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You short-sell 200 shares of Tuckerton Trading Co., now selling for $50 per share. What is your maximum possible gain ignoring transactions cost?

$10,000

You short-sell 200 shares of Tuckerton Trading Co., now selling for $50 per share. You also place a stop-buy order at $60. What is your maximum possible loss?

$2,000

Barnegat Light sold 200,000 shares in an initial public offering. The underwriter's explicit fees were $70,000. The offering price for the shares was $25, but immediately upon issue, the share price jumped to $41. What is the best estimate of the total cost to Barnegat Light of the equity issue?

$3,270,000

You purchased 100 shares of ABC common stock on margin at $50 per share. Assume the initial margin is 50% and the maintenance margin is 30%. Below the stock price of __________ you would get a margin call. Assume the stock pays no dividend and ignore interest on margin.

$35.71

Consider the following limit order book of a specialist. The last trade in the stock occurred at a price of $40. If a market buy order for 100 shares comes in, at what price will it be filled?

$40.25 or less

You sold short 200 shares of common stock at $50 per share. The initial margin is 60%. Your initial investment was __________.

$6,000

Assume you purchased 200 shares of XYZ common stock on margin at $80 per share from your broker. If the initial margin is 60%, the amount you borrowed from the broker is __________.

$6400

Bank discount formula

(asked price) x (days until maturity/360)= x 1-x= y y x 10,000

Standard Deviation of a Single Asset

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Variance of a Portfolio of Assets (Formula)

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Real Return (Inflation) (Formula)

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Money Weighted Return (Formula)

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Portfolio Risk of a Risk Free Asset

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Risk of a Two Asset Portfolio (Formula)

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Geometric Mean Return (Formula)

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Real Return (Risk Premium) (Formula)

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Expected Return of a Risk Free Asset (Formula)

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Arithmetic or Mean Return (Formula)

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Variance of a Single Asset (Formula)

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Return of a Two Asset Portfolio (Formula)

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Three Components of Nominal Return

- Real Risk-Free Rate - Inflation Rate - Risk Premium

You purchased 300 shares of common stock on margin for $50 per share. The initial margin is 60% and the stock pays no dividend. Your rate of return would be __________ if you sell the stock at $40 per share. Ignore interest on margin.

-33%

Trading costs range between ______ and _______.

0.25%; 30%

Classification of Equity

1. Common Stock 2. Preferred Stock

Types of bonds

1. T-notes and bonds 2. TIPS 3. Federal Agency Debt 4. International Bonds (Eurodollars) 5. Municipal Bonds 6. Corporate Bonds 7. Mortgages and MBS

Types of Money market securities

1. Tbills 2. CD's 3. Commercial Paper 4. Banker's acceptances 5. Eurodollars 6. Repos and Reverses 7. Brokers' call 8. Federal Funds 9. Libor

options associated with corporate bonds

1. callable bonds- give firm option to repurtchase bonds at a stipulated price 2. convertible bonds- bondholder has option to convert each bond into a stipulated number of stock

characteristics of Money markets

1. cash equivalent instruments 2. short term 3. marketeable 4. liquid 5. low-risk

characteristics of capital markets and examples

1. longer-term 2. higher risk securities examples: long term debt markets, equity, derivative markets

Characteristics of common stock

1. residual claim 2. limited liability

kinds of corporate bonds

1. secured bonds- backed by collateral 2. unsecured bonds- not backed by collateral 3. subordinated debentures- even lower claim to firm's assets in event of bankruptcy

A block transaction is one where at least __________ shares are traded; these account for approximately __________ of all trading.

10,000; 50%

The average abnormal return earned on investing in IPOs is __________ according to a recent study by Ritter and Weiss.

16%

According to SEC Rule 415 regarding shelf registration, firms can gradually sell securities to the public for __________ following initial registration.

2 years

About ______ of all trades were initiated over the internet in 1999.

