risk.
V. It is the diversifiable portion in total risk.
* III
* I, II, III
* I, II
* I, III, IV

A

I, III, IV
* The stocks must have low positive correlations.
* Fifteen stocks in differing industries such as Microsoft, Exxon, Merck, Ford, GE, etc. will greatly reduce unsystematic risk.
* All technology stocks provide little risk reduction.
* A strike is a business risk (or an unsystematic risk).

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178
Q

The beta of a portfolio is which of the following?
* Equal to the weighted beta.
* Greater than the weighted beta.
* Less than or equal to the weighted beta.
* Less than the weighted beta.

A

Equal to the weighted beta.
* By definition, a portfolio beta is the weighted average of each security in the portfolio and its beta.

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179
Q

A portfolio with a beta of +1 has which of the following?
* Both systematic and unsystematic risk
* Unsystematic risk
* Systematic risk
* No risk

A

Systematic risk
* A portfolio with a beta of +1 is one that moves in the same direction and at the same rate as the market.
* Therefore the portfolio only has market risk which is also known as systematic risk.

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180
Q

The risk level quantification of beta is which of the following?
I. Volatility
II. Systematic risk
III. Non-systematic risk
IV. Unsystematic risk
V. Total risk
* I, II
* II, V
* I, II, V
* III, IV

A

I, II
* III, IV, V refer to standard deviation.

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181
Q

Lesson 6. Measures of Investment Returns

Lesson 6. Measures of Investment Returns

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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182
Q

What’s the formula for Holding-Period Return?

Not on formula sheet!

A

HPR=(PE+D−PB) / PB
Where:
PE = price in the end of the period
PB = price at the beginning of the period
D = any dividend, interest, or cash flow paid.

Holding period is defined as the length of time over which an investor is assumed to invest a given sum of money.
* The holding period return has a major weakness because it does not consider the time or how long it took to earn the return.
* When this procedure is applied, the performance of a security can be measured by comparing the value obtained in this manner at the end of the holding period with the value at the beginning.
* Please note that in the formula below, any coupon (from a bond), interest, dividend, or any other cash flow received from the investment does not assume reinvestment.
* Any reinvestment (like capital gains distributions and dividends from a mutual fund) would be imbedded in the ending value (P1) and the separate addition of theses payments would overstate the return.

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183
Q

If an investor bought a call option for $400 two weeks ago, and sold the option today for $540, what would the HPR be?

A

$540 - $400 ÷ $400 = 0.35 = 35%

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184
Q

The HPR can easily be asked for a bond. An investor pays $875 for a bond with an annual coupon of 6%. There is exactly 7 years to go before the bond matures. Assuming that the investor does hold the bond until maturity, what is the HPR of the bond?

A

$1,000 - $875 + $420 ÷ $875 = 62.3%

In reference to point (1), this could have been asked as a capital appreciation and income yield component: $1,000 - $875 / $875 = 14.3% (Capital gain component) and $420 (7 coupon payments x $60) divided by $875 = 48%.
The two together would sum to the total of 62.3%.

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185
Q

Dan purchased a round lot of 100 shares of Dannon stock for $2,000 or $20/share. Two years later, he sold his shares for $32/share. Dan also received dividends of $4/share. What would be the holding period return?

A

($3,200 + $400 - $2,000) ÷ $2,000 =
0.80 or 80%

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186
Q

When Maura was laid off, she rolled over her 401k into 3 funds in an IRA:
$2,000 in the Growth Fund
$4,000 in the Growth & Income Fund
$2,500 in a Small Company Fund
After 5 years her statement reflected the following balances:
Growth Fund = $2,782
Growth & Income Fund = $5,699
Small Company Fund = $3,127
Which fund has had the best holding period return?
* Growth Fund
* Growth & Income Fund
* Small Company Fund

A

Growth & Income Fund
* The Growth & Income Fund had the best holding period return.
* Growth & Income Fund = ($5,699 - $4,000) ÷ $4,000 = 0.42, or 42%
* Growth Fund = ($2,782 - $2,000) ÷ $2,000 = 0.39, or 39%
* Small Company Fund = ($3,127 - $2,500) ÷ $2,500 = 0.25, or 25%

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187
Q

What is the formula for Arithmetic Mean?

A

The arithmetic average rate of return is a summary of a great deal of information and provides a good way to compare the performance of different investments. The arithmetic mean return (AM), an average of historical one-period rates of return, is computed as follows:

AM=a1+a2+a3+…+an / n
where n denotes the terminal time period.

The arithmetic mean of historical annual returns must be measured over a representative sample period. A representative sample might cover one complete business cycle, measured from either peak to peak, or from trough to trough.

For example, Kerry held an S&P Index Fund for three years. Her returns during that time were 20%, -10%, and 5% respectively. What was her arithmetic mean return?
(.2)+(−.1)+(.05)3
= .05 or 5%

Practitioner Advice: Arithmetic mean is less telling because the standard deviation of the period can vary significantly — the price of the investment could have been very volatile during that period. If so, then the return is not reflective of the movement of the investment during that time.

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188
Q

What would Kerry’s geometric return be if her portfolio yielded -20% return in Year 1, 40% return in Year 2, and 20% in Year 3?
* 10.36%
* 13.34%
* 26.33%
* 26.67%

A

10.36%

Keystrokes (HP 12C)
0.80 ENTER 1.40 x 1.20 x 3 1/x yx 1 -

The calculator returns:
0.10357, which is also expressed as 10.357%

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189
Q

What’s the formula for After Tax Return?

A

After Tax Return = Total Return (1 - tax bracket)

Taxes can take away from return as well. It is important to consider how much is paid in taxes on investment gains when evaluating how much you have really earned.
For example, if your investments yield long-term capital gains of $1,000, then 15% of the long-term gains, or $150, is due to the IRS as Federal tax on the gains. Depending on the state you live in, there could be an additional amount due for state taxes as well.

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190
Q

Jed was in the 31% tax bracket and his taxable investments had a total return of 45%. What was his after tax return?
* 32.4%
* 45%
* 13.95%
* 31%
* 31.05%

A

31.05%
* Jed’s after tax return is equal to his taxable return times reciprocal of his tax bracket.
* 45%(1-0.31)=
* 31.05%

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191
Q

What is the formula for Real (Inflation Adjusted) Return?

A

(1+r)(1+i)−1
Where:
r= rate of return
i= rate of inflation

In times of changing prices, the nominal return (dollars received) on an investment may be a poor indicator of the real return (also known as the real rate) obtained by the investor. This is because part of the additional dollars received from the investment may be needed to recoup the investor’s lost purchasing power due to inflation. As a result, adjustments to the nominal return are needed to remove the effect of inflation in order to determine the real return. Frequently, the consumer price index (CPI) is used for this purpose.

For example, let’s assume the rate of investment return over some time period is 9%. Over that same time persiod, inflation averaged 3%. One could estimate that the inflation adusted rate of return would be 6% (9%-3%). However, it is important to be exact as small differences in return estimates can lead to large differences in dollars over time. If we apply the formula, we will find the actual inflation adjusted rate of return:

(1+.09)(1+.03)−1 = .05825 or 5.83%
While the .17% difference between the estimated and the actual inflation adjusted returns may seem insignificant, when applied to dollars over a long period of time it can lead to big differences.

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192
Q

Jill Edwards purchased 1,000 shares of ABC mutual fund for $10.00 per share, for a total investment of $10,000. A short time later the fund paid a $550 dividend, which Jill decided to have reinvested back into the fund. At the time of the reinvestment, ABC fund was selling for $11.00 per share. At the present time, ABC fund is worth $13.70 per share. What is the holding period return (HPR)?
* 43.85%
* 36.35%
* 24.54%
* 15.5%

A

43.85%
* The $550 dividend was reinvested at a price of $11.00, increasing the number shares owned to 1,050. ($550 / $11.00 = 50 shares).
* Therefore, the value of the dividend is imbedded in the ending account value of $14,385 ($13.70 x 1,050 shares).
* In this case, the HPR would simply be the price at the end, minus the price at the beginning, divided by the price at the beginning. Plugging in the numbers, the calculation yields:
* {($14,385 - $10,000) / $10,000}
* = .4385 = 43.85%

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193
Q

The total return for XYZ fund for one year is 2%. For the year, interest income was 6%, and there was a 4% loss in principal. Which of the following statements are true? (Select all that apply)
* Assuming that the fund’s interest is not reinvested, the price at the end of the year was lower than the beginning
* The fund did not pay any interest because it had a negative return
* The fund paid 2% interest
* The interest was assumed to have been reinvested

A

Assuming that the fund’s interest is not reinvested, the price at the end of the year was lower than the beginning
The interest was assumed to have been reinvested
* The total return for the fund was 2%, which was comprised of a 4% loss of principal, and a 6% interest payment.
* Using the HPR formula, and assuming a starting value of $1,000, we would calculate the total return as
* ($960 + $60 - $1,000) / $1,000 = 2%.

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194
Q

The following data are available on the returns of the Smith Tinker Corporation (STC) for the past 4 years: Y1 = 10%, Y2= -1%, Y3= 15%, Y4= 12%. What is the arithmetic return on the STC stock?
* 4%
* 15%
* 12%
* 9%

A

9%
* The arithmetic mean return (AMR), an average of historical one-period rates of return, is computed as follows:
* AMR = [10+(-1)+15 +12]/4 = 9%

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195
Q

The following data are available on the returns of the Smith Tinker Corporation (STC) for the past 4 years: Y1 = 10%, Y2= -1%, Y3= 15%, Y4= 12%. The arithmetic return on the STC stock is 9%. Calculate the GMR on the stock.
* 4.4%
* 8.8%
* 9.4%
* 8.2%

A

8.8%
* The geometric mean return from this 4-year investment is calculated as follows:
* GMR = [(1.10)(.99)(1.15) (1.12)]^.25 = 8.8%

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196
Q

Which of the following statements are true about YTM and YTC? Click all that apply.
* YTM is appropriate for callable bonds
* YTM is based on maturity date of the bond
* YTC is appropriate for non-callable bonds
* YTC is based on first callable date

A

YTM is based on maturity date of the bond
YTC is based on first callable date
* YTM is the yield to the maturity date of the bond. The YTC is the yield up to the first date that the yield can be called. The appropriate yield to choose for callable bonds may be the lower of the YTC and YTM. YTC cannot be determined for a non-callable bond.

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197
Q

Which of the following scenarios would lead to realization of YTM for a bond? (Select all that apply)
* The bond is held to maturity; coupons are reinvested immediately at YTM; all payments are received on time.
* The bond is called by the issuer due to a low interest rate environment.
* The bond is held to maturity; coupons are reinvested immediately realized at a compound yield different than YTM; all payments are received on time.
* The bond is a zero coupon bond and is held to maturity; par payment is received on time.

A

The bond is held to maturity; coupons are reinvested immediately at YTM; all payments are received on time.
The bond is a zero coupon bond and is held to maturity; par payment is received on time.
* For YTM to be realized, the bond must be held to maturity, the issuer must make full payments of coupon and par on time, and the cash flows must be reinvested immediately at YTM.
* Pure-discount (zero coupon) bonds do not have cash flows to reinvest, so if held to maturity, the holder earns YTM.

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198
Q

Molly is trying to decide between purchasing a corporate bond paying 8%, a bond fund paying 30-day net annualized yield of 7.2%, and a municipal bond fund paying 5.5%. If Molly is in the 28% tax bracket, which option would translate into the biggest after-tax yield for her?
* Bond Fund
* Corporate Bond
* Municipal Bond Fund

A

Corporate Bond
* The tax equivalent yield for the municipal bond at Molly’s tax bracket is 7.638%.
* Although it is higher than the bond fund, it is not as high as the corporate bond.
* If Molly was basing her decision purely on how much yield she would receive, the corporate bond would be the best investment choice.

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199
Q

Consider a $10,000 bond paying a 3.5% annual coupon rate for 10 years. The bond’s present value is $8,140.32, if its cash flows are discounted at the YTM of 6% per year (or 3.0% per 6-month period). The bond’s yield-to-call is 9.373% at an annual rate. What will you consider to make the buy/sell decision for the bond?
* Present value = $8,140.32
* Yield to maturity = 6%
* T = 10 years
* Yield to call = 9.373%

A

Yield to maturity = 6%
* After computing the two different yields, you must select the lower yield for investment decision-making purposes, because that return represents the minimum yield that the investor can expect to earn.

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200
Q

Which of the following statements concerning bond yields is incorrect?
* Nominal yield is higher than current yield for a premium bond.
* Yield to maturity is higher for a premium bond than for a discount bond.
* If the realized compound yield is less than YTM, then the bondholder will earn less than the YTM.
* Bond Equivalent Yield converts discount debt instrument yields to a yield similar to a semi-annual coupon paying bond.

A

Yield to maturity is higher for a premium bond than for a discount bond.
* YTM does depend on whether the bond is selling at a premium or a discount.
* YTM is less for a premium bond because the premium is amortized over the remaining years to maturity, so less money is available for compounding.
* If a bond is selling at a premium, then the nominal yield is divided by a larger price to obtain the current yield, therefore the current yield would be lower.
* If the bondholder reinvests cash flows at a rate below YTM, there will be less interest to compound.
* Bond equivalent yield makes a pure discount bond’s yield equivalent to a coupon paying bond.

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201
Q

Fred had $20,000 in his portfolio at the beginning of the year. He added $5,000 to the portfolio in the middle of the year. The account value before he added the $5,000 was $19,178 and at the year-end, it was $25,998. What was the annual time-weighted return for Fred’s portfolio?
* 20.89%
* 3.992%
* 3.108%
* 20%

A

3.108%

The return for first half year = ($19,178 - $20,000)/$20,000 = -.0411.
The return for second half year = ($25,998 – $19,178 – $5,000) /($19,178 + $5,000) = .075275.
The time-weighted return = [(1-.0411)(1+.075275)-1] = .03108 or 3.108%.

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202
Q

Which of the following reasons make the dollar-weighted return inappropriate for evaluating a portfolio? (Select all that apply)
* The return is strongly influenced by the size and timing of the cash flows.
* The investment manager typically has no control over the deposits and withdrawals.
* The market value of the portfolio is used just before each cash flow occurs.
* Return reflects growth of the dollar from the beginning.

A

The return is strongly influenced by the size and timing of the cash flows.
The investment manager typically has no control over the deposits and withdrawals.
* In general, the dollar-weighted return method of measuring a portfolio’s return for purposes of evaluation is regarded as inappropriate.
* The reason behind this view is that the return is strongly influenced by the size and timing of the cash flows (namely, deposits and withdrawals), over which the investment manager typically has no control.

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203
Q

The quarterly returns for Fred’s portfolio are 2.5%, 1.7%, -3.6% and 2%. What was the annualized return of his portfolio using the compounding method?
* 2.5%
* 4.026%
* .10%
* -3.2%

A

2.5%
* Return
= [(1+.025)(1+.017)(1-.036)(1+.02)]-1
= 2.5%.

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204
Q

Which of the following are useful to compare with investment return figures? Click all that apply.
* Returns of investments with similar risk
* Historic returns of the investment
* Average returns of a relevant market
* Personal required rate of return
* Average returns of company’s industry index

A

Returns of investments with similar risk
Historic returns of the investment
Average returns of a relevant market
Personal required rate of return
Average returns of company’s industry index
* To determine how an investment performed, the returns should be compared to the returns of: a client’s personal objectives, other investments of similar risks, the benchmark market index, the relevant industry index, and the investment’s own past performance.

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205
Q

Exam 6. Measures of Investment Returns

Exam 6. Measures of Investment Returns

A
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206
Q

The rate of return on bonds that is most often quoted for investors is the __ ____??____ __, which is defined as the discount rate that equates the present value of all the bond’s future cash flows with its current market price (purchase price).
* time value of money (TVM)
* current yield (CY)
* yield to maturity (YTM)
* yield to call (YTC)

A

yield to maturity (YTM)
* The rate of return on bonds that is most often quoted for investors is the yield to maturity (YTM), which is defined as the discount rate that equates the present value of all the bond’s future cash flows with its current market price (purchase price). The YTM is the compounded rate of return of a bond.

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207
Q

Arithmetic mean is less informative as a metric because the __ ____??____ __ of the period can vary significantly.
* Beta
* value
* standard deviation
* time frame

A

standard deviation
* The arithmetic mean is less informative as a metric because the standard deviation of the period can vary significantly; the price of the investment could have been very volatile during that period. If so, then the return is not reflective of the movement of the investment during that time.

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208
Q

Your client buys ABC stock for $70. One year later ABC has paid $20 in dividends and your client decides to sell when the stock is at $130. Calculate your client’s Holding Period Return.
* 120%
* 107%
* 105%
* 114%

A

114%

Holding Period return is calculated by taking the total profit and dividing it by the cost.
Buying the stock for $70 and selling it for $130 results in a gain of $60.
Plus, a dividend of $20 results in a total profit of $80.
$80 divided by an original cost of $70 results in a 114% holding period return.
(20 + (130 - 70)) ÷ 70 = 114%

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209
Q

Difficulties are encountered when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the period. One method that has been used for calculating a portfolio’s return in this situation is the __ ____??____ __ return.
* time-weighted
* dollar-weighted
* period-weighted
* Beta-weighted

A

dollar-weighted
* Difficulties are encountered when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the period. One method that has been used for calculating a portfolio’s return in this situation is the dollar-weighted return (or internal rate of return).
* Dollar-weighted return is what an investor should use to determine how well their investment performed.

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210
Q

If inflation is at 3% and your investment account returns 5%, what is your inflation-adjusted rate of return?
* 2.00%
* 1.02%
* 3.00%
* 1.94%

A

1.94%

Inflation-adjusted rate of return:
[(1.05 ÷ 1.03) – 1] x 100 = 1.9417 = 1.94%

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211
Q

The “compound average rate of return” is also known as the __ ____??____ __.
* Treynor Ratio
* arithmetic mean return
* geometric mean return
* Sharpe Ratio

A

geometric mean return
* The compound average rate of return (geometric return) is similar to the arithmetic mean return, except the geometric return, because it does take compounding into account, will always be less than the arithmetic return.
* The compound average rate of return is also called the geometric mean return (GMR), where the GMR is computed over n successive time periods.

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212
Q

__ ____??____ __ is the only acceptable method to display the results of a portfolio manager’s performance.
* Time-weighted return
* Dollar-weighted return
* Standard deviation
* Sharpe-weighted return

A

Time-weighted return
* Time-weighted return is the only acceptable method to display the results of a portfolio manager’s performance.
* The time-weighted return on a portfolio only concerns itself with the portfolio appreciation or depreciation in value from one period to the next.
* That is, all cash flows into and out of the fund are totally disregarded from the return data.

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213
Q

Since bonds would only be called when interest rates are lower, the remaining cash flows are exposed to __ ____??____ __ risk.
* time
* reinvestment
* market
* credit

A

reinvestment
* Many corporate bonds, as well as some government bonds, are callable by the issuers, typically after some deferred call period.
* Since bonds would only be called when interest rates are lower, all of the remaining cash flows are exposed to reinvestment risk.

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214
Q

What is the tax-equivalent yield of a municipal bond that pays an 8% coupon if you are in a 22% tax bracket?
* 13.08%
* 6.24%
* 9.89%
* 10.26%

A

10.26%

The equation for the TEY is:
TEY = r ÷ (1 - t)
Where:
r = tax-free yield
t = Investor’s marginal tax bracket
8 ÷ (1 - 0.22) = 8 ÷ 0.78 = 10.26%

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215
Q

Your client buys XYZ stock for $50. One year later XYZ has paid $10 in dividends and your client decides to sell when the stock is at $80.
Calculate your client’s Holding Period Return.
* 75%
* 80%
* 105%
* 95%

A

80%

Holding Period return is calculated by taking the total profit and dividing it by the cost.
Buying the stock for $50 and selling it for $80 results in a gain of $30.
Plus, a dividend of $10 results in a total profit of $40.
$40 divided by an original cost of $50 results in a 80% holding period return.
(10 + (80 - 50)) ÷ 50 = 80%

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216
Q

Lesson 7. Time Influence on Valuation

Lesson 7. Time Influence on Valuation

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
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217
Q

What is the formula for
Net Present Value (NPV)?

A

NPV = PV of Future Cash Flows - Purchase Price

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218
Q

What does a positive NPV mean?
What does a negative NPV mean?

A

A positive NPV means that the present value of all the expected cash inflows is greater than the cost of making the investment.
Conversely, a negative NPV means that the present value of all the expected cash inflows is less than the cost of making the investment.

219
Q

What is the Equation for the One-Period Rate of Return?

