Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Risky Asset - Principles of Finance - Solved Questions, Exams of Finance

Risky Asset, Return Premium, Average Return, Security Prices, Open Form, Weak Form, Strong Form, Weak Form, Treasury Bonds, Corporate Bonds. Its small class quiz solution for Principles of Finance course.

Typology: Exams

2011/2012

Uploaded on 12/20/2012

alishay
alishay 🇮🇳

4.3

(26)

92 documents

1 / 13

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
Practice questions from chapters 10-12 (with a few “bonus questions from chapter 13).
1. The excess return required on a risky asset over that earned on a risk-free asset is called (a):
A) Risk premium.
B) Return premium.
C) Excess return.
D) Average return.
E) Variance.
Answer: A
2. An efficient capital market is one in which:
A) Brokerage commissions are zero.
B) Taxes are irrelevant.
C) Securities always offer a positive rate of return to investors.
D) Security prices are guaranteed (by the Securities and Exchange Commission) to be fair.
E) Security prices reflect available information.
Answer: E
3. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all available, public and private, information is called
efficiency in the:
A) Open form.
B) Strong form.
C) Semi-strong form.
D) Weak form.
E) Stable form.
Answer: B
4. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all publicly-available information is called efficiency in
the:
A) Open form.
B) Strong form.
C) Semi-strong form.
D) Weak form.
E) Stable form.
Answer: C
5. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all historical information is called efficiency in the:
A) Open form.
B) Strong form.
C) Semi-strong form.
D) Weak form.
E) Stable form.
Answer: D
6. Over the past 76 years, which of the following investments has provided the largest average
return?
A) Small company stocks
B) Common stocks
C) Treasury bills
D) Treasury bonds
E) Corporate bonds
docsity.com
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa
pfd

Partial preview of the text

Download Risky Asset - Principles of Finance - Solved Questions and more Exams Finance in PDF only on Docsity!

Practice questions from chapters 10-12 (with a few “bonus questions from chapter 13).

  1. The excess return required on a risky asset over that earned on a risk-free asset is called (a): A) Risk premium. B) Return premium. C) Excess return. D) Average return. E) Variance. Answer: A
  2. An efficient capital market is one in which: A) Brokerage commissions are zero. B) Taxes are irrelevant. C) Securities always offer a positive rate of return to investors. D) Security prices are guaranteed (by the Securities and Exchange Commission) to be fair. E) Security prices reflect available information. Answer: E
  3. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all available, public and private, information is called efficiency in the: A) Open form. B) Strong form. C) Semi-strong form. D) Weak form. E) Stable form. Answer: B
  4. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all publicly-available information is called efficiency in the: A) Open form. B) Strong form. C) Semi-strong form. D) Weak form. E) Stable form. Answer: C
  5. The hypothesis that market prices reflect all historical information is called efficiency in the: A) Open form. B) Strong form. C) Semi-strong form. D) Weak form. E) Stable form. Answer: D
  6. Over the past 76 years, which of the following investments has provided the largest average return? A) Small company stocks B) Common stocks C) Treasury bills D) Treasury bonds E) Corporate bonds

Answer: A

  1. Over the past 76 years, which of the following investments has been the least risky? A) Small company stocks B) Common stocks C) Treasury bills D) Treasury bonds E) Corporate bonds Answer: C
  2. You track the liquidity of companies and find that you can consistently earn unusually high returns by purchasing the shares of firms whose stock price falls below the cash value per share as indicated on the balance sheet. Which of the following describes this strategy? A) This would not be a violation of market efficiency. B) This would be a violation of weak form efficiency. C) This would be a violation of semi-strong form efficiency. D) This would be a violation of strong form efficiency. E) This would be a violation of all forms of market efficiency. Answer: C
  3. Last year you purchased 1,000 shares of Sun Microsystems stock for $15 per share. According to today's quote in The Wall Street Journal , the stock is currently selling for $3 per share. The stock pays no dividends. Your return on this investment is comprised of _____________. A) retained earnings and dividend yields B) an income return and a capital gains return C) a real return only D) a capital gains return only E) there is no return, since you lost money on this investment Answer: D
  4. Which of the following is generally considered to represent the risk-free return? A) Common stocks B) Small stocks C) Long-term government bonds D) Long-term corporate bonds E) Treasury bills Answer: E
  5. You purchased a bond for $870 one year ago. Today, you receive your only interest payment for the year of $70. The bond can currently be sold for $925. What is your total percentage return on investment? Ignore tax effects. A) 6.3% B) 8.1% C) 14.4% D) 16.5% E) 20.8% Answer: C
  6. You purchased 500 shares of preferred stock on January 1, 2002, for $85 per share. The stock pays an annual dividend of $12 per share. On December 31, 2002, the market price is $91 per share. What is your total dollar return for the year?