20%

A level _____ subscriber to the NASDAQ system may enter bid and ask prices.

3

The shares of approximately __________ firms trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

3,100

A ______ drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average would stop trading for the day.

30%

According to Ross, Shapiro and Smith, when the spread between the quoted bid and ask price is $0.25 or greater, approximately __________ of the trades taking place on the New York Stock Exchange will be executed "inside the quotes".

50%

The securities of more than _______ firms are listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

6,000

Explicit costs of an IPO tend to be around ______ of the funds raised.

7%

Approximately __________ of trades involving shares issued by firms listed on the New York Stock Exchange actually take place on the New York Stock Exchange.

75%

The share of over-the-counter (NASDAQ) market trading volume that is related to trading in New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) listed firms is approximately ________.

8%

The New York Stock Exchange accounts for approximately __________ of total exchange trading in the United States.

85%

Holding Period Return (Formula)

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Certificate of Deposit

A bank time deposit.

Reverse Repo

A dealer finds an investor holding government securities and buys them with an agreement to sell them at a higher price in a future date.

Capital Allocation Line

A graph line that describes the combinations of expected return and standard deviation of return available to an investor from combining the optimal portfolio of risky assets with the risk-free asset

Security Market Line

A graphical representation of the capital asset pricing model with beta on the x-axis and the expected return on the y-axis

Asset Class

A group of assets that have similar characteristics, attributes, and risk/return relationships.

Informational Efficient Market

A market in which asset prices reflect new information quickly and rationally.

Primary Market

A market in which new issues of securities are offered to the public.

Beta

A measure of how sensitive an assets return is to overall market.

Geometric Mean Return

A measure of returns that assumes the investment amount is reset at the beginning of each year and accounts for the compounding of returns.

Net Return

A measure of what the investment has earned for the investor after deducting all managerial and administrative expenses.

Return Revenue Generating Model

A model that can provide an estimate of the expected return of a security given certain parameters and estimates of the values of the independent variables in the model

Multifactor models

A model that can provide an estimate of the expected return of a security given certain parameters and estimates of the values of the independent variables in the model. Can be built using different kinds of factors such as macro economic, fundamental, and statistical factors.

Correlation

A number between −1 and +1 that measures the co-movement (linear association) between two random variables.

Correlation coefficient

A number between −1 and +1 that measures the consistency or tendency for two investments to act in a similar way. It is used to determine the effect on portfolio risk when two assets are combined

Skewness

A quantitative measure of skew (lack of symmetry)

Load

A sales commission charged on a mutual fund.

Derivative Asset

A security with a payoff that depends on the prices of other securities.

Capital Market Line

A specific CAL that uses the market portfolio as the optimal risky portfolio

Arbitrage pricing theory

A theoretical model that proposes a linear relationship between expected return and risk.

Open-End Fund

A type of managed company. A fund that issues or redeems its shares at net asset value. Price cannot fall below NAV bc these funds stand to redeem shares at NAV. Offering price > NAV bc it includes a load.

Investment Policy Statement

A written planning document that describes a client's investment objectives and risk tolerance over a relevant time horizon, along with constraints that apply to the client's portfolio.

31. Consider the one-factor APT. The variance of the return on the factor portfolio is .08. The beta of a well-diversified portfolio on the factor is 1.2. The variance of the return on the well-diversified portfolio is approximately __________.0810. A. .1152 b. .1270 c. .1521 d. .1342

A. .1152

68. What is the alpha of a portfolio with a beta of 2 and actual return of 15%? A. 0% b. 13% c. 15% d. 17%

A. 0%

83. The risk premium for exposure to exchange rates is 5% and the firm has a beta relative to exchanges rates of 0.4. The risk premium for exposure to the consumer price index is -6% and the firm has a beta relative to the CPI of 0.8. If the risk free rate is 3.0%, what is the expected return on this stock? A. 0.2% b. 1.5% c. 3.6% d. 4.0%