A

The following shows how the equation for determining the one-period rate of return is derived by rearranging the equation so that it is equal to the time value model:
r = (Terminal value - Present value)/Present value
r = (Terminal value/Present value) - 1
(1 + r) = Terminal value/Present value
(Present value)(1 + r) = Terminal value

220
Q

What is the Equation for Present Value?

A

Present value =
(Terminal value)/(1 + r)

221
Q

How do you calculate for k using the CAPM model?

A

k = Rf + bi(Rm - Rf)

k = Market Capitalization Rate
Rf = Risk-Free Return
bi = Beta for security (how closely the security correlates with movements of the market)
(Rm - Rf) = Risk Premium: the difference between the market return and the risk free return.

222
Q

What are the Values for K?

A

The following are created based on a combination of risk premiums to compute a security’s Required Rate of Return (Cost of Capital):
* For Treasury bills, k = 4.5%
* For Treasury notes, k = 5.5%
* For Treasury bonds, k = 5.9%
* For corporate bonds, k = 6.3%
* For large-cap stocks, k = 13.0%
* For small-cap stocks, k = 14.5%

223
Q

What is the formula for Present value?

A

Present value, or PV = CF1/(1+k)1 + CF2/(1+k)2 + CFT/(1+k)T

This valuation model says that the value of a series of cash flows equals the discounted present value of all future cash flows.
* CF stands for cash flow (either inflows or outflows). The cash flows could be cash dividends from a common stock, coupon interest from a bond, rent from a piece of real estate, the asset’s selling price, or other cash flows.
* The subscripts and exponents are time period indicators. The terminal time period, when the cash flow occurs, is denoted T. These cash flows are expected to arrive at the end of successive time periods denoted t = 1, t = 2, t = 3,…., t = T.
* The term k represents the required rate of return that is appropriate for the investment.

224
Q

Example PV of Common Stock:

Brenda is thinking of purchasing stock in a small corporation. She thinks the stock should earn a required rate of return of k = 14.5%. Brenda expects to sell the stock for $40 after collecting cash dividends of $2 per share at the end of the first year, and $3 per share at the end of the second year. The present value of this stock is $34.5455 per share.

A

PV = [CF1/(1+k)1]+[CF2/(1+k)2]+[CFT/(1+k)T]

= [$2/(1.145)1] + [$3/(1.145)2] + [$40/(1.145)2]

= $1.7467 + $2.2883 + $30.5105 = $34.5455

Brenda makes a wealth-maximizing decision to buy the stock if she can get it for less than $34.5455

Keystrokes
0 g CF0 2 g CFj 43 g CFj 14.5 i f NPV
The calculator returns: 34.5455

225
Q

Example PV of Common Stock:

Brenda is thinking of purchasing stock in a small corporation. She thinks the stock should earn a required rate of return of k = 14.5%. Brenda expects to sell the stock for $40 after collecting cash dividends of $2 per share at the end of the first year, and $3 per share at the end of the second year. The present value of this stock is $34.5455 per share.

A

PV = [CF1/(1+k)1]+[CF2/(1+k)2]+[CFT/(1+k)T]

= [$2/(1.145)1] + [$3/(1.145)2] + [$40/(1.145)2]

= $1.7467 + $2.2883 + $30.5105 = $34.5455

Brenda makes a wealth-maximizing decision to buy the stock if she can get it for less than $34.5455

Keystrokes
0 g CF0 2 g CFj 43 g CFj 14.5 i f NPV
The calculator returns: 34.5455

226
Q

Example for Stock with Constant Growth Rate

Jana is wondering whether or not she should pay the market price of $51.50 for a stock issued by a large NYSE-listed corporation that is currently paying an annual cash dividend of $3 per share. Jana believes this dividend will grow at a rate of g = 3% per year for as long as she can see. Assume we use k = 13.0% as the risk-adjusted discount rate to use in valuing the stock.
What is the PV of the stock?

A

PV = DIV 0 (1+g) / (k−g)
= $3 (1.03) / (.13 – .03)

= $30.90

Based on these calculations Jana decides not to buy the stock because it is overpriced by $51.50 – $30.90 = $20.60 per share.

227
Q

Example for Stock with No Growth Rate (also works for Preferred Stock)

Alex is considering paying the market price of $50 for a share of preferred stock that will pay an annual cash dividend rate equal to 4.5% of its $100 face value per share forever. This $4.50 annual cash dividend is fixed, g = 0. Alex plans to hold the preferred stock indefinitely. Some financial research leads Alex to conclude that k = 13.0% is an appropriate risk-adjusted discount rate to use in valuing this preferred stock.
What is the PV of the stock?

A

PV = DIV0 / k
= $4.50/.13
= $34.615

The stock’s perpetual stream of constant cash dividends is worth $34.615 per share.

Alex maximizes his wealth by deciding not to buy the stock, because it is overpriced by $50 - $34.62 = $15.38 per share.

228
Q

What is the formula for Sustainable growth rate?

A

Sustainable growth rate =
(1 – Payout ratio)ROE

The following are sources of growth rates: historical average, industry average, and sustainable growth rate*.

229
Q

What is the formula for Internal Rate of Return (IRR)?

A

P=∑∞t=1 Ct / (1+k∗)t

Again, since k* will be compounded over t periods, time has a significant influence over the internal rate of return.

Calculating the internal rate of return (IRR) associated with the investment is similar to the NPV method and offers an alternate method for making investment decisions.

The IRR for a given investment is the discount rate that makes the NPV of the investment equal to zero. To compute the IRR, the NPV is set equal to zero, and the discount rate, which is unknown, is then calculated.

The decision rule for IRR involves comparing the investment’s IRR (denoted by k) with the required rate of return for an investment of similar risk (denoted by k). Specifically, the investment is viewed favorably if k greater than k, and unfavorably if k* less than k. As with NPV, the same decision rule applies if either a real asset or a financial asset is being considered for possible investment.

PRACTITIONER ADVICE
In comparing the NPV and IRR methods, the NPV method is superior in that the underlying assumption in the calculation is the opportunity to reinvest future cash flows at the investors required return. IRR however, makes the unrealistic assumption that the investor has an opportunity to reinvest at the IRR! This difference is significant, and the ramifications are such that given a choice on these methods, the NPV should always be used.

230
Q

What is the formula for Future Value?

A

FVn = PV(1+k)^n

FVn = the future value of the investment at the end of n years
n = the number of years during which the compounding occurs
k = the annual interest rate, and
PV = the present value, or the current value in today’s dollars.

The value of an investment at a future point in time is called future value. To derive the future value, we do not look at the present value of future cash flow through discounting. Instead, we look at the future value of investment through compounding.

The future value of an investment for any number of years can be calculated using the following equation, where:

Again, time influences future value through compounding. Time also allows for compounding of inflation rate to erode away the purchasing power of the investment. The inflation adjusted compounding rate or the real rate is equal to:

Real rate = [(1 + interest rate)/(1 + inflation rate)] – 1

For example, if a stock investment is expected to yield 11% on average over the next 10 years and the inflation rate is expected to average 4% during the same time, then the real rate = (1.11/1.04) - -1 = .0673 or 6.73%. The real rate can be used for the compounding rate to solve for the future value of the investment to show the return net of inflation.

231
Q

PRACTITIONER ADVICE

What is the alternative method for calculating the real interest rate?

A

An alternative method for calculating the real interest rate is to subtract the inflation rate from the nominal return (as a whole number), and then dividing that amount by 1 plus the inflation rate.
Using the same example above,
11 - 4 = 7. Then 7/1.04 = 6.73.

This is the real (or inflation adjusted) return, and is already expressed in the correct format for your calculator. The other method requires you to convert the decimal expression to a whole number.

232
Q

Which of the following statements are true about the present and future value of investments? (Select all that apply)
* Cash flows are discounted backward to calculate the PV.
* Cash flows are compounded forward to calculate the FV.
* Cash flows are compounded forward to calculate the PV.
* Cash flows are discounted backward to calculate the FV.

A

Cash flows are discounted backward to calculate the PV.
Cash flows are compounded forward to calculate the FV.
* The future values of cash flows are discounted backward to calculate the present value.
* This valuation method can be used to compare the present value of an investment to its current market price.
* The initial investment and expected cash flows can also be compounded forward to determine the future value of an investment.

233
Q

A bond is paying a coupon rate of $50 per year (semi-annually). It has 5 years till maturity. If the discount rate is 6.3%, what is its present value?
* $1,000
* $1,220.27
* $944.98
* $945.68

A

$944.98
* 5(2) = N;
* 6.3/2 = I;
* 1000 = FV;
* 50/2 = PMT;
* PV = -944.98 or $944.98.

234
Q

Thomas invests $7,000 today in a portfolio that he expects will yield an average of 11% return per year over the next 10 years. If the inflation rate is an average of 4% for the next 10 years, what will be the real future value of his investment in 10 years?
* $19,876
* $13,426
* $12,980
* $10,362

A

$13,426

Real rate = [(1 + interest rate)/(1 + inflation rate)] - 1
= (1.11/1.04) - 1 =
6.73% FV =
$7,000(1 + .0673)^10 = $13,426

235
Q

What is net present value (NPV)?
* It is the present value in today’s dollars of a future sum of money.
* It is the present value of future cash flows plus the purchase price of an investment.
* It is the present value of future cash flows minus the discount rate of an investment.
* It is the present value of future cash flows minus the purchase price of an investment.

A

It is the present value of future cash flows minus the purchase price of an investment.
* When the cost of an investment is deducted from its present value (PV) of the future inflows, net present value (NPV) is obtained.
* NPV = PV of Future Cash Flows – Purchase Price

236
Q

Define par value

A
  • Cash flows characterizing a typical bond involve the payment of a lump sum on a stated date. This payment is known as the bond’s principal or par value.
  • Most corporate bonds will have a par value of $1,000.
237
Q

Define par value

A
  • Cash flows characterizing a typical bond involve the payment of a lump sum on a stated date. This payment is known as the bond’s principal or par value.
  • Most corporate bonds will have a par value of $1,000.
  • If the market price of a bond is greater than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a premium.
  • If the market price of a bond is less than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a discount.
238
Q

Describe relationship btwn bond’s price to par value, bond’s YTM & coupon rate

A

Par Value
* Market price = Par value
* Yield-to-maturity = Coupon rate

Discount Value
* Market price < Par value
* Yield-to-maturity > Coupon rate

Premium Value
* Market price > Par value
* Yield-to-maturity < Coupon rate

239
Q

What is the formula
for a bond’s duration?

A

Specifically, the formula for a bond’s duration D is
D = (1+y/ y) − (1+y) + T(c−y)c[(1+y)T−1]+y
* where c denotes coupon,
* T denotes the number of compounding periods to maturity, and
* y denotes the market rate of interest which can easily be determined by calculating the bond’s yield-to-maturity.

There are three variables that determine a bond’s duration: Coupon rate, market interest rate, and the number of compounding periods until maturity.
* Note that “price” is not a determinant in calculating duration.
* Price is a function of the market rate of interest.

240
Q

Which of the options can be termed as the face value of a bond, or the amount that’s returned to the bondholder at maturity? (Select all that apply)
* Par
* Premium
* Discount
* Principal

A

Par
Principal
* Cash flows characterizing a typical bond involve the payment of a lump sum on a stated date. This lump sum payment is known as the bond’s principal or par value.

241
Q

If a bond’s yield does not change over its life, then the size of its discount or premium will increase, as its life gets shorter.
* False
* True

A

False
* The second bond-pricing theorem states that if a bond’s yield does not change over its life, then the size of its discount or premium will decrease as its life gets shorter.

242
Q

The prices of two bonds that have the same duration will react differently to a given change in yields.
* False
* True

A

False
* When yields change, most bond prices also change, but some react more than others do.
* Bonds with the same maturity date can react differently to a given change in yields. However, the percentage change in a bond’s price is related to its duration. So the prices of two bonds that have the same duration will react similarly to a given change in yields.

243
Q

Exam 7. Time Influence on Valuation

Exam 7. Time Influence on Valuation

A
244
Q

If the market price of a bond is greater than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at __ ____??____ __.
* par
* a discount
* market price
* a premium

A

a premium
* If the market price of a bond is greater than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a premium.
* Conversely, if the market price of a bond is less than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a discount.

245
Q

One way of valuing an investment is to use the discounted present value model, which assumes that money has __ ____??____ __.
* power
* flow
* time value
* velocity

A

time value
* One way of valuing an investment is to use the discounted present value model, which assumes that money has time value.
* This assumption is relevant because borrowers pay interest to lenders to induce them to make loans. Interest is the rent on borrowed money. It causes money to have a terminal value in the future that differs from its present value. The discounted present value model can be used to help you estimate the value of securities like stocks, bonds, or even rental property.

246
Q

The relationship between bond prices and yields is referred to as __ ____??____ __.
* yield to maturity
* coupon
* convexity
* duration

A

convexity
* The relationship between bond prices and yields is referred to as convexity.
* Although this is true for standard types of bonds, the degree of curvature is not the same for all bonds. Instead, it depends on, among other things, the size of the coupon payments, the life of the bond, and its current market price.

247
Q

__ ____??____ __ - Purchase Price = Net Present Value
* Future Cash Flows
* Present Value of Future Cash Flows
* Future Value of Present Cash Flows
* Present Value

A

Present Value of Future Cash Flows
* When the cost of an investment is deducted from PV, Net Present Value (NPV) is obtained.
* Net Present Value (NPV) = PV of Future Cash Flows - Purchase Price

248
Q

IRR stands for __ ____??____ __.
* Internal Required Return
* Intrinsic Rate of Return
* Intrinsic Required Return
* Internal Rate of Return

A

Internal Rate of Return
* IRR stands for Internal Rate of Return.

249
Q

The measure of the “average maturity” of payments associated with a bond is known as __ ____??____ __.
* duration
* yield to maturity
* convexity
* yield to call

A

duration
* Duration is a measure of the “average maturity” of payments associated with a bond.
* More specifically, it is a weighted average of the length of time until the remaining payments are made.

250
Q

The true price of the bond will always be __ ____??____ __ the modified duration estimate.
* the same as
* lower than
* unrelated to
* higher than

A

higher than
* The true price of the bond will always be higher than the modified duration estimate. This is due to the convex shape of the price/yield function.

251
Q

The IRR for a given investment is the discount rate that makes the NPV of the investment __ ____??____ __.
* become a buy recommendation
* equal to zero
* result in a loss
* profitable

A

equal to zero
* The IRR for a given investment is the discount rate that makes the NPV of the investment equal to zero.
* To compute the IRR, the NPV is set equal to zero, and the discount rate, which is unknown, is then calculated.

252
Q

If the market price of a bond is less than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at __ ____??____ __.
* market price
* par
* a premium
* a discount

A

a discount
* If the market price of a bond is less than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a discount.
* If the market price of a bond is greater than its par value, the bond is said to be selling at a premium.

253
Q

DDM stands for __ ____??____ __.
* Direct Dividend Model
* Dividend Discount Model
* Discounted Debenture Method
* Direct Discount Model

A

Dividend Discount Model
* The Dividend Discount Model (DDM), is a specific valuation model where you assume a constant dividend with no future growth (known as a perpetuity).

254
Q

Which of the following is NOT a typical cash flow for bond investors?
* Call premium when the bond is called early.
* Reinvestment of coupon payments.
* Periodic coupon interest payments.
* Repayment of principal when the bond matures.

A

Call premium when the bond is called early.

Most bond investors obtain three types of cash flows:
* periodic coupon interest payments,
* reinvestment of those coupon payments, and
* repayment of principal when the bond matures.

While some bonds have a call premium, it is not a typical cash flow for most bonds.

255
Q

Which of the following variables is NOT used to determine a bond’s duration?
* Market Interest Rate
* Number of Compounding Periods
* Coupon Rate
* Market Price

A

Market Price
* There are three variables that determine a bond’s duration: Coupon rate, market interest rate, and the number of compounding periods until maturity. Note that “price” is not a determinant in calculating duration. Price is a function of the market rate of interest.

256
Q

Lesson 8. Valuation of Bonds and Stocks

Lesson 8. Valuation of Bonds and Stocks

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
257
Q

What does a positive and negative NPV mean?

A

If the intrinsic value – purchase price = a positive number (or if NPV > 0), then the bond is underpriced or undervalued and the bond should be purchased.
If the intrinsic value – purchase price = a negative number (or if NPV < 0), then the bond is overpriced or overvalued and the bond should not be purchased.

258
Q

Brian is considering purchasing a 10-year, 5.5% Treasury Note with a $10,000 par value. If the Treasury yield curve indicates that 6% is the appropriate yield for such bonds, what is the fair market value of this bond, assuming annual payments?
* $9,632.00
* $10,000.00
* $10,897.78
* $8,655.12

A

$9,632.00
* PV = $550(PVIFA 5.5%,10) + $10,000 (PVIF 5.5%,10) or 10000 FV, 550 PMT, 10N, 6 I, PV = $9,632.00.

259
Q

Consider a bond that is currently selling for $950 and has a remaining life of three years. The bond makes annual coupon payments amounting to $60 per year and has a par value of $1,000, or C1 = $60, C2 = $60, and C3 = $1,060 (= $1,000 + $60). Suppose the appropriate YTM for this bond is 9%. What would be its intrinsic value?
* $950.00
* $1,000.00
* $924.06
* -$25.94

A

$924.06
* PV $60 (PVIFA 9%,3) + $10,000 (PVIF 9%,3) or, using a financial calculator, 1000 FV, 60 PMT, 3 N, 9 I, PV = $924.06. Note that - $25.94 is the net present value of the bond, or the difference between the value of the bond and the purchase price. (NPV = V-P). Therefore, this bond is overpriced and should not be bought.

260
Q

The internal rate of return is sometimes referred to as:
* Risk-adjusted return
* Implied return
* Alpha return
* Implicit return

A

Implied return
* The present value of expected dividends can be calculated for a given required rate of return. However, many investment firms use a computerized trial and error procedure to determine the discount rate that equates the present value of the stock’s expected dividends with its current price. Sometimes this long-run internal rate of return is referred to as the security’s implied return.

261
Q

Alta Cohen is considering buying a machine to produce baseballs. The machine costs $10,000. With the machine, Alta expects to produce and sell 1,000 baseballs per year for $3 per baseball, net of all costs. The machine’s life is five years, with no salvage value. On the basis of these assumptions and an 8% discount rate, what is the net present value of Alta’s investment?
* $1878.13
* $1979.13
* $1978.13
* $1089.13

A

$1978.13
* The first step is to establish a cash flow line: Time / Cash Flows 0 / (10,000) 1 / 3,000 2 / 3,000 3 / 3,000 4 / 3,000 5 / 3,000
* Keystrokes: 10000 CHS g CFo 3000 g CFj 5 g Nj 8 i f NPV
* The Calculator Returns: 1,978.13
* The Project should be accepted since the NPV is positive.

262
Q

A stock investment has a market capitalization rate of 11% and an internal rate of return of 10%. Which of the following statements is true?
* The stock has a positive NPV
* The stock has a negative NPV
* The stock is a favorable investment
* The stock is an unfavorable investment

A

The stock is an unfavorable investment
* Since k^ is less than k, or the IRR is less than the appropriate discount rate, the stock is an unfavorable investment. There is not enough information to determine whether or not the net present value is positive or negative.

263
Q

Mountainside Electric Company is expected to pay cash dividends amounting to $2 per share into the indefinite future and has a required rate of return of 10%. If the market price for the stock is currently $18.50 per share, identify the correct valuation.
* Overvalued
* Undervalued
* Fairly priced

A

Undervalued
* V = $2.00 ÷ 0.10 = $20.
* Since the price of the share is trading currently at $18.50, Mountainside Electric Company stock is undervalued by $1.50 per share, according to the zero growth dividend model.

264
Q

Kelley Promotions, Inc paid a $1 per share dividend last year. Kelley Promotions is expected to grow the dividend at a rate of 4% per year indefinitely. Assuming a required rate of return of 8%, what is the value of the Kelley Promotions, Inc. stock? How would that compare to its current price of $29? Click all that apply.
* Fairly priced
* V=$26
* V=$27
* Undervalued
* Overvalued
* V=$28

A

V=$26
Overvalued
* V=$1(1+.04)/(.08-.04)=$26. $29-$26=$3.
* The stock is $3 overvalued.

265
Q

Spring Valley Bedding stock currently sells for $53 per share. The stock’s dividend is expected to grow at 6% per year indefinitely. Spring Valley just paid a dividend of $3 per share. What would be the stock’s internal rate of return?
* 13%
* 12%
* 11%
* 10%

A

12%
* Assuming that a stock is fairly valued if its dividend is growing at a constant rate, the internal rate of return can be found by solving the intrinsic value equation for k * = (D2/V)+g = [($3X 1.06)/ $53] + 0.06 = .12 or 12%.