E) 15.0%

Answer: E Response: CGY = ($23 - 20) / 20 =.

  1. What is the dividend yield for the investment? A) 2.5% B) 7.5% C) 10.0% D) 15.0% Answer: C Response: DY = $2 / 20 =.
  2. What is the total percentage return for the investment? A) 5% B) 10% C) 15% D) 20% E) 25% Answer: E Response: R = [($23 - 20) / 20] + (2 / 20) =.

Chapter 11 questions begin here

  1. A portfolio is ___________________________. A) a group of assets, such as stocks and bonds, held as a collective unit by an investor B) the expected return on a risky asset C) the expected return on a collection of risky assets D) the variance of returns for a risky asset E) the standard deviation of returns for a collection of risky assets Answer: A
  2. The percentage of a portfolio's total value invested in a particular asset is called that asset's: A) Portfolio return. B) Portfolio weight. C) Portfolio risk. D) Rate of return. E) Investment value. Answer: B
  3. Risk that affects a large number of assets, each to a greater or lesser degree, is called: A) Idiosyncratic risk. B) Diversifiable risk. C) Systematic risk. D) Asset-specific risk. E) Total risk. Answer: C
  4. Risk that affects at most a small number of assets is called: A) Portfolio risk. B) Undiversifiable risk. C) Market risk.

D) Unsystematic risk. E) Total risk. Answer: D

  1. The principle of diversification tells us that: A) Concentrating an investment in two or three large stocks will eliminate all of your risk. B) Concentrating an investment in two or three large stocks will reduce your overall risk. C) Spreading an investment across many diverse assets cannot (in an efficient market) eliminate any risk. D) Spreading an investment across many diverse assets will eliminate all of the risk. E) Spreading an investment across many diverse assets will eliminate some of the risk. Answer: E
  2. The ___________________ tells us that the expected return on a risky asset depends only on that asset's systematic risk. A) Efficient Markets Hypothesis (EMH) B) systematic risk principle C) Open Markets Theorem D) Law of One Price E) principle of diversification Answer: B
  3. The amount of systematic risk present in a particular risky asset, relative to the systematic risk present in an average risky asset, is called the particular asset's: A) Beta coefficient. B) Reward to risk ratio. C) Law of One Price. D) Diversifiable risk. E) Treynor index. Answer: A
  4. The linear relation between an asset's expected return and its beta coefficient is the: A) Reward to risk ratio. B) Portfolio weight. C) Portfolio risk. D) Security market line. E) Market risk premium. Answer: D
  5. Diversification works because: A) Unsystematic risk exists. B) Forming stocks into portfolios reduces the standard deviation of returns for each stock. C) Firm-specific risk can be never be reduced. D) Stocks earn higher returns than bonds. E) Portfolios have higher returns than individual assets. Answer: A
  6. A security has an unexpected negative news announcement specific to that security. Most likely, the ______________________________. A) security's required return on investment will increase. B) security's required return on investment will remain unchanged.

Answer: D Response: .20(.75) + .55(.25) + .15(-10)+ .10(-50) = .2225; RP = .2225 .04 =.

  1. What is the expected portfolio return given the following information:

Asset Portfolio weight Return A .35 20% B .15 35% C .25 6% D .25 12%

A) 6.75% B) 9.50% C) 16.75% D) 18.25% E) 21.50% Answer: C Response: .35(.20) + .15(.35) + .25(.06) + .25(.12) =.

  1. What is the expected return on asset A if it has a beta of 0.6, the expected market return is 15%, and the risk-free rate is 6%? A) 5.4% B) 9.6% C) 11.4% D) 15.0% Answer: C Response: 6 + .6(15 - 6) = 11.4%

Chapter 12 questions begin here

  1. The opportunity cost associated with the firm's capital investment in a project is called its: A) Cost of capital. B) Beta coefficient. C) Capital gains yield. D) Sunk cost. E) Internal rate of return. Answer: A
  2. The return that shareholders require on their investment in the firm is called the: A) Dividend yield. B) Cost of equity. C) Capital gains yield. D) Cost of capital. E) Income return. Answer: B
  3. The return that lenders require on their loaned funds to the firm is called the: A) Coupon rate. B) Current yield. C) Cost of debt. D) Capital gains yield.