A. 0.2%

23. Research has revealed that regardless of what the current estimate of a firm's beta is, it will tend to move closer to ______ over time. A. 1 b. 0 c. -1 d. 0.5

A. 1

72. You consider buying a share of stock at a price of $25. The stock is expected to pay a dividend of $1.50 next year and your advisory service tells you that you can expect to sell the stock in one year for $28. The stock's beta is 1.1, Rf is 6% and E[rm] = 16%. What is the stock's abnormal return? A. 1% b. 2% c. -1% d. -2%

A. 1%

21. You have a $50,000 portfolio consisting of Intel, GE and Con Edison. You put $20,000 in Intel, $12,000 in GE and the rest in Con Edison. Intel, GE and Con Edison have betas of 1.3, 1.0 and 0.8 respectively. What is your portfolio beta? A. 1.048 b. 1.033 c. 1.000 d. 1.037

A. 1.048

82. The two factor model on a stock provides a risk premium for exposure to market risk of 8%, a risk premium for exposure to interest rate of (-2.3%), and a risk free rate of 3.0%. What is the expected return on the stock? A. 8.7% b. 11.0% c. 13.3% d. 15.2%

A. 8.7%

70. Two investment advisors are comparing performance. Advisor A averaged a 20% return with a portfolio beta of 1.5 and Advisor B averaged a 15% return with a portfolio beta of 1.2. If the T-bill rate was 5% and the market return during the period was 13%, which advisor was the better stock picker? A. Advisor A was better because he generated a larger alpha b. Advisor B was better because he generated a larger alpha c. Advisor A was better because he generated a higher return d. Advisor B was better because he achieved a good return with a lower beta

A. Advisor A was better because he generated a larger alpha

63. Assume that both X and Y are well-diversified portfolios and the risk-free rate is 8%. Portfolio X has an expected return of 14% and a beta of 1.00. Portfolio Y has an expected return of 9.5% and a beta of 0.25. In this situation, you would conclude that portfolios X and Y __________. A. Are in equilibrium b. Offer an arbitrage opportunity c. Are both underpriced d. Are both fairly priced

A. Are in equilibrium

18. Arbitrage is based on the idea that __________. A. Assets with identical risks must have the same expected rate of return b. Securities with similar risk should sell at different prices c. The expected returns from equally risky assets are different d. Markets are perfectly efficient

A. Assets with identical risks must have the same expected rate of return

risk premiums to rise

A. Expected returns to fall

50. Liquidity is a risk factor that ____. A. Has yet to be accurately measured and incorporated into portfolio management b. Is unaffected by trading mechanisms on various stock exchanges c. Has no effect on the market value of an asset d. Affects bond prices but not stock prices

A. Has yet to be accurately measured and incorporated into portfolio management

78. A stock has a beta of 1.3. The unsystematic risk of this stock is ____________ the stock market as a whole. A. Higher than b. Lower than c. Equal to d. Indeterminable compared to

A. Higher than

2. Fama and French claim that after controlling for firm size and the ratio of book value to market value, beta is insignificant in explaining stock returns. This claim I. is supported by their analysis of historical stock return data II. is based on a well developed theoretical model III. implies that unsystematic risk is actually priced A. I only b. I and II only c. II and III only d. I, II and III

A. I only

46. In his famous critique of the CAPM, Roll argued that the CAPM _______________. A. Is not testable because the true market portfolio can never be observed b. Is of limited use because systematic risk can never be entirely eliminated c. Should be replaced by the APT d. Should be replaced by the Fama French 3 factor model

A. Is not testable because the true market portfolio can never be observed

38. In a single factor market model the beta of a stock A. Measures the stock's contribution to the standard deviation of the market portfolio b. Measures the stock's unsystematic risk c. Changes with the variance of the residuals d. Measures the stock's contribution to the standard deviation of the stock