266
Q

A&B Company paid dividends amounting to $.75 per share. Over the next year, it is expected to pay dividends of $2 per share. The year after that, dividends are expected to amount to $3 per share. At this time, the forecast is that dividends will grow by 10% per year indefinitely, indicating that T = 2 and g = 10%. With a current stock price of $55 per share and a required rate of return on the company’s shares of 15%, what is the NPV of the A&B Co.’s shares?
* $1.08
* -$1.08
* $4.01
* $3.30

A

-$1.08
* DT+1 = D3 = $3(1 + 0.10) = $3.30. VT- = $2/(1+.15)^1 + $3/(1+0.15)^2 = $4.01. VT+ = $3.30/(0.15-0.10)(1+0.15)^2= $49.91. V = $4.01 + $49.91 = $53.92. With a current stock price of $55 per share, NPV = -$1.08. The company appears to be fairly priced. That is, A&B Co. is not significantly mispriced because V and P are nearly of equal size.

267
Q

Match the correct model and description.
Zero-growth Model
Constant-growth Model
Multiple-growth Model
* Dividend will have different amounts until time T, then it will have the same growth rate forever.
* Dividend will grow at the same rate forever.
* Dividend will remain the same amount forever.

A
  • Zero-growth Model - Dividend will remain the same amount forever.
  • Constant-growth Model - Dividend will grow at the same rate forever.
  • Multiple-growth Model - Dividend will have different amounts until time T, then it will have the same growth rate forever.
268
Q

Rock Rulez Guitar paid dividends of $2 per share last year, with a forecast that dividends would grow by 6% per year indefinitely. The required rate of return on Rock Rulez was 10% and the current stock price was $38 per share. E0 was $4. What is the value of this stock?
* Undervalued
* Overvalued
* Fairly Priced

A

Undervalued
* Calculate payout ratio=($2/$4)=50%.
* According to the equation indicating the normal price/earnings ratio=[(0.5)(1+0.06)]/(0.10-0.06)=13.25.
* This is more than Rock Rulez Guitar’s actual price/earnings ratio of=$38/$4=9.50, which means the stock is undervalued.

269
Q

Which of the following are variables used to replace dividends when calculating the intrinsic value of a stock using expected earnings? (Select all that apply)
* Payout Ratio
* Expected Earnings
* Growth Rate of Earnings
* Required Rate of Return

A

Payout Ratio
Expected Earnings
* Dt = (Pt)(Et); dividends are replaced by the payout ratio multiplied by expected earnings.
* When solving for the normal price/earnings ratio, the expected earnings is divided into the intrinsic value.

270
Q

Jameson and Sons Company paid dividends of $2 per share over the past year, with a forecast that dividends would grow by 6% per year forever. The required rate of return on Jameson and Sons was 10% and the current stock price was $50 per share. E0 was $ 2.50. Which of the following statements are true about Jameson and Son’s stock? (Select all that apply)
* Stock’s P/E = 21.2
* Stock’s V/E = 20
* Stock’s P/E = 20
* Stock’s V/E = 21.2
* Stock is overvalued

A

Stock’s P/E = 20
Stock’s V/E = 21.2
* Payout ratio = ($2/$2.50) = 80%.
* V/E = [(0.80)(1+0.06)]/(0.10 – 0.06) = 21.2.
* This is greater than Jameson and Sons Company’s actual price/earnings ratio of $50/$2.50 = 20.
* This means stock of Jameson and Sons Company’s is undervalued, but not by much.

271
Q

Osseo Operations recently paid an annual dividend of $4 per share. Earnings for the same year were $8 per share. The required return on stocks with similar risk is 11%. Dividends are expected to grow 6% per year indefinitely. Calculate Osseo’s “normal” price/earnings ratio.
* 10.60
* 50
* 12.5
* 1.06

A

10.60
* Payout ratio = $4/$8 = 50%
* V/E = .50(1.06)/.05 = 10.60

272
Q

Which one of the following would be most consistent with a relatively high growth rate of firm earnings and dividends, with all other things being equal?
* The degree of financial leverage is low
* The inflation rate is low
* The variability of earnings is low
* The dividend payout ratio is low

A

The dividend payout ratio is low
* Assuming that no new capital is obtained externally and no shares are repurchased, the portion of earnings not paid to stockholders as dividend will be used to pay for the firm’s new investments. The portion not paid out is the retention ratio. Growth rate depends on the proportion of earnings that are retained and the average return on equity for the earnings that are retained.

273
Q

Is a low or high price/free cash flow (P/FCF) more favorable?

A

The more free cash flow, the lower the price/free cash flow (P/FCF) ratio would be.
Low price to free cash flow ratios are favorable.

274
Q

Describe Price/Sales Ratio

A
  • The explosion in Internet stocks forced investors to look for ways to value companies with lots of potential, but no earnings. Moreover, many investors do not trust net earnings anymore, since they are often manipulated through write-offs and other creative accounting practices. Sales are much harder to disguise.
  • The price/sales ratio is the company’s price divided by its sales (or revenue). This value is arrived by dividing revenue by the number of shares outstanding, and then dividing the revenue per share into the price per share. But because the sales number is rarely expressed as a per-share figure, it’s easier to divide a company’s total market value by its total sales for the last 12 months.
  • Price/Sales works well in analyzing large-cap companies, whose sales are so great, that it is closer to their market capitalization.
  • The ratio is less appropriate for service companies like banks or insurers that don’t really have sales.
  • Most value investors set their P/S hurdle at 2 and below when looking for undervalued situations. Again, with ratios, it is better to compare a company’s P/S value to its competitors and its own history.
275
Q

Describe the Price/Earnings Growth (PEG) Ratio

A
  • The PEG ratio helps quantify this idea. PEG stands for price/earnings growth and is calculated by dividing the P/E by the projected earnings growth rate. So if a company has a P/E of 15, and analysts expect its earnings will grow 10% annually over the next few years, its PEG = 1.5.
  • A PEG above 1 would indicate that the company is trading at a premium to its growth rate.
  • Therefore, a favorable PEG would be below 1.
  • If a company has a P/E of 20 times its earnings, but its peers have P/E of 10 times, it may appear that the company is expensive relative to its peers. However, if the company’s growth rate is at 25% while its competitors are averaging 8%, then the company’s PEG is .80 while its competitors are at 1.25. This will lead to the conclusion that the company’s expected growth rate makes it more attractive than its competitors even though it had a higher P/E.
  • PEG ratio works better for smaller or growth companies because they are effected by growth rate more than large and more mature companies.
  • The one drawback is that the ratio is dependent on earnings estimates, which are less reliable than free cash and revenue.
  • If a company does not pay dividends, it will have a greater PEG ratio.
276
Q

PRACTITIONER ADVICE:

What do the words “margin” and “turnover” usually tell you about ratio?

A

PRACTITIONER ADVICE:
Most of the ratios will not need to be memorized because the name of the formula usually guides your calculation.
* The word “margin” usually means sales in the denominator
* The word “turnover” usually means sales in the numerator.

277
Q

Which of the following statements is true about Price/Earnings Ratio versus Price/Free Cash Flow Ratio?
* P/FCF includes depreciation of assets
* P/FCF is free from accounting assumptions and P/E is not
* P/E is a more accurate depiction of the company’s ability to pay off debt
* P/E presents a clearer picture of a company’s ability to reinvest in itself

A

P/FCF is free from accounting assumptions and P/E is not
* Because Price/Free Cash Flow is net of non-cash accounting assumptions, it gives a clearer picture of how well a company can reinvest in itself, pay down its debt, or pay out dividends.

278
Q

A firm currently has earnings per share of $7.20, and pays a dividend to its shareholders of $0.90. If the firm’s return of equity is 14%, what is the firm’s sustainable growth rate?
* 12.00%
* 12.25%
* 12.50%
* 14.00%

A

12.25%
* The growth rate is return on equity times the retention ratio.
* Since the firm is paying out 12.5% of its earnings ($0.90 / $7.20) then it is retaining 87.5% of its earnings.
* The ROE of 14%, multiplied by 87.5% (.14 x .875) equals .1225 or 12.25%.

279
Q

Which ratio is best for Large Companies?

A

Price/Sales Ratio

280
Q

Which ratio is best for a new company that is not publicly traded?

A

Price/Book Value Ratio

281
Q

Which ratio is best for Post-fledgling company that has rapidly increasing earnings?

A

Price/Earnings Growth Ratio

282
Q

Toymaker Co. paid cash dividends this year of $1.00/share. The firm’s growth rate (g) is 3%. Its cost of equity capital (k) is 10%, and its stock price is $12.50 per share. Assume Toymaker’s expected earnings per share (E1) are $2.00. What is Toymaker’s price/earnings ratio?
* 8.00
* 1.03
* 7.36
* 6.07

A

7.36
* P/E = (D1/E1)/(k-g) =
* ($1.03/$2.00)/(0.10 - 0.03)
* = 7.36

283
Q

ABC Corporation’s current ratio is currently 2.5 to 1 and its total current liabilities are $200,000. If ABC buys equipment (fixed asset) for $100,000 cash, then its working capital immediately after this transaction is:
* $100,000
* $200,000
* $300,000
* $400,000

A

$200,000
* The current ratio was 2.5 to 1 and the current liabilities were $200,000 before the equipment purchase.
* Using a current ratio of 2.5 to 1, this implies that current assets were $500,000.
* Since cash (a major component of current assets) was used to buy the equipment, current assets are reduced to $400,000.
* Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities.
* After the purchase, working capital amounted to $400,000 - $200,000 = $200,000. Please note that a fixed asset does not affect current assets.

284
Q

Exam 8. Valuation of Bonds and Stocks

Exam 8. Valuation of Bonds and Stocks

A
285
Q

Most bonds make __ ____??____ __ interest payments.
* annual
* quarterly
* semi-annual
* monthly

A

semi-annual
* Most bonds make semi-annual interest payments.
* Every 6 months investors will receive half of their annual coupon payment.

286
Q

The __ ____??____ __ assumes that future dividends will remain at a fixed dollar amount.
* Multiple-Growth Model
* Zero-Growth Model
* Null-Growth Model
* Constant-Growth Model

A

Zero-Growth Model
* The Zero-Growth Model assumes that future dividends will remain at a fixed dollar amount.
* That is, the dollar amount of dividends per share that were paid over the past year (D0) will also be paid over the next year (D1), the year after that (D2), the year after that (D3), and so on.

287
Q

Under the __ ____??____ __, the focus is on a time in the future (denoted by T), after which dividends are expected to grow at a constant rate (g).
* Multiple-Growth Model
* Zero-Growth Model
* Constant-Growth Model
* Null-Growth Model

A

Multiple-Growth Model
* Under the Multiple-Growth Model, the focus is on a time in the future (denoted by T), after which dividends are expected to grow at a constant rate (g).

288
Q

The most common rate used when discounting a bond’s value is the __ ____??____ __.
* Par Value
* Current Yield (CY)
* Yield to Maturity (YTM)
* Yield to Call (YTC)

A

Yield to Maturity (YTM)
* The most common rate used when discounting a bond’s value is the Yield to Maturity (YTM) which is the total return anticipated on a bond if the bond is held until it matures.

289
Q

The cash flows associated with an investment in common stock are the __ ____??____ __ expected to be paid on the shares purchased.
* options
* warrants
* dividends
* stock splits

A

dividends
* The cash flows associated with an investment in common stock are the dividends expected to be paid on the shares purchased.

290
Q

The __ ____??____ __ assumes that dividends will grow from period to period at the same rate, forever.
* Zero-Growth Model
* Multiple-Growth Model
* Constant-Growth Model
* Null-Growth Model

A

Constant-Growth Model
* The Constant-Growth Model assumes that dividends will grow from period to period at the same rate, forever.

291
Q

The __ ____??____ __ of a company is forecasted based on the results of the Multiple Growth Model calculation.
* intrinsic value
* par value
* dividend growth rate
* zero sum

A

intrinsic value
* Once investment analysts calculate a required rate of return, it is easy to compute various values required for determining the Multiple Growth Model. The intrinsic value of a company is forecasted based on these figures.

292
Q

Which of the following is NOT considered a liquidity ratio?
* Fast Ratio
* Working Capital
* Cash Ratio
* Current Ratio

A

Fast Ratio

Liquidity ratios provide information about the liquidity or short-term debt paying ability of the firm. Examples include:
* Working Capital = current assets - current liabilities
* Current Ratio = current assets ÷ current liabilities
* Quick Ratio = (current assets - inventory) ÷ current liabilities. (This ratio is also known as the acid test.)
* Cash Ratio = (cash + marketable securities) ÷ current liabilities

293
Q

The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) for an investment is defined as the discount rate that makes the Net Present Value (NPV) of the investment equal to __ ____??____ __.
* one
* zero
* a loss
* a profit

A

zero

  • In computing the IRR, the NPV is set to zero and the discount rate becomes unknown, so the discount rate has to be calculated.
  • The IRR for a given investment is defined as the discount rate that makes the NPV of the investment equal to zero.
294
Q

An investment is viewed favorably if its Net Present Value (NPV) is __ ____??____ __.
* negative
* intrinsic
* positive
* risk-adjusted

A

positive
* The Net Present Value (NPV) equation can be used to determine whether or not an investment is worthwhile.
* An investment is viewed favorably if its NPV is positive or neutral and unfavorably if its NPV is negative.

295
Q

Lesson 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

Lesson 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
296
Q

Calculate the above portfolio’s expected rate of return using the terminal versus the initial value.
* 22%
* 23%
* 16%
* 25%

A

22%
* Portfolio Expected Return =
* ($20,984 - $17,200) ÷ $17,200
* = 0.22, or 22%

297
Q

What is the portfolio’s expected rate of return?
* 8.22%
* 22%
* 3.77%
* 10.01%

A

22%
* Portfolio Expected Return = The sum of the contribution to portfolio expected returns =
* 3.77% + 10.01% + 8.22%
* = 22%

298
Q

According to the CAPM, which of the four is the most efficient?
* Asset A has a return of 14%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=18%
* Asset B has a return of 10%; beta=1.15; standard deviation=14%
* Asset C has a return of 19%; beta=1.45; standard deviation=24%
* Asset D has a return of 17%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=21%

A

Asset D has a return of 17%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=21%
* Based on the information provided, the risk assessment investment statistic under the CAPM that details relative efficiency is Coefficient of Variation, which is Standard Deviation, divided by return. Since the risk measure is the numerator, the lower the result the better the risk-return relationship; that is, it is more efficient.
* The CV for asset D is 1.235 which is the lowest. Simply, for every unit of return (for which Asset D has 17), there is 1.235 units of risk. Asset A, B, and C have CV of 1.286, 1.4 and 1.263, respectively.

299
Q

Markowitz asserts that investors should base their portfolio decisions solely on two variables.
* Initial and terminal wealth
* Non-satiation and marginal utility
* Variance and covariance
* Expected returns and standard deviations

A

Expected returns and standard deviations
* According to Markowitz, the investor should view the rate of return associated with any portfolio by considering the random variables of expected (or mean) value and standard deviation.

300
Q

Investors will less likely make an investment when there is an alternative to make the same amount of money with more certainty. This statement assumes that investors are:
* Risk-averse
* Risk-seeking
* Risk-neutral

A

Risk-averse
* It is assumed that investors are risk-averse, which means that the investor will choose a portfolio with a smaller standard deviation.
* Risk-averse investors are willing to forego some expected terminal wealth (that is, accept lower expected returns) in exchange for less risk.

301
Q

If an investor invests 50% in IBM which returned 20%, 30% in Texaco which returned –10% and 20% in Motorola which returned 5%, what was the portfolio’s rate of return?
* 14%
* 8%
* 8.45%
* 9.11%

A

8%
* The investment in IBM is 50% of the portfolio, so the return of 20% times the portfolio weight of 50% yields a contribution to the portfolio return of 10% (50% weight x 20% return).
* Calculate the same for Texaco (30% weight x -10% return = -3%), and
* the same for Motorola (20% weight x 5% return = 1%).
* Adding the three together generates the portfolio return
* (10% + -3% + 1% = 8%).

302
Q

Portfolio diversification is most effective when the correlation coefficient is
* Greater than zero
* Positive
* Less than one
* Less than zero

A

Less than zero
* When the correlation coefficient is greater than zero, it indicates the securities in the portfolio are moving in tandem.
* Whereas, when the correlation coefficient is zero, the movement of one security in comparison to the other in the portfolio is not predictable.
* When the correlation coefficient is less than zero, the movement of one security as against the other is exactly opposite, indicating the most diversified situation.

303
Q

What are the 3 common risk-adjusted performance measures?

A

CAPM-based measures of portfolio performance are:
* Sharpe ratio
* Treynor ratio
* Jensen’s ratio

Each one of these measures provides an estimate of a portfolio’s risk-adjusted performance, thereby allowing the client to see how the portfolio performed relative to other portfolios and relative to the market.

304
Q

Describe Sharpe Ratio

A

Ranking portfolios’ returns averaged over several years is oversimplified because such rankings ignore risk. Thus, what is needed is an index of portfolio performance, which is determined by both the return and the risk.

William F. Sharpe devised the reward-to-variability index of portfolio performance, denoted SHARPEp. This defines a single parameter portfolio performance index that is calculated from both the risk and return statistics.

305
Q

LIST COMMON MARKET INDEXES USED AS BENCHMARKS FOR PORTFOLIOS OF US-BASED COMPANIES

A
  • Dow Jones Industry Average (DJIA) 30 of the largest U.S.-based companies
  • Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500) 500 U.S.-based companies. Widely accepted as the standard index to benchmark against for large cap U.S. stocks. According to the S&P, 97% of money managers and pension funds are indexed against the S&P 500.
  • Wilshire 5000 Contains of 6,500 U.S.-based companies. Considered the broadest index for U.S. Stocks.
  • Russell 2000 Commonly used as a benchmark for small company portfolios. The capitalization ranges from approximately $1.3 billion to $128 million.
  • NASDAQ Typically, a benchmark for technology companies and mid-size companies.
306
Q

In selecting benchmark portfolios for comparison, the client should be certain that they represent …
* The best possible portfolio construction available
* The best but not necessarily a feasible portfolio
* Alternative portfolios that could have been chosen instead of the one chosen
* Portfolios of varying degrees of risk

A

Alternative portfolios that could have been chosen instead of the one chosen
* Comparing the returns obtained by the investment manager with appropriate alternative portfolios that could have been chosen for investment helps evaluate portfolio performance.
* In selecting the benchmark portfolio, the client should be certain that they are relevant, feasible, and known in advance, meaning that they should represent alternative portfolios that could have been chosen for investment instead of the portfolio being evaluated.

307
Q

Which measure includes methods that are used when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the investment interval?
* Time-weighted returns
* The geometric mean
* The arithmetic mean
* Dollar-weighted returns

A

Dollar-weighted returns
* The dollar-weighted return (or internal rate of return) is the method that helps in situations when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the period.

308
Q

Exam 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

Exam 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

A
309
Q

Understanding how risk-averse investors construct portfolios to optimize expected returns against market risk is best described as __ ____??____ __.
* Modern Portfolio Theory
* Greater Fool Theory
* Random Walk Theory
* Behavioral Finance

A

Modern Portfolio Theory
* Understanding how risk-averse investors construct portfolios to optimize expected returns against market risk is best described as Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT).

310
Q

Consider the following information:
Security Name
Weight in Portfolio
Expected Return
Adam Stock
33%
15%
Brendan Stock
22%
11%
Jerry Stock
25%
6%
Mike Stock
20%
27%
What is the expected return of this portfolio of stocks?
* 17.21%
* 14.75%
* 11.46%
* 14.27%

A

14.27%

The expected return is solved by adding the proportionate weighting of each component’s expected contribution:
* Adam Stock. 33% x 15% = 0.0495
* Brendan Stock. 22% x 11% = 0.0242
* Jerry Stock. 25% x 6% = 0.015
* Mike Stock. 20% x 27% = 0.054

311
Q

The assumption that investors, given the same level of risk, will always choose the portfolio with the greatest return is known as __ ____??____ __.
* non-correlation
* risk-tolerant
* non-satiation
* risk-averse

A

non-satiation
* The assumption that investors, given the same level of risk, will always choose the portfolio with the greatest return is known as non-satiation.

312
Q

The statistical measure of co-movement that is standardized on a scale of -1.0 to 1.0 is known as __ ____??____ __.
* Covariance
* the Comparative Value
* the Correlation Coefficient
* the Coefficient of Variation

A

the Correlation Coefficient
* Only the correlation coefficient has a standardized scale.

313
Q

If a portfolio manager is looking to add diversifying securities into their portfolio, which of the following securities would be best to add?
* Non-correlated securities
* Proportionately correlated securities
* Positively correlated securities
* Negatively correlated securities

A

Negatively correlated securities
* Negatively correlated securities will have the most diversifying benefit.