E) Cost of capital. Answer: C

  1. The weighted average of the firm's costs of equity, preferred stock, and aftertax debt is the: A) Reward to risk ratio for the firm. B) Expected capital gains yield for the stock. C) Expected capital gains yield for the firm. D) Portfolio beta for the firm. E) Weighted average cost of capital (WACC). Answer: E
  2. All of the following could be considered advantages in assessing the cost of preferred stock compared to the cost of common stock EXCEPT: A) Preferred stock generally carries with it a fixed dividend payment. B) Preferred stock is often rated for default risk. C) The cost of preferred stock is simply equal to its dividend yield. D) The cost of preferred stock can be calculated as a perpetuity based on the fixed dividend payment and the present stock price. E) Unlike common stock, preferred stock requires no assumptions be made about future cash flows. Answer: E
  3. Which of the following, among other things, is needed to calculate the weighted average cost of capital for a non-profit corporation? A) The par value of bonds outstanding. B) The bond rating of the firm's outstanding debt issues. C) The corporate tax rate. D) The number of preferred shares outstanding. E) The operating cash flow for the most recent reporting period. Answer: D
  4. All else the same, a higher corporate tax rate _____________________. A) will decrease the WACC of a firm with some debt in its capital structure B) will increase the WACC of a firm with some debt in its capital structure C) will not affect the WACC of a firm with some debt in its capital structure D) will decrease the WACC of a firm with no debt in its capital structure E) will change the WACC of a firm with some debt in its capital structure, but the direction is unclear. Answer: A
  5. To estimate the cost of equity for a firm, which of the following variables would NOT be needed? A) The current dividend payment. B) The risk-free interest rate. C) The debt/equity ratio. D) The beta coefficient. E) The market price of the stock. Answer: C
  6. A firm is expected to pay a dividend of $3.50 per share in one year. This dividend, along with the firm's earnings, is expected to grow at a rate of 7% forever. If the current market price for a share is $67, what is the cost of equity?

Answer: B Response: V = 19M($18.35) + 114,500($960) = $458,570,000; D/V = $109.92M / 458.57M = .

  1. A common stock issue is currently selling for $31 per share. You expect the next dividend to be $1.40 per share. If the firm has a dividend growth rate of 5% that is expected to remain constant indefinitely, what is the firm's cost of equity? A) 9.5% B) 11.3% C) 13.8% D) 14.2% E) 15.1% Answer: A Response: ($1.40/31) + .05 =.
  2. Given the following information, what is the average annual dividend growth rate?

Dividend $1.80 $1.90 $2.15 $2.28 $2.49 $2.

A) 4.9% B) 6.2% C) 8.8% D) 9.7% E) 10.3% Answer: C Response: ($.10/1.80 + .25/1.90 + .13/2.15 + .21/2.28 + .26/2.49) / 5 =.

  1. Treasury bills currently have a return of 2.5% and the market risk premium is 7%. If a firm has a beta of 1.4, what is its cost of equity? A) 8.1% B) 9.9% C) 10.8% D) 12.3% E) 14.4% Answer: D Response: 2.5 + 1.4(7) = 12.3%
  2. Your firm sold a 25-year bond at par 19 years ago. The bond pays an 6% annual coupon, has a $1,000 face value, and currently sells for $825. What is the firm's cost of debt? A) 6.0% B) 8.2% C) 9.5% D) 10.0% E) 11.3% Answer: D Response: $825 = $60{[1 - 1/(1 + YTM)^6 ] / YTM} + 1,000 / (1 + YTM)^6 ; YTM = 10.02%
  3. A company has preferred stock outstanding which pays a dividend of $6 per share a year. The current stock price is $75 per share. What is the cost of preferred stock? A) 6%

B) 7%

C) 10%

D) 9%

E) 8%

Answer: E Response: $6 / 75 =.

  1. A firm sold a 10-year bond issue 3 years ago. The bond has a 6.45% annual coupon and a $1, face value. If the current market price of the bond is $951.64 and the tax rate is 35%, what is the aftertax cost of debt? A) 3.50% B) 5.99% C) 6.45% D) 7.36% E) 4.78% Answer: E Response: $951.64 = $64.50{[1 - 1/(1 + YTM)^7 ] / YTM} + 1,000 / (1 + YTM)^7 ; YTM = 7.359% AT = 7.359(1-.35) = 4.783%
  2. Given the following information, what is the firm's weighted average cost of capital? Market value of equity = $30 million; market value of debt = $20 million; cost of equity = 15%; cost of debt = 9%; equity beta = 1.4; tax rate = 35%. A) 11.34% B) 12.60% C) 12.97% D) 13.32% E) 14.08% Answer: A Response: 15($30M/50M) + 9(20M/50M)(1-.35) = 11.34%

Chapter 13 questions begin here

  1. The equity risk derived from the firm's operating activities is called ___________ risk. A) market B) systematic C) extrinsic D) business E) financial Answer: D
  2. The equity risk derived from the firm's capital structure policy is called ___________ risk. A) market B) systematic C) extrinsic D) business E) financial Answer: E
  1. Which of the following statements is true? A) The financial risk of a firm decreases when it takes on a risky project. B) The financial risk of a firm increases when it takes on more equity. C) The business risk of a firm increases when it takes on a risky project. D) The business risk of a firm increases when it takes on more debt. E) The higher the business risk for a firm, the higher the financial risk as well. Answer: C