A. Measures the stock's contribution to the standard deviation of the market portfolio

58. The measure of unsystematic risk can be found from an index model as A. Standard error b. Multiple R c. Degrees of freedom d. Sum of squares of the regression

A. Standard error

24. The beta of a security is equal to __________. A. The covariance between the security and market returns divided by the variance of the market's returns b. The covariance between the security and market returns divided by the standard deviation of the market's returns c. The variance of the security's returns divided by the covariance between the security and market returns d. The variance of the security's returns divided by the variance of the market's returns

A. The covariance between the security and market returns divided by the variance of the market's returns

59. Standard deviation is a measure of ____________. A. Total risk b. Relative systematic risk c. Relative non-systematic risk d. Relative business risk

A. Total risk

Asset Allocation

Allocation of an investment portfolio across broad asset classes.

Active Investment

An approach to investing in which the investor seeks to outperform a given benchmark by continuously monitoring their activity in order to exploit profitable conditions.

Price-Weighted Average

An average computed by adding the prices of the stocks and dividing by a "divisor."

Capital Asset pricing model

An equation describing the expected return on any asset (or portfolio) as a linear function of its beta.

Equally Weighted Index

An index computed from a simple average of returns.

Market Capitalization Weighting

An index weighting method in which the weight assigned to each constituent security is determined by dividing its market capitalization by the total market capitalization (sum of the market capitalization) of all securities in the index.

Capital Market Expectations

An investor's expectations concerning the risk and return prospects of asset.

Banker's Acceptance

An order to a bank by a customer to pay a sum of money at a future date.

Equity

An ownership share in a corporation.

Security Analysis

Analysis of the value of securities.

12b - 1 fees

Annual fees charged by a mutual fund to pay for marketing and distribution costs. Named after the SEC rule that allows this.

sum of each HP returns in each period / number of period

Artihmetic average

Real Assets

Assets used to produce goods and services.

Risk-Return Trade-Off

Assets with higher expected returns entail greater risk.

Active Management

Attempting to identify mispriced securities or to forecast broad market trends.

7. Consider the CAPM. The risk-free rate is 5% and the expected return on the market is 15%. What is the beta on a stock with an expected return of 12%? a. .5 B. .7 c. 1.2 d. 1.4

B. .7

73. If the beta of the market index is 1.0 and the standard deviation of the market index increases from 12% to 18%, what is the new beta of the market index? a. 0.8 B. 1.0 c. 1.2 d. 1.5

B. 1.0

77. Research has identified two systematic factors that affect U.S. stock returns. The factors are growth in industrial production and changes in long term interest rates. Industrial production growth is expected to be 3% and long term interest rates are expected to increase by 1% and based on this data You are analyzing a stock is that has a beta of 1.2 on the industrial production factor and 0.5 on the interest rate factor. It currently has an expected return of 12%. However, if industrial production actually grows 5% and interest rates drop 2% what is your best guess of the stock's return? a. 15.9% B. 12.9% c. 13.2% d. 12.0%

B. 12.9%

76. What is the expected return on a stock with a beta of 0.8, given a risk free rate of 3.5% and an expected market return of 15.6%? a. 3.8% B. 13.2% c. 15.6% d. 19.1%

B. 13.2%

43. The risk-free rate and the expected market rate of return are 5% and 15% respectively. According to the capital asset pricing model, the expected rate of return on security X with a beta of 1.2 is equal to __________. a. 12% B. 17% c. 18% d. 23%

B. 17%

40. The variance of the return on the market portfolio is .0400 and the expected return on the market portfolio is 20%. If the risk-free rate of return is 10%, the market degree of risk aversion, A, is __________. a. 0.5 B. 2.5 c. 3.5 d. 5.0

B. 2.5

39. Security A has an expected rate of return of 12% and a beta of 1.10. The market expected rate of return is 8% and the risk-free rate is 5%. The alpha of the stock is __________. a. -1.7% B. 3.7% c. 5.5% d. 8.7%