314
Q

Security A
Expected Return 15%
Standard Deviation 11%

Security B
Expected Return 7%
Standard Deviation 12%

Security C
Expected Return 23%
Standard Deviation 22%
Which of the securities is most efficient?
* Security C
* Not possible to determine
* Security A
* Security B

A

Security A
* The question is asking about the coefficient of variation or standard deviation divided by the expected return.

A = 0.11 ÷ 0.15 = 0.733
B = 0.12 ÷ 0.07 = 1.71
C = 0.22 ÷ 0.23 = 0.956
Security A has the most efficient return.

315
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 11%
Standard Deviation 14%
Weight in Portfolio 41%
Security B
Expected Return 17%
Standard Deviation 21%
Weight in Portfolio 59%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.61
What is the covariance of securities A & B?
* 0.011407
* 0.017934
* 0.147559
* 0.019873

A

0.017934
* COVij = ρijσiσjCOVij
* = 0.61 × 0.14 × 0.21
* COVij = 0.017934

316
Q

When two securities are expected move in the same direction at the same time to the same degree they are best described as __ ____??____ __.
* perfectly positively correlated
* diversified
* perfectly negatively correlated
* perfectly non-correlated

A

perfectly positively correlated
* These securities would have a correlation coefficient of 1.0 and be considered perfectly positively correlated.

317
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 15%
Standard Deviation 23%
Weight in Portfolio 67%
Security B
Expected Return 7%
Standard Deviation 12%
Weight in Portfolio 33%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.72
What is the weighted standard deviation of this two-asset portfolio?
* 17.50%
* 19.43%
* 34.37%
* 18.47%

A

18.47%
σp=((0.67×0.23)2+(0.33×0.12)2+2(0.67)(0.33)(0.01987))√=
σp=(0.02375+0.00157+0.00879)‾‾
‾‾‾√=
σp=0.03411‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√
=σp=0.1847=18.47%

318
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 21%
Standard Deviation 17%
Weight in Portfolio 45%
Security B
Expected Return 27%
Standard Deviation 16%
Weight in Portfolio 55%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.32
What is the weighted standard deviation of this two-asset portfolio?
* 17.13%
* 15.61%
* 42.53%
* 19.43%

A

17.13%
* σp=((0.45×0.27)2 + (0.55 × 0.16)2 + 2(0.45)(0.55)(0.01382))‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
* ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√ =σp= (0.01476 + 0.00774 + 0.00684)‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
* ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√=σp= 0.02934‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√=σp=0.1713=17.13%

319
Q

Lesson 10. Formula Investing & Invest. Strategies

Lesson 10. Formula Investing & Invest. Strategies

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
320
Q

Use the table above to calculate the return for the dollar-cost averaging investment.
* 8.18%
* 4.05%
* 7.65%
* 5.98%

A

8.18%
* The return for the dollar-cost averaging investment was

($4,327 - $4,000) ÷ $4,000 =
8.175%, or 8.18% (rounded).

321
Q

What determines choosing between Bond Ladders, Bullets and Barbells?

A

They choose between these options based on their expectations of the direction of the yield curve.
* Those investors who anticipate the yield curve to become steeper will use a bullet strategy.
* Those who expect the yield cure to flatten will pick the barbell.
* Those who are neutral or uncertain will buy a ladder.

322
Q

Describe the barbell strategy

A
  • A barbell is a strategy of holding more bonds at the short and long end of the yield curve with intermediate bonds being underweighted.
  • This allows a portfolio’s price to match the volatility of an intermediate-term liability.
  • When there is a likelihood that the Federal Reserve will loosen monetary policy in the near term, a barbelled portfolio may increase a bond portfolio’s return.
  • High-yield municipal and corporate bonds have two advantages that can be utilized in a barbelled portfolio.
  • First, high-yield bonds help diversify a portfolio. Their performance is largely isolated from what’s happening with government interest rates because their yields depend almost entirely on default risk.
  • Second, compared to equity alternatives, they are often undervalued. If the yield curve continues to flatten, the return on a barbelled portfolio is optimized.
323
Q

Describe the bullet-structured portfolio

A
  • A bullet-structured portfolio benefits when the yield curve is expected to steepen.
  • A bullet structure usually weighs heavier around intermediate term assets.
  • A bulleted maturity tends to outperform a barbell structure when the yield curve steepens because in a rising rate environment, intermediate-term securities usually hold up better than long-term securities.
  • Also, in a declining interest-rate environment, intermediate securities produce significantly greater price appreciation than do short-term securities.
324
Q

Consider the following case: You invest $250 in stock every month over a period of a year. Which investment strategy are you applying?
* Buy and Hold
* Dollar Cost Averaging
* Dividend Reinvestment Plan
* All of the above

A

Dollar Cost Averaging
* Dollar cost averaging is the practice of purchasing a fixed dollar amount of stock at specified intervals. The logic behind dollar cost averaging is that by investing the same dollar amount each period instead of buying in one lump sum, you’ll be averaging out price fluctuations by buying more shares of common stock when the price is lowest, and fewer shares when the price is highest.

325
Q

Your client owns a stock fund in a joint account with his wife. He elected to have the distributed dividends and capital gains reinvested back into the fund. Which of the following statements are true? (Select all that apply)
* The reinvestments will have a dollar cost average effect on the account.
* Since he did not take the dividends and distributed capital gains as cash, he will not need to pay taxes on them.
* The reinvested amounts will not affect the cost basis of the account.
* The reinvested amounts will purchase additional shares.

A

The reinvestments will have a dollar cost average effect on the account.
The reinvested amounts will purchase additional shares.
* Reinvestment of dividends and distributed capital gains is a method to purchase additional shares rather than taking the amounts as cash.
* Since it is a purchase on a regular basis, it is gives the effect of dollar cost averaging.
* The cost basis of the account will change because the additional shares will be purchased at different share prices.
* Although the client does not take the money out of the account, the dividends and distributed gains are still taxable.

326
Q

Which of the following statements is true about a normal yield curve? (Select all that apply)
* Short-term yield is lower than long-term yield.
* A portfolio with a bullet strategy is best suited to this environment.
* A portfolio with a ladder strategy is best suited to this environment.
* A portfolio with a barbell strategy is best suited to this environment.

A

Short-term yield is lower than long-term yield.
A portfolio with a ladder strategy is best suited to this environment.
* A ladder structure will be the most beneficial in a normal upward sloping yield curve indicating higher yield at longer maturities, with a stable interest rate environment.
* Barbells work better in a flat yield curve while
* bullet works better for a steep yield curve.

327
Q

Dollar cost averaging is a risk reduction method that would lower risk and likely increase return. Which of the following market conditions would be the LEAST favorable for dollar cost averaging?
* Stock price is on the rise
* Stock price is dropping
* Stock price is level
* Stock price is fluctuating

A

Stock price is on the rise
* Dollar cost averaging can help investors lower their overall average cost per share in most market conditions except for when the stock price is continuously increasing.
* In that case, the investor would have been better off investing everything at the lower price in the beginning.

328
Q

Describe Head and Shoulders Top and Bottom and what they signal.

A

Head and Shoulders Top has three successive peaks, forms after an uptrend, and is viewed as a sell signal.
* A head and shoulders reversal pattern forms after an uptrend, and its completion marks a trend reversal. A technician would view this price pattern as a distinct sell signal.

Head and Shoulders Bottom has three successive troughs, forms after a downtrend, and is viewed as a buy signal.
* As a major reversal pattern, the head and shoulders bottom forms after a downtrend, and its completion marks a change in trend. A technician would view this price pattern as a distinct buy signal.

329
Q

Was technical analysis significant for this period?
* Yes
* No
* Not enough information

A

Yes
* If the market was efficient, the difference between the returns should be approximately zero.
* Since all three methods yield significant differences between buy day and sell day returns, it can be said that technical analysis would have made a difference during this period.

330
Q

Match the corresponding order of Top-down analysis with the correct level
First
Second
Third
Fourth
* Industry (e.g. Technology or healthcare services)
* Country (e.g. Germany or Japan)
* Company (e.g. IBM or Tyco)
* Region (e.g. Europe or Pacific rim)

A
  • First - Region (e.g. Europe or Pacific rim)
  • Second - Country (e.g. Germany or Japan)
  • Third - Industry (e.g. Technology or healthcare services)
  • Fourth - Company (e.g. IBM or Tyco)
331
Q

Which of the following interest rate environments are beneficial for the buyer of a collar?
* Rates go above cap
* Rates remain between cap and floor
* Rates go below floor

A

Rates go above cap
* A collar is beneficial when the rate goes above the cap.

332
Q

Which of the following would describe a contrarian investor? (Select all that apply)
* Buys securities that are doing well
* Sells securities that are doing well
* Buys securities that are doing poorly
* Sells securities that are doing poorly

A

Sells securities that are doing well
Buys securities that are doing poorly
* Contrarians invest in a manner that is completely opposite to momentum investors.
* They tend to buy stocks that have had recent bad news and sell the ones that have recently performed well.

333
Q

Margaret has two bond types in a portfolio. Forty percent of the portfolio is in a zero coupon bond which will mature in 10 years. The other sixty percent is invested in a 30-year bond with a duration of 27. What is the average duration of this portfolio?
* 27
* 20.2
* 37
* 10.1

A

20.2
* Zero coupon bonds have a duration that equals its maturity.
* (40%)(10)+(60%)(27) = 20.2

334
Q

Match each item listed with the strategy that is its opposite.
Market Timing
Momentum
Passive
Technical Analysis
* Contrarian
* Fundamental Analysis
* Active
* Buy and Hold

A
  • Market Timing - Buy and Hold
  • Momentum - Contrarian
  • Passive - Active
  • Technical Analysis - Fundamental Analysis
335
Q

Exam 10. Formula Investing & Invest. Strategies

Exam 10. Formula Investing & Invest. Strategies

A
336
Q

Dollar-cost averaging does NOT favor the client when the price of the stock never decreases.
* False
* True

A

True
* The only instance where dollar cost averaging will not work is if the stock or stock fund’s price continues to rise and never drops. If that was the case and your client had a lump sum to invest, it would have been cheaper to buy it in the beginning.

337
Q

Regarding market timing, a market timer will:
* Hold a low-beta portfolio when the expected market return is greater than the risk-free return.
* Hold a high-beta portfolio when the expected market return is greater than the risk-free return.

A

Hold a high-beta portfolio when the expected market return is greater than the risk-free return.

A market-timer structures a portfolio to have a relatively high beta when he expects the market to rise and a relatively low beta when a market drop is anticipated. In other words, a market timer will:
* Hold a high-beta portfolio when Expected Market Return > Risk-free Return, and
* Hold a low-beta portfolio when Expected Market Return < Risk-free Return.

338
Q

Which of the following statements pertaining to dollar-cost averaging is NOT correct?
* Under dollar-cost averaging, stock investments are made at random intervals.
* Under dollar-cost averaging a fixed amount is invested at each interval.
* Under dollar-cost averaging fewer shares are purchased when the stock price has risen.
* Under dollar-cost averaging more shares are purchased when the stock price has fallen.

A

Under dollar-cost averaging, stock investments are made at random intervals.
* Dollar-cost averaging is the practice of purchasing a fixed dollar amount of stock or stock funds at specified (not random) intervals.

339
Q

Which of the following tools is NOT used for fundamental analysis when evaluating a stock?
* Forecasting future sales for several industries
* Charting
* Company balance sheet
* Company income statement

A

Charting
* Charting a stock’s price is a tool used by technical analysts, not for fundamental analysis.

340
Q

Which of the following tools is NOT used for technical analysis when evaluating a stock?
* Charting Strategies
* Sentiment Indicators
* Company Financial Statements
* Flow of Funds Indicators

A

Company Financial Statements
* Technical analysts are not concerned with the fundamental prospects of a firm. In fact, what the company does, what they make, their relative market share, etc., is all unimportant information according to a technician.

341
Q

Which of the following strategies benefits when the bond yield curve is expected to steepen?
* Ladder structure
* Bullet structure
* Barbell structure
* Dollar-cost averaging

A

Bullet structure
* A bullet-structured portfolio benefits when the yield curve is expected to steepen.
* A bullet structure usually weighs heavier around intermediate-term assets.

342
Q

Which of the following strategies holds bonds that mature at regular intervals throughout the various maturities of the yield curve?
* Barbell structure
* Bullet structure
* Ladder structure
* Dollar-cost averaging

A

Ladder structure
* A ladder structure is a portfolio of bonds that mature at regular intervals throughout the various maturities of the yield curve.
* To perpetuate a ladder structure, as each bond matures, the proceeds are used to purchase a bond that will mature at the next interval after the one with the longest maturity in the portfolio.

343
Q

Which of the following statements regarding dividend reinvestment plans (DRIP) is NOT correct?
* Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP), dividends are automatically reinvested in the additional shares without paying brokerage fees.
* Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) the investor does not receive the dividend in cash.
* Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP), automatically reinvested dividends are not subject to current taxation.
* Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP), the investor’s cost basis includes the automatically reinvested dividends.

A

Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP), automatically reinvested dividends are not subject to current taxation.
* Under a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP), the reinvested dividends are subject to current taxation and become part of the investor’s cost basis.

344
Q

Which of the following investment holdings is NOT considered a passive management style holding?
* Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT)
* A small company aggressive growth fund
* SPDR (EFT)
* S&P Index Fund

A

A small company aggressive growth fund
* A small company aggressive growth fund is actively managed, not passive.

345
Q

Which of the following strategies holds more bonds at the short and long end of the yield curve with intermediate bonds being underweighted?
* Ladder structure
* Dollar-cost averaging
* Bullet structure
* Barbell structure

A

Barbell structure
* A barbell is a strategy of holding more bonds at the short and long end of the yield curve with intermediate bonds being underweighted.
* This allows a portfolio’s price to match the volatility of an intermediate-term liability.

346
Q

Lesson 11. Asset Allocation & Portf. Diversification

Lesson 11. Asset Allocation & Portf. Diversification

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
347
Q

Can a client have more than one time horizon?
* Yes
* No

A

Yes
* Yes. A client could have multiple investment goals, each with its own time horizon.
* For example, in creating a financial plan, you may discover that your client wants to retire in 35 years, pay for her son’s college education in 18 years, and buy a new home in 5 years. Each of these is a different goal carrying a different time horizon.

348
Q

Which of the following investments would you recommend for your client’s liquidity needs?
* High Yield Bonds
* Foreign Stock
* Shares of a Partnership
* Money Market Fund
* Land

A

Money Market Fund
* Liquidity needs such as emergency funding or a temporary place to hold some money must be met by liquid asset.
* Money market mutual funds are the most liquid investments in the list.
* The low eating of the high yield bond makes it tough to sell.
* Foreign stocks may be harder to sell than domestic ones, especially from emerging markets.
* Land and shares to a partnership are typically classified as illiquid investments as well.

349
Q

How is a benchmark portfolio used in an investment policy? Click all that apply.
* Reference point for risk objectives
* Security selection
* Measure performance against
* Reference point for return objectives
* Diversification

A

Reference point for risk objectives
Measure performance against
Reference point for return objectives
* Funds are professionally managed based on a previously determined strategy. Investors do not get to choose which securities should be purchased or sold.

350
Q

Match the corresponding level of potential risk and return with the portfolios.
Highest potential risk and reward
Higher potential risk and reward
Conservative potential risk and reward
Most conservative potential risk and
reward
* 10% money market instruments, 20% bonds, 70% stocks
* 20% money market instruments, 30% bonds, 50% stocks
* 25% money market instruments, 60% bonds, 15% stock
* 10% money market instruments, 10% bonds, 80% stocks

A
  • Highest potential risk and reward - 10% money market instruments, 10% bonds, 80% stocks
  • Higher potential risk and reward - 10% money market instruments, 20% bonds, 70% stocks
  • Conservative potential risk and reward - 20% money market instruments, 30% bonds, 50% stocks
  • Most conservative potential risk and reward - 25% money market instruments, 60% bonds, 15% stock
351
Q

Strategic asset allocation (SAA) is the portion of the portfolio that has asset class mix for the normal mix for the long-run portfolio. Tactical asset allocation (TAA) is the portion of the portfolio designed to profit from temporaty market disequilibria. State False or True.
* False
* True

A

True
* SAA is the asset mix that is intended to accomplish investment objectives over the long run.
* TAA is designed to deviate from SAA when temporary market conditions make it profitable to do so.

352
Q

Exam Tip & Audio

Exam Tip: Common testable applications of the efficient frontier are covered in this recording.
AUDIO:
* Exactly how it’ll be tested on exam. There will be plots on, above and below the line.
* The plots right on the line – that’s the Efficient Frontier – those portfolios are all considered equally efficient. The highest return for a given amount of risk.

A
  • The plots on the line are the most efficient.
  • Plot below the line – achievable, but not efficient.
  • Plot above the line – not achievable at all.
353
Q

Simply Stated: The Markowitz Efficient Frontier AUDIO:

What does the Markowitz efficient frontier plots out?

A

Plotting out Mean variance optimization – investor is getting an optimal amount of return given a unit of risk they’re willing to take
* T bills 6% and Stocks 14% (higher return, higher risk)
* Risk averse will plot on left and lower end of curve
* Risk tolerant will plot on right and upper end of curve

354
Q

Match the corresponding types of asset allocations with the correct descriptions.
Strategic Asset Allocation
Tactic Asset Allocation
Dynamic Asset Allocation
Integrated Asset Allocation
* Optimize based on investment goals and market conditions
* Change in weights to meet temporary market conditions
* Change in weights to meet a change in investor’s circumstances
* Derive long-term asset allocation weights

A
  • Strategic Asset Allocation - Derive long-term asset allocation weights
  • Tactic Asset Allocation - Change in weights to meet temporary market conditions
  • Dynamic Asset Allocation - Change in weights to meet a change in investor’s circumstances
  • Integrated Asset Allocation - Optimize based on investment goals and market conditions
355
Q

Analysts who study historical market data in hopes of finding patterns that will repeat themselves in the future are known as:
* Risk-return analysts
* Technical analysts
* Graphic analysts
* Fundamental analysts
* Pattern analysts

A

Technical analysts
* Technical analysts study historical market data. They prepare graphs of stock prices and study statistics in hopes of discerning patterns that will repeat themselves in the future. Technical analysts typically analyze dozens of different assets and market indexes, but they typically prepare their forecasts for one asset or one market index at a time.

356
Q

An asset allocation strategy that gives simultaneous consideration to the investor’s goals and policies and capital market conditions and uses these data as inputs to an optimizer is known as:
* Insured asset allocation
* Dynamic asset allocation
* Integrated asset allocation
* Strategic asset allocation
* Tactical asset allocation

A

Integrated asset allocation
* Integrated asset allocation considers the investor’s goals and policies and capital market conditions, and then uses these data as inputs to some kind of optimizer.
* The optimizer’s solution becomes the new inputs that are reconsidered along with the investor’s latest goals and policies and most recent market conditions when revising the asset allocation.

357
Q

The asset allocation decision:
* Involves selecting the classes of assets in which funds will be invested.
* Should focus on selecting assets that are expected to offer the highest return over the investment horizon.
* Refers to the decision on what specific securities the funds should be used to purchase.
* Should be strictly adhered to throughout the investment horizon in order to maintain a well-diversified portfolio.

A

Involves selecting the classes of assets in which funds will be invested.
* The asset allocation decision involves selecting the classes of assets, rather than the specific securities, in which to invest. It needs to be based on the objectives and constraints of the investor, which may not be investing to offer the highest expected return. It must be revisited regularly to ensure that the objectives and constraints are still being met and to make any necessary changes if the objectives and constraints are modified due to changes in the investor’s circumstances.

358
Q

Put the following in the correct order:
* Create and agree upon an investment policy, then forecast expected risk and return.
* Review performance and make changes as necessary.
* Allocate funds.
* Gain understanding of the client’s goals, circumstances and risk tolerance.

A
  • First - Gain understanding of the client’s goals, circumstances and risk tolerance.
  • Second - Create and agree upon an investment policy, then forecast expected risk and return.
  • Third - Allocate funds.
  • Fourth - Review performance and make changes as necessary.
359
Q

This analysis attempts to predict short-term price movements and makes recommendations concerning the timing of purchases and sales of stocks.
* Fundamental
* Technical
* Bottom-up
* Top-down

A

Technical
* Technical analysis is involved with short-term predictions of security price movements based on past patterns of prices and trading volumes, and then makes recommendations concerning the timing of purchases and sales of stocks.

360
Q

Along with identifying certain characteristics of securities, financial analysis also attempts to identify which of the following?
* Economic fundamentals of the market
* Forecast of securities values
* Mis-priced securities
* Under-priced securities

A

Mis-priced securities
* Financial analysts are active mangers who focus their research efforts on analyzing company financial statements. Such research permits an analyst to better understand a company’s business operations, as well as the characteristics of securities, group of securities, and which securities might be mis-priced.