B. 3.7%

67. What is the expected return for a portfolio with a beta of 0.5? a. 5% B. 7.5% c. 12.5% d. 15%

B. 7.5%

28. Consider the single factor APT. Portfolio A has a beta of 1.3 and an expected return of 21%. Portfolio B has a beta of 0.7 and an expected return of 17%. The risk-free rate of return is 8%. If you wanted to take advantage of an arbitrage opportunity, you should take a short position in portfolio __________ and a long position in portfolio __________. a. A, A B. A, B c. B, A d. B, B

B. A, B

57. A stock's alpha measures the stock's ________________________________. a. Expected return B. Abnormal return c. Excess return d. Residual return

B. Abnormal return

25. According to the capital asset pricing model, __________. a. All securities' returns must lie on the capital market line B. All securities' returns must lie on the security market line c. The slope of the security market line must be less than the market risk premium d. Any security with a beta of 1 must have an excess return of zero

B. All securities' returns must lie on the security market line

10. In the context of the capital asset pricing model, the systematic measure of risk is __________. a. Unique risk B. Beta c. Standard deviation of returns d. Variance of returns

B. Beta

41. The risk-free rate is 4%. The expected market rate of return is 11%. If you expect stock X with a beta of .8 to offer a rate of return of 12 percent, then you should __________. a. Buy stock X because it is overpriced B. Buy stock X because it is underpriced c. Sell short stock X because it is overpriced d. Sell short stock X because it is underpriced

B. Buy stock X because it is underpriced

71. The expected return on the market is the risk free rate plus the ______________. a. Diversified returns B. Equilibrium risk premium c. Historical market return d. Unsystematic return

B. Equilibrium risk premium

3. Which of the following are assumptions of the simple CAPM model? I. Individual trades of investors do not affect a stock's price II. All investors plan for one identical holding period III. All investors analyze securities in the same way and share the same economic view of the world IV. All investors have the same level of risk aversion a. I, II and IV only B. I, II and III only c. II, III and IV only d. I, II, III and IV

B. I, II and III only

48. In a study conducted by Jagannathan and Wang, it was found that the performance of beta in explaining security returns could be considerably enhanced by ______________. I. including the unsystematic risk of a stock II. including human capital in the market portfolio III. allowing for changes in beta over time a. I and II only B. II and III only c. I and III only d. I, II and III

B. II and III only

33. The possibility of arbitrage arises when _____________. a. There is no consensus among investors regarding the future direction of the market, and thus trades are made arbitrarily B. Mis-pricing among securities creates opportunities for riskless profits c. Two identically risky securities carry the same expected returns d. Investors do not diversify

B. Mis-pricing among securities creates opportunities for riskless profits

10

B. Monthly

32. Security X has an expected rate of return of 13% and a beta of 1.15. The risk-free rate is 5% and the market expected rate of return is 15%. According to the capital asset pricing model, security X is __________. a. Fairly priced B. Overpriced c. Underpriced d. None of the above

B. Overpriced

51. Beta is a measure of _______________. a. Total risk B. Relative systematic risk c. Relative non-systematic risk d. Relative business risk

B. Relative systematic risk

9. The arbitrage pricing theory was developed by __________. a. Henry Markowitz B. Stephen Ross c. William Sharpe d. Eugene Fama

B. Stephen Ross

27. In a world where the CAPM holds which one of the following is not a true statement regarding the capital market line? a. The capital market line always has a positive slope B. The capital market line is also called the security market line c. The capital market line is the best attainable capital allocation line d. The capital market line is the line from the risk-free rate through the market portfolio

B. The capital market line is also called the security market line

56. Arbitrage is ___________________________. a. Is an example of the law of one price B. The creation of riskless profits made possible by relative mispricing among securities c. Is a common opportunity in modern markets d. An example of a risky trading strategy based on market forecasting

B. The creation of riskless profits made possible by relative mispricing among securities

52. According to capital asset pricing theory, the key determinant of portfolio returns is __________. a. The degree of diversification B. The systematic risk of the portfolio c. The firm specific risk of the portfolio d. Economic factors

B. The systematic risk of the portfolio

Passive Management

Buying and holding a diversified portfolio without attempting to identify mispriced securities.