361
Q

Which one of the following is a component of the investment process that involves identifying which securities to invest in and determining the proportion of funds to invest in each of the securities?
* Investment policy
* Security selection
* Portfolio revision
* Portfolio evaluation

A

Security selection
* Security selection is a component of the investment process where assets are identified for investment and the proportion of funds to invest in each of the assets is determined. The investment manager makes a forecast of expected returns, standard deviations, and co-variances for all available securities. This results in the identification of the optimal portfolio.

362
Q

Exam 11. Asset Allocation & Portf. Diversification

Exam 11. Asset Allocation & Portf. Diversification

A
363
Q

If the sale of stock results in a net loss, what is the maximum amount an investor may claim as a tax deduction in that year?
* $5,000
* 100% of the net amount without limit
* 20% of the net loss amount
* $3,000

A

$3,000
* If the sale of stock results in a net loss, then it can be deducted up to $3,000 per year. If the amount of the loss is greater than $3,000, the investor can carry that amount to future tax years and continue to deduct up to $3,000 per year.

364
Q

Iris is in a 37% marginal federal income tax bracket. If Iris can earn 3% by investing in a tax-exempt municipal bond, what is her taxable equivalent yield?
* 4.76%
* 2.19%
* 2.01%
* 8.11%

A

4.76%

Tax equivalent yield = Tax-exempt rate ÷ (1 – Tax bracket).
0.03 ÷ (1 - 0.37)
0.03 ÷ 0.63 = 0.0476, or 4.76%

365
Q

According to the Markowitz efficient market hypothesis, the most efficient portfolios lie __ ____??____ __.
* above the efficient frontier
* either above or below the efficient frontier
* below the efficient frontier
* on the efficient frontier

A

on the efficient frontier
* The most efficient portfolios lie directly on the efficient frontier.

366
Q

Preparing forecasts for asset allocation typically includes each of the following EXCEPT:
* Statistics for foreign and domestic stock indexes.
* Statistics for individual foreign and domestic stocks.
* Statistics for foreign and domestic bond indexes.
* Statistics for foreign and domestic real estate indexes.

A

Statistics for individual foreign and domestic stocks.
* In preparing forecasts for asset allocation Investment managers typically overlook individual stocks, individual bonds, and individual pieces of real estate, and focus instead on the categories of homogeneous assets.

367
Q

In Step 1 of the asset allocation process, “Gain Understanding,” each of the following is considered EXCEPT:
* The length of the client’s investment horizon.
* Reallocation of existing assets.
* The client’s tax situation.
* The client’s liquidity needs.

A

Reallocation of existing assets.
* Reallocation of existing assets would occur at a later step and is not considered in Step 1.

368
Q

Which method of asset allocation attempts to address the client’s portfolio asset allocation based on the typical needs of a person at a particular point in their lifetime?
* Risk tolerance allocation
* Passive asset allocation
* Active asset allocation
* Lifecycle asset allocation

A

Lifecycle asset allocation
* Lifecycle asset allocation attempts to address the client’s portfolio asset allocation based on the typical needs of a person in a similar lifecycle stage.

369
Q

A Markowitz efficient portfolio has
I. The maximum expected return available at its level of risk.
II. The maximum risk at its level of expected return.
* II only
* I only
* Neither I nor II
* Both I and II

A

I only
* Every Markowitz efficient portfolio:
* has the maximum expected return available at its level of risk, and
* the minimum risk at its level of expected return.

370
Q

A written investment policy statement includes each of the following EXCEPT:
* Any constraining policies
* Adviser fee structure disclosures
* Asset Allocation policies
* A benchmark

A

Adviser fee structure disclosures
* The purpose of a written investment policy statement carefully sets forth the client’s investment goals and policies. Adviser compensation is discussed at the commencement of the engagement and is not part of the written investment policy statement.

371
Q

Consider the following investors and their respective marginal federal income tax brackets. Which investor has the highest taxable equivalent yield holding a municipal bond yielding 3%?
* Marlene: 0% marginal federal income tax bracket
* Iris: 24% marginal federal income tax bracket
* Sue: 12% marginal federal income tax bracket
* Rose: 37% marginal federal income tax bracket

A

Rose: 37% marginal federal income tax bracket
* The investor in the highest federal income tax bracket has the highest taxable equivalent yield because they experience the highest tax savings by holding the municipal bond.

372
Q

Which of the following would be expected to have the greatest market volatility?
* Small company stock funds
* Money market funds
* Large company stock funds
* Bond funds

A

Small company stock funds
* Small company stick funds would be expected to have the greatest volatility.

373
Q

Lesson 12. Efficient Market Theory

Lesson 12. Efficient Market Theory

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
374
Q

In a perfectly efficient market, which of the following investment choices is the most logical for someone looking to invest in the stock market?
* Stock Index Funds
* Contrarian Stock Funds
* Momentum Stock Funds
* Growth Stocks
* Value Stocks

A

Stock Index Funds
* In a perfectly efficient market, there is no opportunity to gain abnormal returns beyond the market. Therefore, a stock index fund would produce the most returns possible.

375
Q

What is the level of market efficiency, in which only previous security prices and volume data are reflected in current security prices, called?
* A strong form efficient market
* A semi-strong form efficient market
* A weak form efficient market
* A perfectly efficient market

A

A weak form efficient market
* A weak form efficient market exists when the market prices reflect only previous or historical information.
* In a semi-strong efficient market, the market prices reflect all public information.
* A strong form or perfectly efficient market exists when the market prices reflect everything that is knowable. This includes both historical and public information in addition to other information.

376
Q

What types of information do perfectly efficient prices reflect? (Select all that apply)
* Historical information
* Public information
* Inside information of the company
* Additional information that is more difficult to obtain

A

Historical information
Public information
Inside information of the company
Additional information that is more difficult to obtain
* A strong form or perfectly efficient market exists when the market prices reflect everything that is knowable. This includes both historical and public information in addition to other information. Knowable information also includes inside information of the company. However, this must be used only in a legally approved manner.

377
Q

When a series of prices represents a situation in which changes in the value of the prices are independent and identically distributed, we refer to the series as a random walk.
* False
* True

A

True
* The random walk model is a situation in which changes in the value of a random variable are independent and identically distributed.
* When applied to common stocks, it refers to a situation in which security price changes are independent and identically distributed. This means that the size of a security’s price change, from one period to the next, can be viewed as being determined by the spin of a roulette wheel.

378
Q

Which of the following statements does not apply to an efficient market? (Select all that apply)
* Investors generate price expectations for securities.
* Under or overvaluation of securities can be expected.
* Abnormal profits can be made by using a set of information to formulate buying and selling decisions.
* Investors must make full and accurate use of the available information set.

A

Under or overvaluation of securities can be expected.
Abnormal profits can be made by using a set of information to formulate buying and selling decisions.
Investors must make full and accurate use of the available information set.
* In an efficient market it is impossible to make abnormal profits by using a particular set of information to formulate buying and selling decisions. That is, investors should expect to make only normal profits by earning a normal rate of return on their investments. An efficient market is defined as one in which every security’s price equals its investment value at all times. In an efficient market, a set of information is fully and immediately reflected in market prices.

379
Q

In a perfectly efficient market:
* Investors who have the resources should rely on investment advisors for pricing decisions.
* Investment analysts will be highly regarded and actively pursued for their advice.
* Professional investors should fare no better in stock selection than the uninformed investors.
* Professional investors have an edge in generating abnormally high returns.

A

Professional investors should fare no better in stock selection than the uninformed investors.
* In a perfectly efficient market, prices always reflect investment value, and hence, professional investors do not have an edge over ordinary investors when it comes to stock selection. Therefore, investors need not rely on investment advisors or analysts for pricing decisions.

380
Q

In perfectly efficient markets, the investors who profited in the past:
* Have a higher probability of profiting in the future
* Were most often lucky
* Learned valuable trading rules for the future
* Used professional advice

A

Were most often lucky
* Though some investment advisors or analysts may display impressive performance records, it is merely due to luck or chance. Their past performance cannot be relied upon as a basis for predicting their future performance.

381
Q

In a perfectly efficient market, analysts can gain abnormal returns by using special data and analytical software.
* False
* True

A

False
* Analysts may be able to show abnormal returns on their gross returns, but these gains will be offset by the increased cost incurred in using special data and analytical software.
* The resulting net returns will show that they have earned a fair return and nothing more.

382
Q

Which the following is true about a perfectly efficient market with transaction costs? (Select all that apply)
* Passive managers will out perform active managers
* The net return of passive and active managers will be similar
* Active managers’ returns will be offset by cost to acquire information and make frequent trades

A

The net return of passive and active managers will be similar
Active managers’ returns will be offset by cost to acquire information and make frequent trades
* Active managers may be able to find better returns, but their costs for information and transactions will offset any additional gains. This will result in a similar net return for both passive and active managers.

383
Q

Match the efficiency tests with the correct description.
Event
Patterns
Performance
* Seeking for consistent repetition of abnormal gains
* Seeking investment managers who can consistently earn abnormal returns.
* The speed with which the price adjusts to the equilibrium after an event, such as announcement of a stock split

A
  • Event - The speed with which the price adjusts to the equilibrium after an event, such as announcement of a stock split
  • Patterns - Seeking for consistent repetition of abnormal gains
  • Performance - Seeking investment managers who can consistently earn abnormal returns.
384
Q

Which one of the following would best justify an investor hiring an active portfolio manager even though markets have been shown to be semi-strong form efficient?
* The existence of market “anomalies” has been discovered.
* Analysts have incorporated relevant information quickly and accurately.
* Technical trading rules have been proven to be ineffective.
* The results from studies on efficiency are debatable and not universally accepted.

A

The existence of market “anomalies” has been discovered.
* Various market “anomalies” have been discovered in tests of a semi-strong form market. Securities with certain characteristics or during certain time periods appear to produce abnormally high returns.
* The help of an active portfolio manager aware of such anomalies would help an investor. It is in highly efficient markets, such as the U.S., that analysts have incorporated information quickly and accurately. In weak form markets technical analysis based on past records has proved to be ineffective.

385
Q

Testing for market efficiency is often conducted using __ ____??____ __ where it can be seen how quickly security prices actually reach the next equilibrium from the release of new information.
* A pattern search
* Event studies
* Performance of professional investors
* Inside information

A

Event studies
* Event studies reveal how fast security prices react to release of information.
* Pattern searches and performance tests are methods used for testing other aspects of market efficiency.
* Inside information is not used in testing for market efficiency.

386
Q

The day-of-the week effect states that:
* Small firms have lower returns on Monday.
* Stocks tend to open below their Friday closing prices on Monday.
* Stock returns in January are higher.
* Small firms have higher returns than larger firms.

A

Stocks tend to open below their Friday closing prices on Monday.
* The day-of-the-week effect shows that returns on Monday are lower and in the negative.
* The January effect and size effect indicate the other regularities.
* No regularity has been found stating that small firms have lower returns on Monday.

387
Q

Jack Jones is a professional investor. He wants to purchase stocks of Instapro and Deltapro. He also wishes to sell stocks of Techpro and Softpro. Instapro and Techpro are large firms while Deltapro and Softpro are small firms. According to the study of anomalies, he should: (Select all that apply)
* Purchase stocks of Deltapro in late December or earlier.
* Sell stocks of Deltapro in mid-January or later.
* Purchase stocks of Softpro in late December or earlier.
* Purchase stocks of Instapro in early February or later.
* Sell stocks of Instapro in late December or earlier.

A

Purchase stocks of Deltapro in late December or earlier.
Purchase stocks of Instapro in early February or later.
* Market anomalies suggest that Jack Jones should:
* purchase stocks of small firms (Deltapro) in late December or earlier;
* sell stocks of small firms (Softpro) in mid-January or later;
* purchase stocks of large firms (Instapro) in early February or later;
* and sell stocks of large firms (Techpro) in late December or earlier.

388
Q

A study of anomalies in the Tokyo Stock Exchange shows that apart from the size effect, none of the other anomalies found in the United States exist in Japan.
* False
* True

A

False
* In addition to the size effect, the January effect and the day-of-the-week effect also exist in Japan. This also includes the interrelationship between the January effect and size effect.

389
Q

Exam 12. Efficient Market Theory

Exam 12. Efficient Market Theory

A
390
Q

Which type of portfolio managers tend to invest in stocks issued by corporations that have low rates of earnings growth, high current yields, and low P/E ratios?
* Growth managers
* Value managers

A

Value managers
* Value managers tend to invest in stocks issued by corporations that have low rates of earnings growth, high current yields, and low P/E ratios.
* Growth managers tend to invest in stocks issued by firms with high rates of earnings growth, low current yields, and high P/E ratios.

391
Q

In which of the following forms of the efficient market model is technical analysis still considered worthwhile?
* Strong form
* Weak form
* None of these
* Semi-strong form

A

None of these
* None of the forms of the efficient market theory consider technical analysis to be worthwhile.
* Each assumes all technical analysis is already incorporated into the security’s current FMV.

392
Q

What is the term used to describe the belief that security price changes are independent and identically distributed?
* Semi-strong form
* Strong form
* Random walk
* Weak form

A

Random walk
* Random walk is, in general, a situation in which changes in the value of a random variable are independent and identically distributed. When applied to common stocks, it refers to a situation in which security price changes are independent and identically distributed.

393
Q

Under the Value Line phenomenon, which of the follow stocks would be expected to outperform the market over the next 6 to 12 months?
* Stock D, rated 1 by Value Line with a return last year of 6%
* Stock A, rated 3 by Value Line with a return last year of 10%
* Stock C, rated 5 by Value Line with a return last year of 10%
* Stock B, rated 4 by Value Line with a return last year of 12%

A

Stock D, rated 1 by Value Line with a return last year of 6%
* Stocks ranked 1 or 2 are forecasted to outperform the market over the next 6 to 12 months.
* Stocks ranked 3 are expected to return amounts that mirror the general market average, and
* stocks ranked 4 or 5 are expected to underperform the stock market returns over the next 6 to 12 months.

394
Q

Empirical studies showing that the stocks issued by small companies earned higher rates of return, on average, than stocks issued by large companies are referred to as __ ____??____ __.
* seasonality
* low P/E effect
* neglected firm effect
* small-firm effect

A

small-firm effect
* Empirical studies showing that the stocks issued by small companies earned higher rates of return, on average, than stocks issued by large companies are referred to as the small-firm effect.

395
Q

In which of the following forms of the efficient market model is fundamental analysis still considered worthwhile?
* Strong form
* Weak form
* None of these
* Semi-strong form

A

Weak form
* Under the weak form of efficient market theory technical analysis is not considered worthwhile but this form considers fundamental analysis to remain worthwhile.

396
Q

Under the semi-strong form of the efficient market theory, which of the following types of information is considered worthwhile in determining a security’s FMV?
* Technical analysis
* Insider information
* None of these
* Fundamental analysis

A

Insider information
* The semi-strong form of the efficient market theory does not consider technical analysis and fundamental analysis worthwhile but does consider insider information worthwhile in determining the current FMV of a security.

397
Q

Which of the following forms of the efficient market model renders insider information worthless and already incorporated into a security’s FMV?
* Semi-strong form
* Weak form
* Strong form
* None of these

A

Strong form
* The strong form considers insider information worthless and already reflected in the security’s FMV.

398
Q

The belief that some stocks that are not followed closely by investment analysts provide a method for investors to outperform the general stock market is referred to as the __ ____??____ __.
* Value Line phenomenon
* low P/E effect
* neglected firm effect
* small-firm effect

A

neglected firm effect
* Basically, these stocks are “below the radar screen” and have been proven to be a method for investors to outperform the general stock market.

399
Q

Which of the following types of analysis focuses on the past performance of a security to attempt to forecast the future movement in the security’s market value?
* Fundamental analysis
* Technical analysis

A

Technical analysis
* Technical analysis focuses on historical information on a company that would be available from libraries, bookstores, computer databases, and the Internet. This information represents past data.
* Technical analysts rely on past performance data that would lead to security selection.

400
Q

Lesson 13. Asset Pricing Models

Lesson 13. Asset Pricing Models

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
401
Q

Exam: Highly-testable calculation Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

Exam Tip:
* The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) is a highly-testable formula that is** included on your CFP® Board-provided formula sheet**.
* Check out exam tip to learn about the variables & additional need-to-know facts about CAPM.

A
  • Highly-testable calculation: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
  • Security Market Line (SML) is simply CAPM expressed in a graphic form
  • Likely will have to calculate
  • One of the provided formulas – be able to recognize it by sight and recognize that’s what they’re asking for in the question
  • Order of operations:
  • Rm – Rf: market return minus the risk-free return
  • Multiply by beta
  • Add to risk free return
  • And that would be CAMP – risk free return
402
Q

Identify the variables that represent the ‘market risk premium’ within the CAPM formula.
ri = rf + (rm – rf)ßi
* rf + (rm – rf)
* (rm – rf)Bi
* (rm – rf)
* rf

A

(rm – rf)
* The ‘market risk premium’ is the difference between the market return and the risk-free rate [i.e., (rm – rf)].
* This is the premium given to investors for taking on systematic risk.
* When multiplied by ß, it becomes the ‘stock risk premium.’

403
Q

Which one of the following is not a key assumption underlying the CAPM?
* Investors prefer portfolios with lower standard deviations.
* Assets are infinitely divisible.
* Investors may borrow or lend at a single risk-free interest rate.
* Taxes and transaction costs reduce market liquidity.

A

Taxes and transaction costs reduce market liquidity.
* The assumption regarding taxes and transactions costs under CAPM is that they are irrelevant. It is not assumed that they reduce market liquidity.
* The CAPM also assumes that investors are risk averse and therefore prefer portfolios with lower standard deviations. Other assumptions are that assets are infinitely divisible and that investors may borrow or lend at a single risk-free rate.

404
Q

If the risk-free rate is 4%, the beta on Intel is 1.1, and the rate of return of the market portfolio is 12.0, what is the expected return on Intel?
* 12.8%
* 11.2%
* 12%
* 13.1%

A

12.8%
* The expected rate of return
* = 4% + (12.0 – 4) (1.1)
* = 12.8%.

405
Q

In the equilibrium world of the CAPM, a security that is not part of the market portfolio: (Select all that apply)
* Is not owned by investors
* Has an equilibrium price of zero
* Is attractive to the very risk-averse investor
* Has a market value of zero

A

Is not owned by investors
Has an equilibrium price of zero
Has a market value of zero
* The market portfolio is the risky portfolio held by all investors. Therefore, a security that is not part of the market portfolio is not attractive to the risk-averse investor.
* An important feature of the CAPM is that in equilibrium each security must have a nonzero proportion in the composition of the tangency portfolio.
* That is, no security can, in equilibrium, have a proportion in the portfolio that is zero.
* Hence, the market portfolio is a set of securities that can be freely owned by investors.

406
Q

Match the term with the correct description:
Market risk
Non-market risk
Risk-free rate of return
Total risk of a security
* It is composed of market risk and non-market risk.
* The portion of a security’s total risk that is related to events specific to the security and not to the movements in the market portfolio.
* In the CAPM world, the expected return of a security with a beta of zero equals this rate of return.
* The portion of a security’s total risk that is related to movements in the market portfolio and hence to the beta of the security.

A
  • Market risk - The portion of a security’s total risk that is related to movements in the market portfolio and hence to the beta of the security.
  • Non-market risk - The portion of a security’s total risk that is related to events specific to the security and not to the movements in the market portfolio.
  • Risk-free rate of return - In the CAPM world, the expected return of a security with a beta of zero equals this rate of return.
  • Total risk of a security - It is composed of market risk and non-market risk.
407
Q

Cheri is trying to determine the return for a security that has zero factor of 4%, expected return from economic growth of 8% with sensitivity to the growth of 0.8. If the error term is 0, what is the return of this security?
* 8%
* 12%
* 13.6%
* 10.4%

A

10.4%
* The one factor model for this security is
* r = .04+(.8)(.08)
* =10.4%

408
Q

Which of the following is true about the arbitrage pricing theory? (Select all that apply)
* Investors will take advantage of arbitrage opportunities thus eliminating them.
* Investors will not act on arbitrage opportunities.
* Arbitrage has fewer assumptions than the CAPM.
* Arbitrage opportunities are expensive and risky.

A

Investors will take advantage of arbitrage opportunities thus eliminating them.
Arbitrage has fewer assumptions than the CAPM.
* The logic behind APT is that investors will observe and take advantage of arbitrage opportunities and eliminate them.
* When all arbitrage possibilities have been eliminated, the equilibrium expected return on a security will be a linear function of its sensitivities to the factors.

409
Q

What does the process of arbitrage take advantage of?
* Differential pricing
* Abnormal returns
* Low stock price
* Volatility of stock

A

Differential pricing
* Investors who take advantage of differential pricing for the same physical asset or security engage in the arbitrage process.
* Abnormal returns, low stock price and volatility of stock do not figure in the arbitrage process.

410
Q

Some common characteristics of the relevant factors of APT models include: (Select all that apply)
* Inflation
* Term structure of interest rates
* Price of gold
* Corporate earnings and dividends

A

Inflation
Term structure of interest rates
Corporate earnings and dividends
* The most commonly identified factors that affect expected returns are indicators of aggregate economic activity, inflation and interest rates. Researchers have not identified the price of gold as a factor.

411
Q

The following statements describe either characteristics of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) or the Behavior Asset Pricing Model (BAPM). Select the statements that pertain to the BAPM. (Select all that apply)
* Betas are determined with respect to the preferences of noise traders.
* Supply and demand for a stock is utilitarian.
* Determining Beta is difficult because the preferences of noise traders change over time.
* Expected returns are based on beta, which is determined by the market portfolio.
* Beta is determined using both utilitarian and value-expressive measures.

A

Betas are determined with respect to the preferences of noise traders.
Determining Beta is difficult because the preferences of noise traders change over time.
Beta is determined using both utilitarian and value-expressive measures.
* BAPM is based on the interaction between information traders and noise traders, while CAPM only considers information traders.
* CAPM uses utilitarian factors in determining supply and demand for a stock, while BAPM also considers value-expressive measures.

412
Q

Which of the following statements is/are true? (Select all that apply)
* Both the standard finance view and the behavioral finance view assume the investor to be “rational.”
* Investors make mistakes under the standard finance models.
* Behavioral finance recognizes the contributions of standard finance.
* Behavioral finance considers how investors act and feel.
* Mental accounting is a key concept of “prospect theory.”

A

Behavioral finance recognizes the contributions of standard finance.
Behavioral finance considers how investors act and feel.
Mental accounting is a key concept of “prospect theory.”
* Investors, assumed to be “rational” under the standard finance view, do not make mistakes using these standard finance models.

413
Q

Match the term with the correct description.
Cognitive Errors
Biased Expectations
Mental Accounting
Loss Aversion
* Investors segment their money into separate accounts.
* Investors are overly confident in their ability.
* Investors are more risk adverse when faced with gains and less risk adverse when faced with losses.
* Investors make mistakes.

A
  • Cognitive Errors - Investors make mistakes.
  • Biased Expectations - Investors are overly confident in their ability.
  • Mental Accounting - Investors segment their money into separate accounts.
  • Loss Aversion - Investors are more risk adverse when faced with gains and less risk adverse when faced with losses.
414
Q

Put-Call Parity Example:

Security X has a current put price of $3, a strike price of $20, a market price of $22, and 30 days till expiration. If the risk-free rate is 1.5%, what is the current price of a call for security X for the same strike price and maturity?

A

C - P = S - PV(X)
C = S - PV(X) + P (Tip: Add P to each side to isolate C)
C = S - [ X / (1+r) T ] + P (Tip: Present value of the strike price.)
C = 22 - [20 / (1.015)(30/365)] + 3
C = 22 - [20 / 1.0012] + 3
C = 22 - [19.98] + 3
C = $5.02

415
Q

Describe the Black-Scholes-Merton Measurements

A

Delta - Delta measures the impact of a change in the underlying stock price on the value of a stock option. Delta is positive for a call option and negative for a put option.
* A $1 change to the stock price is approximately equivalent to change in option price by delta dollars.

Eta - Eta measures the percentage impact of a change in the stock price on the option value. Eta is positive for a call option and negative for a put option.
* A 1% change to the stock price is approximately equivalent to change in option price by eta%.

Vega - Vega measures the impact of a change in the volatility of the stock on the stock option. Vega is positive for both a call option and a put option.
* A 1% change to the stock’s standard deviation is approximately equivalent to change in option price by vega.

Gamma - Gamma measures delta’s sensitivity to a stock price change.
* A $1 change in the stock price causes the delta to change by approximately the amount of gamma.

Theta - Theta measures the option price sensitivity to a change in time till expiration.
* A one-day change to time to expiration will cause the option price to change approximately by theta.

Rho - Rho measures the option price sensitivity to a change in interest rate.
* A 1% change to the interest rate will cause the option price to change approximately by rho.

  • TEST TIP: Since the Black-Scholes-Merton-Merton Model is calculated using computer software in real life, it is not as important to know the equation or how to calculate options prices using this model as it is to know how changes in various components of the model affect the price of the option.
416
Q

Exam Tip: Several components influence the pricing of options.

Exam Tip: Several components influence the pricing of options.
Listen to this exam tip audio to learn about relevant factors & how they each influence option pricing.

Option Pricing Model factors
**Know change in price and time variable **
* Inc in stock price – decrease value of put (option of selling at strike price)
* The closer stock price gets to strike price, the less valuable is the option
* Inc in stock price – increase value of call (call gives holder to purchase at strike price)
* The bigger the spread, the more valuable that option is
* Time – for both put and call – The more time to expiration, the higher the value of the option price
* The more time that’s left, the more probable it will move to a favorable position for a particular option

A

The option pricing model factors listed below illustrate how changes in certain variables will affect the price of puts and calls.
* Price: Change of share price beyond the parity will affect the price of calls and puts inversely.
* As the price of the stock increases, the call premium increases and the put premium decreases.
* If the stock price decreases, the opposite will occur.

  • Time: The longer the time to expiration, the higher the premium of a call and a put option. However, the put premium will level out while the call premium will continue to rise.
  • Risk: Will affect put and call premiums the same way (directly). The higher the standard deviation, the higher the premium.
  • Interest: Will have an inverse relationship with calls and puts. As interest rates increase, call premiums will increase but put premiums will decrease.
417
Q

Which model is predicated on the assumption that stock prices can move to only two values over a short period of time?
* BOPM
* CAPM
* APT
* Black-Scholes-Merton

A

BOPM
* The binomial option pricing model assumes that stock prices will attain one of two possible known prices at the end of each of a finite number of periods.
* The Black-Scholes-Merton model is a continuous time model.
* The CAPM and APT are not option pricing models.

418
Q

The Black-Scholes-Merton formula calculates the fair value of an option based on five factors. Which of the following are included among those factors? (Select all that apply)
* Taxes and transaction costs
* Time remaining before expiration
* Risk-free rate of return
* Stock volatility

A

Time remaining before expiration
Risk-free rate of return
Stock volatility
* The Black-Scholes-Merton formula shows that the fair value of an option is determined by the following five factors: stock price, exercise price, risk-free rate, life of the option and the volatility of the common stock. It does not consider taxes and transaction costs as a factor in determining the fair value of an option.

419
Q

Which of the following is an important assumption of put-call parity?
* Both options may have different exercise prices but the same expiration dates
* Both options have the same exercise prices and the same expiration dates
* Both options will produce the same payoff on the stock as well as a risky bond
* Both options will produce the same payoff on the stock as well as another risky asset

A

Both options have the same exercise prices and the same expiration dates
* The payoff from buying a put option on a stock and a share of the stock will be the same as buying a call option on the stock and a risk-free bond.
* This is under the assumption that both options have the same exercise price and expiration date.
* This is called put-call parity.

420
Q

One limitation to the Black-Scholes-Merton model is that strictly speaking it is only applicable to options that do not:
* Have an expiration date
* Pay dividends over the life of the option
* Display implied volatility
* Have an intrinsic value

A

Pay dividends over the life of the option
* One limitation of the Black-Scholes-Merton model is that it can only be applied to options that will not pay dividends over the life of the option.
* The other limitation is that it is applicable only to European options and not to American options.

421
Q

Exam 13. Asset Pricing Models

Exam 13. Asset Pricing Models

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
422
Q

CAP Corporation has a Beta of 1.25 and a standard deviation of 5%. The risk-free rate is 1.00%. If the market premium is 10%, what is the expected return for CAP Corporation using the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)?
* 11.25%
* 15%
* 13.50%
* 12.50%

A

13.50%

The formula for CAPM is ri = rf + (rm – rf) βi
* (rm – rf) is referred to as the “market premium”
* The CAPM for CAP Corporation is ri
* = 0.01 + 0.10(1.25)
* .0.01 + 0.125
* = 0.1350 or 13.50%

423
Q

Which of the following is NOT a condition in defining an arbitrage portfolio?
* There is no sensitivity to any factor and there is zero variance and covariance with other portfolios.
* The riskless arbitrage will result in a positive return.
* There is significant nonfactor risk.
* It does not require additional funds from the investor.

A

There is significant nonfactor risk.
* There is negligible nonfactor risk in an arbitrage portfolio.

424
Q

A call option that is found to be selling for substantially less than its Black-Scholes-Merton value is a candidate for __ ____??____ __.
* purchase
* options writing

A

purchase
* A call option that is found to be selling for substantially less than its Black-Scholes-Merton value is a candidate for purchase, whereas
* one that is found to be selling for substantially more is a candidate for writing.

425
Q

Using the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), if the market return is 10%, the risk-free rate is 1.10%, and the CAPM expected rate of return for CAP Corporation is 12%, what is CAP Corporation’s Beta?
* 1.50
* 1.10
* 1.2523
* 1.2247

A

1.2247
The formula for CAPM is ri = rf + (rm – rf) βi
* ri = 0.011 + (0.10 – 0.011) βi
* 0.12 = 0.011 + 0.0890(βi)
* 0.12 - 0.011 = 0.089(βi)
* 0.109 / 0.089 = 0.089(βi) /0.089
* 1.2247 = (βi)

426
Q

The relationship between the market prices of a call and a put on a given stock that have the same exercise price and expiration date is known as the __ ____??____ __.
* arbitrage portfolio
* put-call parity
* binomial option pricing model
* Black-Scholes-Merton Model

A

put-call parity
* The relationship between the market prices of a call and a put on a given stock that have the same exercise price and expiration date is known as the Put-Call Parity.
* Given the price of a call for a security, you can determine the price of a put for the same security with the same expiration date and strike price.

427
Q

Which of the following statements is NOT correct regarding the Capital Market Line (CML)?
* All investors will hold a portfolio lying on the CML.
* It can be described as the most desirable asset allocation line.
* It is the efficient frontier when borrowing and lending at the risk-free rate are permitted.
* The risk factor used in the capital market line (CML) is Beta.

A

The risk factor used in the capital market line (CML) is Beta.
* The distinguishing feature of the capital market line is that the denominator is the standard deviation of the market.
* This will help you recognize the capital market line equation on the CFP® exam.

428
Q

The Security Market Line (SML) is a graphical depiction of __ ____??____ __.
* Beta
* Standard deviation
* Capital Asset Pricing Model
* market premium

A

Capital Asset Pricing Model
* SML is a graphical depiction of the CAPM and plots risks relative to expected returns.
* It is an equilibrium relationship between the expected return and covariance with the market portfolio for all securities and portfolios.
* The slope of the SML is the risk premium on the market portfolio.

429
Q

CAP Corporation has a Beta of 1.25 and a standard deviation of 5%. The risk-free rate is 1.00% and the return of the market is 10%. Using the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), calculate the expected return for CAP Corporation.
* 11.25%
* 12.25%
* 13.75%
* 15%

A

12.25%
The formula for CAPM is ri = rf + (rm – rf) βi
* CAPM for CAP Corporation is
* ri = 0.01 + (0.10 – 0.01)1.25
* 0.01 + 0.1125
* = 0.1225, or 12.25%

430
Q

CAP Corporation has a Beta of 1.60 and a standard deviation of 6%. The risk-free rate is 1.00% and the return of the market is 10%. Using the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), would the purchase of CAP Corporation be advised for an investor with a required rate of return of 15%?
* Yes
* No

A

Yes
* The expected return for CAP Corporation meets the investor’s required rate of return.

The formula for CAPM is ri = rf + (rm – rf) βi
* ri = 0.01 + (0.10 – 0.01)1.60
* 0.01 + 0.1440
* = 0.1540 or 15.40%

431
Q

Which of the following can be used to estimate the fair value of a call or put option?
* Black-Scholes-Merton model
* Binomial option pricing model
* Arbitrage portfolio
* Put-call parity

A

Binomial option pricing model
* The binomial option pricing model can be used to estimate the fair value of a call or put option.

432
Q

In the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), (rm - rf) is often referred to as the __ ____??____ __.
* market premium
* expected return
* risk factor
* assumed return

A

market premium
* In the CAPM formula, (rm - rf) is often referred to as the “market premium.”

433
Q

CAP Corporation has a Beta of 1.50 and a standard deviation of 6%. The risk-free rate is 1.00% and the return of the market is 10%. Using the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), would the purchase of CAP Corporation be advised for an investor with a required rate of return of 15%?
* Yes
* No

A

No
* The expected return for CAP Corporation does not meet the investor’s required rate of return.

The formula for CAPM is ri = rf + (rm – rf) βi
* ri = 0.01 + (0.10 – 0.01)1.50
* 0.01 + 0.1350
* = 0.145 or, 14.50%

434
Q

Lesson 14. Buying and Selling Securities

Lesson 14. Buying and Selling Securities

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
435
Q

Match the corresponding order size with the number of shares.
Round Lot
Odd Lot
Mixed Lot
Block trade
* 65 shares
* 10,000 shares
* 369 shares
* 200 shares

A
  • Round Lot - 200 shares
  • Odd Lot - 65 shares
  • Mixed Lot - 369 shares
  • Block trade - 10,000 shares
436
Q

Jose places an order with his broker to buy 400 shares of XYZ Corp to be executed by the end of the day at $49/share or less. Which of the following is true about Jose’s order? (Select all that apply)
* It is an odd lot
* It is a round lot
* It is a day order
* It is a fill or kill order
* It is a limit order

A

It is a round lot
It is a day order
It is a limit order
* Since the size was a multiple of 100, the order was a round lot.
* Execution within the same day is a day order.
* The specified ceiling price of $49/share makes it a limit order.

437
Q

When an investor specifies a time limit on the order, it indicates the:
* Time that the exchange is open
* Amount of price movement allowed by the investor
* Time to fill the order
* Commission based on the time it takes to fill the order

A

Time to fill the order
* The investor needs to specify a time limit within which the broker should attempt to fill the order.

438
Q

Natasha wanted to purchase shares of a stock once it hit a certain price, but she is afraid the price of the stock may move too quickly. What type of order should she request?
* Market order
* Stop-buy order
* Limit order
* Stop-limit order

A

Stop-limit order
* Natasha can use a stop-limit order to activate a market order at a certain price, and then limit the transaction from going beyond an unwanted price.

439
Q

Which orders are cancelled if the broker is unable to fully execute them immediately?
* Good-till-canceled
* Open
* Fill-or-kill
* Discretionary

A

Fill-or-kill
* Fill-or-kill orders are those that get cancelled if the broker is unable to fully execute them immediately.

440
Q

Antonio bought a 100-share block of Tomorrow’s Toys Corp. for $20/share. The initial margin is 65%. If the price of the stock goes to $30/share, what is the actual margin on Antonio’s account?
* 65%
* 66.67%
* 23.33%
* 76.67%

A

76.67%
* Initial purchase was for $2,000.
* At 65% initial margin, $1,300 was paid in cash and $700 was a loan.
* When assets increase to $3,000, the loan is still $700 and the equity is $2,300.
* The actual margin = $2,300/$3,000
* =76.67%.

441
Q

An investor just bought 1,000 shares of IBM from her broker on margin. The initial margin requirement was 50%, and the firm adheres to a strict maintenance margin requirement of 30%. The total cost of the transaction, including the commission, was $100,128. ($100 per share and $128 commission).
1. At what price per share will the investor receive a margin call from her broker?
2. If the price should suddenly fall to $60 per share, how much additional cash will be needed to meet the margin call?

A
  • The break-point formula yields the lowest possible price where the margin level is still acceptable. Any price below this however, will result in a margin call.

This break-point form is: [(1 - I.M.) / (1 - M.M)] x Ps
Where:
I.M. = initial margin requirement (%)
M.M. = maintenance margin requirement (%)
Ps = purchase price of the stock

[(1 - .50) / (1 - .30)] x $100.128
= $71.52
Any closing price below $71.52 will generate a margin call.

  • Formula is: Market value x (1 - M.M,) = maximum debt allowable.
    Then subtract this amount from current debt amount to determine margin call
    .

= $60,000, multiplied by (1 - .30)
= $42,000 = maximum debt allowable.
The current debt amount was 50% of the original transaction of $100,128 or $50,064.
Therefore, the margin call = $50,064 - $42,000 = $8,064.

442
Q

Example (Cash Account vs. Margin Account)

If Donna buys 100 shares of Toothwhite Co. for $50/share using a cash account, she would pay $5,000 for them.
* If she buys those shares in a margin account with an initial margin of 60%, then she would pay $__ ____??____ __ for them.
* If the price went to $60/share, then Donna’s return for the cash account is __ ____??____ __.
* But if she bought the shares in a margin account, then her return would be __ ____??____ __.

A
  • If she buys those shares in a margin account with an initial margin of 60%, then she would pay $3,000 for them.
  • If the price went to $60/share, then Donna’s return for the cash account is ($6,000 - $5,000)/$5,000 = 20%.
  • But if she bought the shares in a margin account, then her return would be ($6,000 - $5,000)/$3,000 = 33%.
  • Therefore, through leverage, Donna can earn a greater return on her margin account.
443
Q

If the maintenance margin is 40%, would an investor receive a margin call if the price went up to $120/share? Equity is $4,000.
* Yes
* No

A

Yes
* Actual Margin = Equity ÷ Margin Value
* = $4,000 ÷ $12,000
* = 33.3%.
* Since 33.3% is less than 40% a margin call will be made for the account.

444
Q

Mei sells short 200 shares of Wheels-R-Us at $50 per share. The initial margin is 60% and the maintenance margin is 50%. If the price per share goes to $57, would Mei receive a margin call from her broker?
* Yes
* No

A

Yes

  • The short sale proceeds = $10,000

Initial margin = $6,000
Therefore, the loan amount = $11,400
The actual maintenance is 40.35%.

Mei will receive a margin call and she has to either add cash or securities, or buy back stock to pay off part of her short position.

445
Q

When opening a margin account with a brokerage firm, which agreement must an investor sign?
* Commission-waiver
* Hold-harmless
* Limit order
* Hypothecation

A

Hypothecation
* When opening a margin account with a brokerage firm, an investor must sign a hypothecation agreement. This agreement grants the brokerage firm the right to pledge the investor’s securities as collateral for bank loans, provided that securities are purchased using a margin account.
* Most brokerage firms also expect investors to allow them to lend their securities to others who wish to sell them short.

446
Q

The minimum percentage of the purchase price that must come from the investor’s own funds is known as the:
* Maintenance margin
* Margin account
* Initial margin requirement
* Debit balance

A

Initial margin requirement
* The minimum percentage of the purchase price that must come from the investor’s own funds is known as the initial margin requirement.

447
Q

VJ suspects that Hermes Wireless’ share price will decline in the near future. He would like to sell it for its current price and buy it back later when it is cheaper. When an investor sells a security first and buys it back later, it is known as:
* Margin selling
* A short sale
* Discounting
* A wash

A

A short sale
* Most investors buy securities first and sell them later.
* But with short selling, investors sell securities first and then buy them back later.
* If VJ short sells Hermes Wireless shares, he will be borrowing the securities to sell to someone, then when the prices drop, he will buy the shares back and return the shares to the original lender.

448
Q

A broker buys 500 shares of IBM stock at $80 per share on margin. The initial margin is 50% and the maintenance margin requirement is 30%. To what price may the IBM stock fall before the broker receives a margin call?
* $57.14
* $55.08
* $48.00
* $52.85

A

$57.14
* The maintenance margin is 30% = $12,000 (500 x 80 x 0.30).
* The initial margin provides a price movement of ± 50% i.e. up to $20,000. Therefore, beyond a price volatility of ± $12,000, the broker is likely to give an additional margin call.
* When the total value of the stock falls to $28,000 (initial investment – maintenance margin), the broker will ask for a margin call. So he calls for the highest price that allows him not to go beyond $28,000.
* At the price of $57.14 (500 x 57.14 = 28,570) the broker is likely to give margin call, since the total value of the shares is only $28,570.

449
Q

When multiple margin purchases are made, how are the transactions managed into one account to determine whether the account is under-margined, restricted, or over-margined?
* Collateralized
* Indexed
* Aggregated
* Arbitraged

A

Aggregated
* An investor with a margin account can purchase multiple securities on margin account or may short sell securities. The investor can also purchase some on margin and short sell others. To determine whether the account is under-margined, restricted, or over-margined depends on how the transactions are aggregated.