37. You invest $600 in security A with a beta of 1.5 and $400 in security B with a beta of .90. The beta of this portfolio is __________. a. 1.14 b. 1.20 C. 1.26 d. 2.40

C. 1.26

66. What is the beta for a portfolio with an expected return of 12.5%? a. 0 b. 1 C. 1.5 d. 2

C. 1.5

42. Consider the one-factor APT. The standard deviation of return on a well-diversified portfolio is 20%. The standard deviation on the factor portfolio is 12%. The beta of the well-diversified portfolio is approximately __________. a. 0.60 b. 1.00 C. 1.67 d. 3.20

C. 1.67

65. What is the expected return on the market? a. 0% b. 5% C. 10% d. 15%

C. 10%

36. Consider the capital asset pricing model. The market degree of risk aversion, A, is 3. The variance of return on the market portfolio is .0225. If the risk-free rate of return is 4%, the expected return on the market portfolio is __________. a. 6.75% b. 9.0% C. 10.75% d. 12.0%

C. 10.75%

75. According to the CAPM, what is the expected market return given an expected return on a security of 14.6%, a stock beta of 1.2, and a risk free interest rate of 5.0%? a. 4.0% b. 8.0% C. 13.0% d. 16.0%

C. 13.0%

81. The risk premium for exposure to aluminum commodity prices is 4% and the firm has a beta relative to aluminum commodity prices of 0.6. The risk premium for exposure to GDP changes is 6% and the firm has a beta relative to GDP of 1.2. If the risk free rate is 4.0%, what is the expected return on this stock? a. 10.0% b. 11.5% C. 13.6% d. 14.0%

C. 13.6%

30. Consider the multi-factor APT with two factors. Portfolio A has a beta of 0. 5 on factor 1 and a beta of 1.25 on factor 2. The risk premiums on the factors 1 and 2 portfolios are 1% and 7% respectively. The risk-free rate of return is 7%. The expected return on portfolio A is __________ if no arbitrage opportunities exist. a. 13.5% b. 15.0% C. 16.25% d. 23.0%

C. 16.25%

8. Consider the CAPM. The expected return on the market is 18%. The expected return on a stock with a beta of 1.2 is 20%. What is the risk-free rate? a. 2% b. 6% C. 8% d. 12%

C. 8%

29. Consider the single factor APT. Portfolio A has a beta of 0.2 and an expected return of 13%. Portfolio B has a beta of 0.4 and an expected return of 15%. The risk-free rate of return is 10%. If you wanted to take advantage of an arbitrage opportunity, you should take a short position in portfolio __________ and a long position in portfolio __________. a. A, A b. A, B C. B, A d. B, B

C. B, A

44. Consider the following two stocks, A and B. Stock A has an expected return of 10% and a beta of 1.20. Stock B has an expected return of 14% and a beta of 1.80. The expected market rate of return is 9% and the risk-free rate is 5%. Security __________ would be considered a good buy because __________. a. A, it offers an expected excess return of 0.8% b. A, it offers an expected excess return of 2.2% C. B, it offers an expected excess return of 1.8% d. B, it offers an expected return of 2.4%

C. B, it offers an expected excess return of 1.8%

1. An adjusted beta will be ______ than the unadjusted beta. a. Lower b. Higher C. Closer to 1 d. Closer to 0

C. Closer to 1

45. According to the CAPM, the risk premium an investor expects to receive on any stock or portfolio is ________________. a. Directly related to the risk aversion of the particular investor b. Inversely related to the risk aversion of the particular investor C. Directly related to the beta of the stock d. Inversely related to the alpha of the stock

C. Directly related to the beta of the stock

Based on the data you know that the stock a. Earned a positive alpha that is statistically significantly different from zero b. Has a beta precisely equal to 0.890 C. Has a beta that could be anything between 0.6541 and 1.465 inclusive d. Has no systematic risk

C. Has a beta that could be anything between 0.6541 and 1.465 inclusive

rise

C. Have the same intercept with a steeper slope

47. Which of the following variables do Fama and French claim do a better job explaining stock returns than beta? I. Book to market ratio II. Unexpected change in industrial production III. Firm size a. I only b. I and II only C. I and III only d. I, II and III

C. I and III only

26. According to the CAPM which of the following is not a true statement regarding the market portfolio. a. All securities in the market portfolio are held in proportion to their market values b. It includes all risky assets in the world, including human capital C. It is always the minimum variance portfolio on the efficient frontier d. It lies on the efficient frontier

C. It is always the minimum variance portfolio on the efficient frontier

17. According to the capital asset pricing model, a security with a __________. a. Negative alpha is considered a good buy b. Positive alpha is considered overpriced C. Positive alpha is considered underpriced d. Zero alpha is considered a good buy

C. Positive alpha is considered underpriced

55. The most significant conceptual difference between the arbitrage pricing theory (APT) and the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is that the CAPM ______________. a. Places less emphasis on market risk b. Recognizes multiple unsystematic risk factors C. Recognizes only one systematic risk factor d. Recognizes multiple systematic risk factors

C. Recognizes only one systematic risk factor

62. The expected return on the market portfolio is 15%. The risk-free rate is 8%. The expected return on SDA Corp. common stock is 16%. The beta of SDA Corp. common stock is 1.25. Within the context of the capital asset pricing model, __________. a. SDA Corp. stock is underpriced b. SDA Corp. stock is fairly priced C. SDA Corp. stock's alpha is -0.75% d. SDA Corp. stock alpha is 0.75%

C. SDA Corp. stock's alpha is -0.75%

22. The graph of the expected return beta relationship in the CAPM context is called the __________. a. CML b. CAL C. SML d. Term Structure

C. SML

35. An important characteristic of market equilibrium is ________________. a. The presence of many opportunities for creating zero-investment portfolios b. All investors exhibit the same degree of risk aversion C. The absence of arbitrage opportunities d. The a lack of liquidity in the market

C. The absence of arbitrage opportunities

15. The capital asset pricing model was developed by __________. a. Kenneth French b. Stephen Ross C. William Sharpe d. Eugene Fama

C. William Sharpe

all combination of risky asset and risk free asset lie on

CAL

risk return combinations available by varying asset allocation, that is, by choosing different values of y.

CAL

what connect the risk free asset to the risky asset

CAL

plot of risk return combination available by varying portfolio allocation between a risk free asst and a risky portfolio

Capital allocation line

CAL using the market index portfolio as the risky asset

Capital market line (CML)

Security Selection

Choice of specific securities within each asset class.

Financial Assets

Claims on real assets or the income generated by them.

Investment

Commitment of current resources in the expectation of deriving greater resources in the future.

Mutual Fund

Common name for open-end company. Each has a specified investment policy. Accounts for about 90% of investment company assets. It's NAV is quoted once a day.

Sector Funds

Concentrate on particular industries.

Agency Problems

Conflicts of interest between managers and stockholders.