450
Q

In multiple short sales, the account is marked to the market every day. Actual margins are calculated by:
* Asset re-evaluation done every day
* Liability re-evaluation done every day
* Aggregation of stocks
* Aggregation of sale transactions of all short sales

A

Liability re-evaluation done every day
* With multiple short sales, it is the liabilities that are re-evaluated on the basis of current market prices, because the short seller’s liabilities are shares whose market values are changing every day.

451
Q

On May 1, Ivy Olson sold short 100 shares of Minnetonka Minerals stock at $25 per share and bought on margin 200 shares of St. Louis Park Company stock for $40 per share. The initial margin requirement was 50%. On June 30, Minnetonka stock sold for $36 per share and St. Louis Park stock sold for $45 per share. State whether Ivy’s account is restricted as of June 30.
* False
* True

A

True

Ivy’s Total Assets = $12,750 (Cash from Minnetonka sale=$25/shr x 100 shrs = $2,500; Initial margin = 0.50 x$25/shr x 100 shrs = $1,250; Market value of St. Louis Park stock = $45/shr x200 shrs = $9,000).
To remain unrestricted based on the short sale of Minnetonka stock, Ivy must have deposited in the margin account:100 shrs x $36/shr x (1 + 0.50) = $5,400.
To remain unrestricted based on the margin purchase of St.Louis Park stock, Ivy must have deposited in the margin account: (200 shrs x $40/shr x 0.50)/(1 - 0.50) = $8,000.
Thus to remain unrestricted in aggregate, Ivy’s margin account must be worth at least $13,400.
But Ivy actually has assets worth $12,750, so the account is restricted as of June 30.

452
Q

Exam 14. Buying and Selling Securities

Exam 14. Buying and Selling Securities

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
453
Q

What is the best way to buy a foreign stock?
* Global fund
* ADR
* Buying overseas
* International fund

A

ADR
* The best way to buy an individual stock is to buy an ADR.

454
Q

Rory purchased 200 shares of MRG stock on margin at $100 per share. The initial margin requirement is 60%. The maintenance margin is 35%. If the price of MRG stock falls to $50 per share, what amount must Rory deposit to cover the margin call?
* $5,000
* $7,500
* $10,000
* $1,500

A

$1,500
* Required equity: 35% of $50 = $17.50

Current equity: Current stock price – loan amount = $50 - $40 = $10 per share
Required equity – current equity = $17.50 - $10 = $7.50 deficit
$7.50 x 200 = $1,500

455
Q

What amount must be deposited by an investor for a $25,000 stock purchase on margin if the initial margin requirement is 60%?
* $15,000
* $10,000
* $7,500
* $12,500

A

$15,000
* The margin portion refers to the equity (the portion that is paid for already).
* A 60% initial margin requirement for a $25,000 stock purchase requires $15,000 (60% x $25,000) be deposited.

456
Q

Rory purchased 100 shares of MRG stock on margin at $100 per share. The initial margin requirement is 60%. The maintenance margin is 35%. What price must the stock fall below for Rory to receive a margin call?
* $35.00
* $76.92
* $61.54
* $92.31

A

$61.54
Debt ÷ (1 – maintenance margin)
40 ÷ (1 - 0.35) = $61.54

457
Q

Which of the following types of security purchase orders does not typically include any time limit?
* Market order
* Good-till-canceled order
* Week and Month orders
* Fill-or-kill order

A

Market order
* If an investor puts in a market order, it would be irrelevant to put time constraints around the order because it is supposed to be filled at whatever the market price is at the time the order is made.

458
Q

Who among the following is considered an insider?
I. Employee of the firm
II. Officer
III. Director
IV. A person who has information about the firm that no one else has
* II, III
* All of the above
* II, III, IV
* I, II, III

A

II, III, IV
* An employee would not be considered an insider unless the employee had access to key information.

459
Q

Which of the following security purchase orders remain in effect until they are either filled or canceled by the investor?
* Fill-or-kill order
* Good-till-canceled order
* Day order
* Week and month orders

A

Good-till-canceled order
* Open orders or “good-till-canceled” orders remain in effect until they are either filled or canceled by the investor.
* However, during the time period before the order has been filled, the orders typically expire in 1 to 2 months and need to be reconfirmed.

460
Q

Amy purchases 100 shares of Widget Corporation on margin for $50 per share. The initial margin percentage is 60%. Which of the following statements is CORRECT regarding the impact of the purchase on Amy’s Statement of Financial position on the day of purchase?
* Liabilities are increased by $3,000
* Assets are increased by $3,000
* Assets are increased by $5,000
* Liabilities are increased by $5,000

A

Assets are increased by $5,000
* On the day of the purchase, Amy’s assets increased by $5,000.
* While not part of this question, Amy’s liabilities increased by $2,000 on the date of purchase.

461
Q

The daily calculation of the actual margin in an investor’s account is known as __ ____??____ __.
* maintenance margin
* the account marked to the market
* the account balance
* the margin call calculation

A

the account marked to the market
* The daily calculation of the actual margin in an investor’s account is known as having the account marked to the market.
* At the time of the margin purchase, the actual margin and the initial margin are the same.
* However, after the purchase, the actual margin can be either greater than or less than the initial margin.

462
Q

Which of the following security purchase orders are canceled if the broker is unable to fully execute them immediately?
* Fill-or-kill order
* Week and Month orders
* Day order
* Good-till-canceled order

A

Fill-or-kill order
* Fill-or-kill orders are canceled if the broker is unable to fully execute them immediately.

463
Q

In a typical wrap account, how is the firm compensated?
* A flat dollar amount fee.
* As a percentage of assets under management.
* Trade commissions.
* Specific fee per service.

A

As a percentage of assets under management.
* In exchange for an annual fee equal to a percentage of assets under management, a broker creates an investment plan, finds professional money managers to execute it, and waives all commissions for any trading that takes place in the account.

464
Q

In general, a round lot order to purchase a security indicates an order to purchase how many shares?
* 100
* 50
* 25
* 1

A

100
* In general, a round lot means that the order is for 100 shares, or a multiple of 100 shares.
* Odd lot orders generally are for 1 to 99 shares.

465
Q

Lesson 15. Hedging and Option Strategies

Lesson 15. Hedging and Option Strategies

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
466
Q

Realized Gain Example:

Sanjey has 100 shares of Oracle Corp. stock. He thinks the price of the stock will either go down or remain level over the next few months. Sanjey writes a three-month call option for $5/share with a strike price of $40/share. Maria thinks that Oracle Corp’s stock is undervalued and buys the option from Sanjey. Over the next three months, the price of the stock increases to $48. Maria decides to exercise the option. Now, Sanjey must sell his 100 shares to Maria for $40/share.
Maria will sell the shares at the market for $48 and make the difference between the current price and the strike price plus premium, or $__ ____??____ __.

A

Maria will sell the shares at the market for $48 and make the difference between the current price and the strike price plus premium, or
* $48 - $40 - $5 = $3 X 100 shares
* = $300.

Maria could have decided to sell the option to another party rather than make the election to exercise.

467
Q

Using the facts from the example above, what would happen if the Oracle Corp’s stock price fluctuated between $40 and $38 for the three months before the option’s expiration?
I. Maria would exercise the option.
II. Sanjey would make a profit.
* I only
* II only
* Both I and II
* Neither I nor II

A

II only
* Maria would not exercise the option and Sanjey would make a profit equivalent to the premium ($500).
* Note: Maria has the right to exercise the option just to receive the shares, although she would lose money in the process.

468
Q

Put Example:

Daniel owns 100 shares of Microsoft stock. He thinks the price of the stock will go up the next few months. Daniel writes a three-month put option for $10/share with a strike price of $80/share. Anastasia thinks that Microsoft stock prices will drop and buys the put option from Daniel. During the three months, the price of the stock decreases to $65/share.
Anastasia can go to the market and buy 100 shares at $65/share, then exercise the option and sell Daniel 100 shares of Microsoft for $80/share.
She will make the difference between the current price and the strike price plus premium, or __ ____??____ __.

A

She will make the difference between the current price and the strike price plus premium, or
* $80 - $65 - $10 = $5 X 100 shares
* = $500.

Anastasia could also have decided to sell the option to another party rather than exercise it.

469
Q

Option buyers take large risks, as their liability is unlimited.
* False
* True

A

False
* The adverse movement of the price of the underlying stock need not adversely affect the option buyer because they cannot lose any more than their option premiums.
* Thus, their situation is not risky. Instead, they enjoy limited liability.

470
Q

Which of the following will increase the market value of a call option? (Select all that apply)
* Decrease in the announced dividend
* Increase in the price of the underlying stock
* Decrease in the time remaining until option expires
* Increase in the volatility of the underlying stock

A

Decrease in the announced dividend
Increase in the price of the underlying stock
Increase in the volatility of the underlying stock
* Increase in price of underlying stock, volatility or riskiness of the stock and lower cash dividends are factors that increase the market value of a call option.
* As the expiration date gets closer, the option value decreases.

471
Q

Stacy bought a 3-month call option for 100 shares of Stain guard Inc. for a premium of $3/share with a strike price of $30/share. If two months later, the price of the stock is at $35/share. What is the exercise value of the option?
* $5
* $3
* $30
* $35
* $2

A

$2
* The exercise value of the option for the buyer of the call will be the market price less the strike price and premium.
* It would be a profit of
* ($35 - $30 - $3) = $2.

472
Q

Diego had purchased a put option for 100 shares on Moonstar Company stock for a premium of $3 per share. The option has an exercise price of $60. On the last day of the option’s life, Diego would exercise his option if the stock’s price is:
* $57
* $63
* $66
* $60

A

$57
* The buyer of a put option would exercise the option on the last day of the option’s life if the exercise price is greater than the market price of the stock. The breakeven point for the put is $57.
* So as long as Moonstar Company’s stock price is $60 or less, Diego will exercise the put or sell it for a premium before expiration.

473
Q

Which of the following option strategies benefit from small movements in the underlying asset around the exercise price? (Select all that apply)
* Long Straddle
* Short Straddle
* Long Strangle
* Short Strangle

A

Short Straddle
Short Strangle
* A short straddle or a short strangle position will profit from small price movements around the exercise price.
* A long straddle or a long strangle position will profit by large price movements.

474
Q

A strangle has a put and call with same expiration date but different strike prices. Which of the following statements is true about strangles? (Select all that apply)
* Short strangle is a debit transaction.
* Long strangle is a debit transaction.
* Premiums are received in a short strangle.
* Long strangle is credit transaction.
* Premiums are received in a long strangle.

A

Long strangle is a debit transaction.
Premiums are received in a short strangle.
* Long strangle is a debit transaction because no premiums from writing options are received.
* Short strangle is a credit transaction because premiums are received.

475
Q

Brad White has written an option on stock that he does not own. Which of the following terms apply to this option? (Select all that apply)
* Off-cover
* Writing naked
* Covered call writing
* Writing uncovered
* Writing against cash

A

Writing naked
Writing uncovered
Writing against cash
* If the call writer does not own the underlying stock on which the option is written, it is referred to as writing naked, writing against cash or writing uncovered.
* This is in contrast to covered call writing, where the writer owns the underlying stock and is thus covered against potential loss.
* Naked call options can increase leveraged returns as well as losses.

476
Q

A put and call are bought with the same expiration date and exercise price.

A

Straddle

477
Q

A put and call are bought with the same expiration date but different exercise price.

A

Strangle

478
Q

Purchase of one option and sale of another similar but different option.

A

Spreads

479
Q

Exam 15. Hedging and Option Strategies

Exam 15. Hedging and Option Strategies

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
480
Q

Which of the options strategies is(are) appropriate for an investor that is bearish on a security? (Select all that apply)
* Sell call
* Buy put
* Sell put
* Buy call

A

Sell call
Buy put

THE FOLLOWING TABLE REPRESENTS WHAT BUYERS AND WRITERS HOPE FROM OPTIONS:

BUYER

SELLER

CALL

Price of stock to increase

Price of stock to decrease

PUT

Price of stock to decrease

Price of stock to increase

481
Q

To implement a zero-cost collar options strategy, the investor:
I. buys a put option
II. sells a call option
* Neither I nor II
* II only
* I only
* Both I and II

A

Both I and II
* For a zero-cost collar, an investor buys a put (portfolio insurance) and also sells (or writes) a call option.
* The “collar” is formed by the premium obtained from writing the call or the premium paid for the protection afforded by buying the put, combined with the long position in the underlying stock.

482
Q

Each of the following will increase a put option premium EXCEPT:
* An increase in the underlying stock price.
* An increase in the exercise price.
* An increase in the variance of the underlying asset.
* An increase in the time until expiration.

A

An increase in the underlying stock price.

Increase Time Until Expiration & Increase Variance of Underlying Asset
* Increase Put AND Call Premium

Increase in Underlying Stock Price & Increase in Interest Rates
* Increase Call Premium
* Decrease Put Premium

Increase in Exercise Price
* Decrease Call Premium
* Increase Put Premium

483
Q

Which of the options strategies is appropriate for investors that are bullish on a given security and are interested in generating income?
* Buy call
* Sell put
* Buy put
* Sell call

A

Sell put
* The only way to generate income from an options strategy is to function as the seller.
* Therefore, if the investor expects the price of the stock to increase and wants income, the only option is to sell a put.

484
Q

Which of the following variables will decrease a call option’s premium?
* An increase in the time until expiration.
* An increase in the variance of the underlying asset.
* An increase in the exercise price.
* An increase in the underlying stock price.

A

An increase in the exercise price.

Increase Time Until Expiration & Increase Variance of Underlying Asset
* Increase Put AND Call Premium

Increase in Underlying Stock Price & Increase in Interest Rates
* Increase Call Premium
* Decrease Put Premium

Increase in Exercise Price
* Decrease Call Premium
* Increase Put Premium

485
Q

The buyer of a long straddle believes there will be __ ____??____ __ in the underlying stock’s performance.
* no changes
* price volatility
* predictability
* price stability

A

price volatility
* The buyer of a long straddle believes the underlying stock has the potential for enough price fluctuations to make the straddle profitable before it expires.

486
Q

__ ____??____ __ include combinations of options having different expiration dates but the same exercise price.
* Horizontal spreads
* Diagonal spreads
* Credit spreads
* Vertical spreads

A

Horizontal spreads
* Horizontal spreads include those combinations of options having different expiration dates but the same exercise price. They are called horizontal spreads because different options that all have the same exercise prices are listed in horizontal rows in the newspapers. Horizontal spreads are also called time spreads and calendar spreads.

487
Q

A call option contract specifies each of the following four items EXCEPT:
* The expiration date.
* The exercise price or strike price.
* The market capitalization of the underlying stock.
* The company whose shares can be bought.

A

The market capitalization of the underlying stock.

A call option contract specifies four items:
* The company whose shares can be bought.
* The number of shares that can be bought.
* The purchase price for those shares, known as the exercise price or strike price.
* The date when the right to buy expires, known as the expiration date.

488
Q

What is breakeven for the following:
Call buyer’s gain or loss
Call writer’s intrinsic gain
Put buyer’s intrinsic gain
Put writer’s gain
* Intrinsic value of the put - Put option’s premium
* Intrinsic value of put writer’s position + Price of put
* Intrinsic value of call writer’s position + Call option’s premium
* Intrinsic value of call - Call option’s premium

A
  • Call buyer’s gain or loss = Intrinsic value of call - Call option’s premium
  • Call writer’s intrinsic gain = Intrinsic value of call writer’s position + Call option’s premium
  • Put buyer’s intrinsic gain = Intrinsic value of the put - Put option’s premium
  • Put writer’s gain = Intrinsic value of put writer’s position + Price of put
489
Q

Which of the following options strategies carries the MOST potential risk?
* Protective Put Buying
* Covered Call Writing
* Naked Call Writing
* Naked Put Writing

A

Naked Call Writing
* The naked call buyer’s gains equal the naked call writer’s losses.
* As the price goes beyond the exercise price, the naked writer’s loss will increase proportionately.
* Writing naked calls is risky if the optioned security is likely to rise in price.

490
Q

Lesson 16. Tax Efficient Investing

Lesson 16. Tax Efficient Investing

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
491
Q

If Carlos invested before-tax dollars of $5,000 for 5 years at a rate of return of 6%, what would his accumulation be before taxes?
* $5,300.00
* $6,500.00
* $6,083.26
* $6,691.13

A

$6,691.13
* Carlos’ before tax accumulation would be
* = 5,000(1+.06)^5 or
* $6,691.13

492
Q

If Carlos invested $3,250 for 5 years at a rate of return of 6% and his marginal tax bracket is 35%, what would his accumulation be after taxes?
* $3,935.15
* $4,225.00
* $6,691.13
* $4,797.47

A

$3,935.15

Here is how to solve the question algebraically:
3250 [1 + (0.06 x 0.65)]^5
3250 [1 + (0.039)]^5
3250 [1.039]^5
3250 [1.2108]
3935.1483

That said, there is actually a much easier method to solve this question! Here is how to solve using Time Value of Money (TVM):
6 x 0.65 = 3.90 I/YR
5 N
3250 +/- PV
Solve FV 3935.1483

493
Q

If Francois made a one-time investment of before-tax dollars of $2,000 for 20 years at an average rate of return of 10%/year and his marginal tax bracket is 36%, what would his accumulation be after taxes?
* $13,455.63
* $13,454.99
* $6,691.13
* $8,611.20

A

$8,611.20
* Francois’ after tax accumulation would be
* =2,000(1.10)^20(1-.36) or
* $8,611.20.

494
Q

Which of the following Models does not use after-tax dollars as the investment?
* Current Model
* Deferred Model
* Pension Model
* Tax Exempt Model

A

Pension Model
* The Pension Model gives the future value of an investment in a qualified retirement plan when before-tax dollars are invested.
* The three other models, Current Model, Deferred Model and Tax Exempt Model, give the future value of an investment when after tax-dollars are invested.

495
Q

A Deferred Model investment will always outperform a Current Model investment when which of the following is/are true? (Select all that apply)
* The before-tax rate of returns (BTROR) is constant over time
* The BTRORs are equal across models
* Tax rates must be equal and constant over time
* The after-tax dollars are invested

A

The before-tax rate of returns (BTROR) is constant over time
The BTRORs are equal across models
Tax rates must be equal and constant over time
* After-tax dollars are invested in both the models.
* However, the Deferred Model always outperforms the Current Model when the BTRORs and tax rates are constant over time and equal across both models.
* This is because the earnings on the investment grow at BTROR and the investors are taxed at the end of the investment horizon.

496
Q

Which of the following are examples of the Exempt Model. (Select all that apply)
* State and local government obligations
* Roth IRAs
* Deferred compensation
* Traditional non-deductible IRA

A

State and local government obligations
Roth IRAs
* State and local government obligations such as municipal bonds, as well as Roth IRAs, are classic examples of the Exempt Model.

497
Q

Identify the transaction that would NOT trigger a disallowed loss per the wash sale rules:
* Purchase of a call option that can be exercised into the same stock that was sold for a loss.
* An investor sells a bond at a loss, then purchases back the same exact bond.
* The purchase of a bond that is convertible to a stock that was sold for a loss.
* AAA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.

A

AAA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.
* A AA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.
* Unless the investor purchases back the same exact bond or bond fund, it is difficult to violate the wash sale rule with fixed income.
* Since the bond is issued from different companies, loss associated with the blue-chip to blue-chip transaction would not be subject to the wash sale rules.

498
Q

Which of the following type of mutual funds has the lowest turnover ratio?
* Tax-efficient Funds
* Growth and Income Funds
* Tax-managed Funds
* Index Funds

A

Index Funds
* Index funds have the lowest turnover ratio because the manager would not sell any of the stocks in the portfolio except when the benchmark index changes its composition.
* Tax-efficient or tax-managed funds try not to have too many short-term trades, but they will harvest losses in a down market to use later to offset capital gains.

499
Q

Stella owns assets worth $1,500. In the course of a year the market value of her assets has increased to $1,800. This capital gain is not relevant for tax purposes, as she has still not exchanged her assets to buy or sell any other asset. Is this gain realized capital gain or unrealized capital gain?
* Realized
* Unrealized

A

Unrealized
* The capital gain that Stella makes on her asset is unrealized because she has not exchanged her assets and no tax is due on the unrealized capital gain. Also a change in the market value of a capital asset is not relevant for tax purposes until it is realized as a capital gain (or loss) by sale or exchange.

500
Q

Consider a tax-exempt municipal bond yielding 6%. To an investor with a marginal tax bracket of 32%, what is the equivalent before-tax interest rate that a taxable bond would have to offer to be considered equivalent to the municipal bond?
* 6.67%
* 8.36%
* 8.82%
* 6.33%

A

8.82%
* In general, the taxable equivalent yield of a tax-exempt bond is given by:

Taxable bond yield = tax-exempt bond yield ÷ (1 - t).
Thus a taxable bond has to offer 8.82% [6.00 ÷ (1 - 0.32)] before-tax interest rates to be considered equivalent in value to the 6% municipal bond.

501
Q

Which of the following stock lots would you sell first in order to minimize taxes?
* Lot 1: cost $30 per share
* Lot 2: cost $50 per share
* Lot 3: cost $15 per share
* Lot 4: cost $55 per share
* Lot 5: cost $25 per share

A

Lot 4: cost $55 per share
* Although lot 3 would be ideal to reflect the largest return because it cost the cheapest, lot 4 would be more appropriate for tax management because it costs the most.

502
Q

Which of the following is not an example of a tax-advantaged account?
* Traditional IRA
* Roth IRA
* 401(k) Plan
* 529 Plan
* Joint Tenants WROS

A

Joint Tenants WROS
* Joint tenants WROS is simply a type of property ownership that does not give the owners any tax advantages. All the other account types give the owners either tax-deferred or tax-exempt growth.

503
Q

Which of the following statements is true about tax-deferred accounts?
* Capital gains are tax-exempt
* Capital gains are capped at 20%
* All gains and income are taxed as ordinary income when distributed
* Capital gains are capped at 18%

A

All gains and income are taxed as ordinary income when distributed
* Capital gains and dividends grow tax-deferred and are not taxed until the owner takes distributions from the account. At that point, any dollars that were pre-taxed or deducted from taxes, including any gains and income, will be taxed as the owner’s ordinary income.

504
Q

Which of the following assets would NOT be appropriate for a tax-advantaged account? (Select all that apply)
* Ohio Tax Free Bond Fund
* Mississippi state direct obligation bonds
* Small Company Value Fund
* Microsoft stock
* Annuities

A

Ohio Tax Free Bond Fund
Mississippi state direct obligation bonds
Annuities
* Tax-exempt securities such as tax-free funds and municipal bonds, money market instruments, and annuities are not appropriate for tax-advantaged accounts because there is already a tax advantage associated with them.
* The tax advantages from tax-exempt securities already result in a lower nominal return, so there is no additional advantage of holding them in a tax-advantaged account.

505
Q

Exam 16. Tax Efficient Investing

Exam 16. Tax Efficient Investing

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
506
Q

In a Roth IRA, if the investor allows his investment to stay for the required period, the earnings go from tax-deferred to __ ____??____ __.
* tax-efficient
* taxable
* tax-exempt
* tax-advantaged

A

tax-exempt
* In a Roth IRA, if the investor allows his investment to stay for the required period, the earnings go from tax-deferred to tax-exempt.

507
Q

Each of the following is an example of an investment for which after-tax dollars are invested and earnings are taxed annually EXCEPT:
* Savings accounts
* Taxable bonds with after-tax earnings reinvested
* Money market funds
* Municipal bonds

A

Municipal bonds

The current model gives the future value of an investment having the following characteristics:
Only after-tax dollars are invested.
* The earnings on the investment are taxed annually (currently), thus the reinvested earnings grow at the after-tax rate of return.
* Common examples of investments taxed this way are savings accounts, money market funds, and taxable bonds (if the investor reinvests the after-tax earnings annually).

Municipal bonds are tax-exempt and do not meet the criteria.

508
Q

Identify the transaction that would NOT trigger a disallowed loss per the wash sale rules.
* The purchase of a bond that is convertible to a stock that was sold for a loss.
* Purchase of a call option that can be exercised into the same stock that was sold for a loss.
* One AA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.
* An investor sells a bond at a loss, then purchases back the same exact bond.

A

One AA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.
* One AA-rated bond issue from a blue-chip company is sold at a loss and the investor purchases another AA-rated bond from a different blue-chip company.
* Unless the investor purchases back the same exact bond or bond fund, it is difficult to violate the wash sale rule with fixed income. Since the bond is issued from different companies, loss associated with the blue-chip to blue-chip transaction would not be subject to the wash sale rules.

509
Q

Ceasar bought a market discount bond and elected to not accrue the market discount over the period. Which of the following statements is CORRECT?
I. He must treat any gain when you dispose of the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount.
II. He must treat any partial payment of principal on the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount.
* I only
* Both I and II
* Neither I nor II
* II only

A

Both I and II
* When you buy a market discount bond, you can choose to accrue the market discount over the period you own the bond and include it in your income currently as interest income. If you do not make this choice, the following rules generally apply.
* You must treat any gain when you dispose of the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount.
* You must treat any partial payment of principal on the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount.

510
Q

Carissa invested $6,750 for 3 years at a rate of return of 5.25% and her marginal tax bracket is 24%. Calculate her after-tax accumulation.
* $7,008.37
* $7,590.64
* $6,981.14
* $7,557.98

A

$7,590.64

Here is how to solve the question algebraically:
$6,750 [1 + (0.0525 x 0.76)]3
$6,750 [1 + (0.0399)]3
$6,750 [1.0399]3
$6,750 [1.1245]
$7,590.6420

Here is how to solve using Time Value of Money (TVM):
5.25 x 0.76 = 3.90, I/YR
3, N
6,750, +/-, PV
Solve for FV = 7,590.6420

511
Q

Jerome is in the 32% tax bracket and is interested in purchasing the highest-yielding bond for his portfolio. Which of the following bonds accomplishes Jerome’s goal?
AAA-Corporate Bond yielding 7.57%
Municipal Bond yielding 5.20%
Taxable Bond yielding 7.62%
* Taxable Bond
* AAA-Corporate Bond
* Municipal Bond

A

Municipal Bond
* To compare the bond options, the taxable equivalent yield must be calculated for the municipal bond using the following formula (using this formula makes the comparison with the other bond options ‘apples-to-apples’):

TEY = Tax-Free Yield ÷ (1 – Marginal Tax Bracket)
For the municipal bond, TEY = 5.20 ÷ (1 – 0.32) = 7.65%
As a result, the municipal bond offers the highest yield of the three options and Jerome should select that one above the taxable bond options.

512
Q

Investors in __ ____??____ __ tax brackets may wish to take advantage of tax-exempt interest from municipal bonds.
* higher
* progressive
* accelerated
* lower

A

higher
* Tax-deferred bonds such as government bonds, Series EE/E savings bonds, municipal bonds, and certain zero-coupon bonds generally yield a return somewhere close to that of taxable bonds, provided the investor is in the higher tax brackets.
* Investors in higher tax brackets may wish to take advantage of tax-exempt interest from municipal bonds.

513
Q

Renata would like to purchase a taxable bond and is seeking to maximize the total before-tax appreciation of her investment. She has $3,000 to invest and her financial planner has presented the following investment options:
Bond #1: 10 years; 4% rate of return
Bond #2: 8 years; 5.5% rate of return
Bond #3: 11 years; 3.75% rate of return
Bond #4: 6 years; 7% rate of return
Which of the following bonds provides Renata with the highest before-tax appreciation?
* Bond #1
* Bond #2
* Bond #4
* Bond #3

A

Bond #2

Bond #1 before-tax accumulation = $3,000(1 + 0.04)10 = $4,440.73

Bond #2 before-tax accumulation = $3,000(1 + 0.055)8 = $4,604.06

Bond #3 before-tax accumulation = $3,000(1 + 0.0375)11 = $4.497.70

Bond #4 before-tax accumulation = $3,000(1 + 0.07)6 = $4,502.19

514
Q

Which of the following mutual fund types have low turnover rates? (Select all that apply)
* Tax-efficient funds
* Actively managed funds
* Passively managed index funds
* Growth funds

A

Tax-efficient funds
Passively managed index funds
* There are two types of mutual funds that have low turnover rates.
* Passively managed index funds have low turnover by design because they only sell a stock when it is no longer on the index that the fund is mimicking.
* Tax-managed or tax-efficient funds purposely invest in stocks that the managers feel they will buy and hold for a few years, therefore lowering the turnover ratio.

Actively managed funds and growth funds generally have higher turnover ratios.

515
Q

If Jon invested before-tax dollars of $7,500 for 8 years at a rate of return of 7%, what would his accumulation be before taxes?
* $12,853
* $12,027
* $12,700
* $12,886

A

$12,886
* Jon’s before tax accumulation
* = $7,500(1 + 0.07)8
* = $12,886.40 or,
* $12,886 (rounded)

516
Q

Lesson 17. Taxation of Investment Vehicles

Lesson 17. Taxation of Investment Vehicles

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
517
Q

Sidney purchased a long-term bond fund last year. She received a statement at the end of the year that told her a portion of the income she received from the fund is tax-free at the state level. Which of the following types of bonds in her fund may exempt income from state taxes? Click all that apply.
* T-Notes
* Corporate Bonds
* T-Bonds
* High Yield Bonds

A

T-Notes
T-Bonds
* U.S. government bonds such as treasury notes and bonds and agency bonds are direct obligations of the U.S. government and have income that is exempt from state taxes.

518
Q

Which of the following are subject to federal tax with respect to interest earned on them? (Select all that apply)
* Treasury bonds
* Agency bonds
* Municipal bonds
* Inflation-protection bonds

A

Treasury bonds
Agency bonds
Inflation-protection bonds
* The interest on Treasury bonds and agency bonds is taxable for federal income tax purposes, but not state and city income taxes.
* The interest on inflation-protection bonds is also subject to federal tax but is deferred until maturity.
* Municipal bonds are tax-exempt.

519
Q

Joan purchased a municipal zero coupon bond for the state that she lives in and holds it to maturity. Which of the following taxes will apply to her?
* Federal income tax
* Not subject to taxes
* State income tax
* Phantom interest tax through accretion
* Capital gains tax

A

Not subject to taxes
* Municipal zero coupon bonds are not subject to any taxes if held to maturity.
* If Joan had bought a U.S Treasury zero coupon bond, then she would have had to declare the discount annually through accretion as income.

520
Q

What type of bonds have their redemption value adjusted semi-annually?
* Treasury bonds
* Agency bonds
* Municipal bonds
* Zero-coupon bonds
* Inflation-protection bonds

A

Inflation-protection bonds
* The redemption values of inflation-protection bonds are adjusted semi-annually to reflect the rate of inflation in the previous six months.

521
Q

Dividends are not subject to taxation if they are reinvested to purchase more shares.
* False
* True

A

False.
* Even when dividends are not paid out in cash they are taxed as ordinary income.

522
Q

Which of the round lots should Janet identify first to offset the sale of 400 shares at a $10/share?
* 300 shares at $10.50/share
* 200 shares at $1.50/share
* 200 shares at $9.50/share

A

300 shares at $10.50/share
* The shares that provides the greatest capital loss or the least capital gains should be the ones identified to be sold first. Therefore the lot with $10.50/share would be sold first because the lot can provide a $0.50-loss per share. The $9.50/share lot would be next to be sold in order to offset the remaining 100 shares because it only provides $.50 gain rather than the $8.50 gain from the $1.50/share lot.

523
Q

If a person received stock as an inheritance, the starting basis is the value of the stock:
* On the date the original owner purchased it plus any cost of purchase such as commissions.
* On the date the original owner died.
* Nine months from the date the original owner died.
* When the original owner purchased it.

A

On the date the original owner died.
* If the person received the stock as an inheritance, the starting basis is the value of the stock on the date the original owner died. This is called a stepped-up basis.

524
Q

Which of the following is the cost basis method used for tax-efficient portfolio management?
* FiFO
* Average Cost
* Share Identification
* LIFO

A

Share Identification
* Specific share identification allows investors to limit capital gains by identifying shares that cost the most to be sold first.

525
Q

Janis received warrant certificates on April 13 when she purchased some preferred stocks. On July 30, Janis exercised the warrants and purchased additional shares of the stock. When does the cost basis of those shares begin?
* July 30
* April 13
* January 1
* August 1

A

July 30
* The cost basis begins the day Janis exercises the warrants.

526
Q

Match the corresponding cost basis with the correct description.
FIFO
Specific Share Identification
Average Cost
* Sell the shares that were the most expensive first
* Sell the shares that were purchased first; advantage occurs when the market prices have dropped
* Combine all purchases and divide by the number of shares owned; great for accounts with many purchases

A
  • FIFO - Sell the shares that were purchased first; advantage occurs when the market prices have dropped
  • Specific Share Identification - Sell the shares that were the most expensive first
  • Average Cost - Combine all purchases and divide by the number of shares owned; great for accounts with many purchases
527
Q

Tom Sanders is doing an analysis of features of U.S. savings bonds. Choose all the options that are true regarding savings bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury Department. (Select all that apply)
* They are marketable securities.
* They can be bought only from redeeming agents of the Treasury department.
* They are not registered securities.
* Interest on savings bonds is exempt from state and local income tax.

A

They can be bought only from redeeming agents of the Treasury department.
Interest on savings bonds is exempt from state and local income tax.
* Savings bonds are non-marketable securities. They may be sold or bought from an issuing and redeeming agent authorized by the Treasury Department. They are registered securities and are owned by the person named on them. The interest earned on U.S. Savings Bonds is exempt from state and local income tax.

528
Q

Julian is trying to determine how much of the annual distribution from his annuity is excluded from taxes because it is counted as the cost of the annuity. Julian purchased the annuity for $25,000 and the terms are for $250/month for the rest of his life (expectancy for someone his age is 20 years). How much of the annual distribution from his annuity is excluded from taxes?
* $3,000
* 0.4167
* $60,000
* $25,000
* $1,250

A

$1,250
* The expected return is the life expectancy in years times the annual distributions or 20x250x12 = $60,000.
* The exclusion ratio is the cost of the annuity divided by the expected return = 0.4167.
* The annual exclusion amount is the exclusion ratio times the annual distribution amount or
* 0.4167 x 250 x 12 = $1,250.

529
Q

Tamara is a partner of a limited partnership. Which of the following statements are true? (Select all that apply)
* The partners pay taxes on profits
* The partners use losses as credits
* The partnership pays taxes on profits
* The partnership use losses as credits

A

The partners pay taxes on profits
The partners use losses as credits
* A limited partnership is a pass-through entity where all the partnership’s profits and losses are passed on to the partners.

530
Q

Exam 17. Taxation of Investment Vehicles

Exam 17. Taxation of Investment Vehicles

Course 3. Investing Planning

A
531
Q

Which of the following distributions from mutual funds are taxable?
I. Dividends
II. Capital Gains
* II only
* I only
* Both I and II
* Neither I nor II

A

Both I and II
* Mutual funds can distribute dividends and capital gains, both types are taxable. The amount of distribution depends on the nature of the fund. Income-oriented funds, such as bond funds, tax-free bond funds, and money market instruments, will pay a monthly amount.

532
Q

The IRS considers any annual appreciation in value or undistributed interest from zero-coupon bonds to be __ ____??____ __.
* tax-free
* tax-deferred
* taxable
* tax-deductible

A

taxable
* The IRS considers any annual appreciation in value or undistributed interest from zero-coupon bonds to be taxable.
* This income is commonly known as phantom income.

533
Q

The preferred basis method for investors who actively manage their portfolios for tax efficiency is __ ____??____ __.
* average cost
* specific identification
* LIFO
* FIFO

A

specific identification
* The specific share identification implies that specific shares are used to apply against the shares sold.
* This method is the best method for tax purposes because the investor has absolute control over how much gain from a sale would be recognized.

534
Q

Dividend distributions in excess of one’s basis in a stock are classified as __ ____??____ __.
* tax-free returns of investment
* passive income
* ordinary income
* capital gains

A

capital gains
* Distributions to shareholders are taxable only to the extent they are made from either the corporation’s current earnings and profits or accumulated earnings and profits.
* Distributions in excess of the basis are classified as capital gains.

535
Q

Interest received from a municipal bond, issued by the state of Connecticut and owned by a Connecticut resident is:
I. Exempt from federal income tax
II. Exempt from state income tax
* Both I and II
* I only
* II only
* Neither I nor II

A

Both I and II
* Any interest received from a municipal bond is free of federal income tax. This is a major advantage for municipal bonds versus other taxable bonds.
* Usually, the state government also does not tax the interest payments on these bonds, as long as the person lives in the state in which the bonds were issued.

536
Q

Boris, age 66, purchases an annuity for $65,000. According to IRS actuarial tables, Boris is expected to live to 90. Under the terms of the annuity, he will receive a monthly annuity payment of $425 for the remainder of his life.
Calculate the tax-free amount of the annual payment that Boris will receive.
* $2,708
* $2,643
* $2,392
* $2,550

A

$2,708

  • Life expectancy = 24.0 years

The expected return = $122,400 (24.0 years x ($425 x 12 months))
The exclusion ratio = 0.5310 ($65,000 ÷ $122,400)
The excluded (tax-free) amount = $2,708 (0.5310 (exclusion ratio) x $5,100 (annual income))

537
Q

Maritza held 400 shares of WEB stock which were purchased at $15 per share. Today, a three-for-one stock split was announced.
Calculate Maritza’s new per share basis following completion of the stock split.
* $7.50
* $5
* $45
* $15

A

$5
* Stock splits occur when companies split their shares so that the number of shares a shareholder has will increase.
* In Maritza’s case, the three-for-one stock split will result in her receiving 3 shares for each of her 400 shares of WEB, or 3 x 400 = 1,200 shares.
* Maritza’s pre-split basis was $15/share for a total basis in WEB of $15 x 400 = $6,000.

To calculate the post-split basis, divide the new number of shares by the total basis:
$6,000 ÷ 1,200 = $5/share

538
Q

__ ____??____ __ shows the partner’s share of the income or loss from a partnership and is mailed within the first three months of the year.
* Form 1120
* Schedule K-1
* Form W-2
* 1099-DIV

A

Schedule K-1
* Schedule K-1 shows the partner’s share of the income or loss from a partnership and is mailed within the first three months of the year.

539
Q

The __ ____??____ __ method is the default method that the IRS will assume a taxpayer is following unless otherwise specified in a statement attached to the income tax return.
* specific identification
* average cost
* FIFO
* LIFO

A

FIFO
* The first-in, first-out (FIFO) method is the default method that the IRS will assume a taxpayer is following unless otherwise specified in a statement attached to the income tax return.

540
Q

Barney buys the following round lots of the Big Time Appreciation Fund:
200 shares on Mach 27, 2011, at $14.50/share
150 shares on July 16, 2015, at $11/share
200 shares on April 20, 2020, at $15.75/share
On September 15, 2023, he sold 400 shares at $16/share. What is his cost basis according to the average cost method?
* $14.00
* $13.81
* $13.75
* $13.34

A

$14.00

According to the single category average cost method, Barney would take an average of the purchase prices and divide it by the total number of shares owned:
200 shares at $14.50 = $2,900
150 shares at $11 = $1,650
200 shares at $15.75 = $3,150
Total cost = $7,700
Total shares = 550

Average cost per share = $7,700 ÷ 550 = $14.00

541
Q

A stock has an average (mean) return of 5.75% with a standard deviation of 7.59%. Within what range could an investor expect its return to fall 95% of the time?
* -7.59% to 18.89%
* 1.84 to 13.34%
* -9.43% to 20.93%
* -1.84% to 13.34%

A

-9.43% to 20.93%

Mean = 5.75%
SD = 7.59%
2σ = 5.75% - (7.59% + 7.59%) = -9.43%
2σ = 5.75% + (7.59% + 7.59%) = 20.93%

542
Q

Identify the type of money market instrument with the following features:
Denominations of $100,000 or more
Maturities of up to 270 days
Large institutional investors
Terms are non-negotiable
* Certificate of Deposit (CD)
* Money Market Mutual Fund
* Bankers’ Acceptance (BA)
* Commercial Paper

A

Commercial Paper

Commercial Paper Features:
* Denominations of $100,000 or more
* Maturities of up to 270 days
* Large institutional investors
* Terms are non-negotiable
* Issuer may prepay the note

543
Q

Revenue bonds may be issued for each of the following reasons EXCEPT:
* Financing by levying a tax on properties that benefit from the expenditure.
* Financing quasi-utilities.
* Financing publicly owned utilities.
* Funding any project which will be supported only by the full faith and credit of the state or local agency.

A

Funding any project which will be supported only by the full faith and credit of the state or local agency.

Revenue Bonds are backed by revenues from a designated project, authority, or agency or by the proceeds from a specific tax. Such bonds are only as creditworthy as the enterprise associated with the issuer. Revenue bonds may be issued for the following reasons:
* financing publicly owned utilities,
* financing quasi-utilities, like transportation,
* financing by levying a tax on properties that benefit from the expenditure, for example a new sewer system, and
* Industrial Development Bonds are used to finance the purchase or construction of industrial facilities

General Obligation Bonds are issued by state and local agencies and are backed by the full faith and credit of the agency.