13. The market portfolio has a beta of __________. a. -1.0 b. 0 c. 0.5 D. 1.0

D. 1.0

84. The two factor model on a stock provides a risk premium for exposure to market risk of 12%, a risk premium for exposure to silver commodity prices of 3.5% and a risk free rate of 4.0%. What is the expected return on the stock? a. 11.6% b. 13.0% c. 15.3% D. 19.5%

D. 19.5%

6. Consider the CAPM. The risk-free rate is 6% and the expected return on the market is 18%. What is the expected return on a stock with a beta of 1.3? a. 6% b. 15.6% c. 18% D. 21.6%

D. 21.6%

74. According to the CAPM, what is the market risk premium given an expected return on a security of 13.6%, a stock beta of 1.2, and a risk free interest rate of 4.0%? a. 4.0% b. 4.8% c. 6.6% D. 8.0%

D. 8.0%

well diversified portfolios only

D. Both well diversified portfolios and individual assets

79. There are two independent economic factors M1 and M2. The risk-free rate is 5% and all stocks have independent firm-specific components with a standard deviation of 25%. Portfolios A and B are well diversified. Given the data below which equation provides the correct pricing model? a. E(rP) = 5 + 1.12bP1 + 11.86bP2 b. E(rP) = 5 + 4.96bP1 + 13.26bP2 c. E(rP) = 5 + 3.23bP1 + 8.46bP2 D. E(rP) = 5 + 8.71bP1 + 9.68bP2

D. E(rP) = 5 + 8.71bP1 + 9.68bP2

34. Building a zero-investment portfolio will always involve _____________ a. An unknown mixture of short and long positions b. Only short positions c. Only long positions D. Equal investments in a short and a long position

D. Equal investments in a short and a long position

4. When all investors analyze securities in the same way and share the same economic view of the world we say they have _____________________. a. Heterogeneous expectations b. Equal risk aversion c. Asymmetric information D. Homogeneous expectations

D. Homogeneous expectations

5. In a simple CAPM world which of the following statements is/are correct? I. All investors will choose to hold the market portfolio, which includes all risky assets in the world II. Investors' complete portfolio will vary depending on their risk aversion III. The return per unit of risk will be identical for all individual assets IV. The market portfolio will be on the efficient frontier and it will be the optimal risky portfolio a. I, II and III only b. II, III and IV only c. I, III and IV only D. I, II, III and IV

D. I, II, III and IV

85. Since the APT does not specify which factors should be used to determine risk premiums, how should we decide which factors to investigate? a. Researchers should focus on factors that affect firms and industries b. Researchers should look for the most important unsystematic factors c. Researchers should concentrate on better defining the market portfolio D. Researchers should consider factors that correlate highly with uncertainty in consumption and investment opportunities

D. Researchers should consider factors that correlate highly with uncertainty in consumption and investment opportunities

54. According to the CAPM, investors are compensated for all but which of the following? a. Expected inflation b. Systematic risk c. Time value of money D. Residual risk

D. Residual risk

11. Empirical results estimated from historical data indicate that betas __________. a. Are always close to zero b. Are constant over time c. Of all securities are always between zero and one D. Seem to regress toward one over time

D. Seem to regress toward one over time

19. Investors require a risk premium as compensation for bearing _______________. a. Unsystematic risk b. Alpha risk c. Residual risk D. Systematic risk

D. Systematic risk

60. One of the main problems with the arbitrage pricing theory is a. Its use of several factors instead of a single market index to explain the risk-return relationship b. The introduction of non-systematic risk as a key factor in the risk-return relationship c. That the APT requires an even larger number of unrealistic assumptions than the CAPM D. The model fails to identify the key macro-economic variables in the risk-return relationship

D. The model fails to identify the key macro-economic variables in the risk-return relationship

53. The expected return of the risky asset portfolio with minimum variance is __________. a. The market rate of return b. Zero c. The risk-free rate D. There is not enough information to answer this question

D. There is not enough information to answer this question

14. In a well diversified portfolio, __________ risk is negligible. a. Nondiversifiable b. Market c. Systematic D. Unsystematic

D. Unsystematic

20. According to the capital asset pricing model, fairly priced securities have __________. a. Negative betas b. Positive alphas c. Positive betas D. Zero alphas

D. Zero alphas

Treasury Notes or Bonds

Debt obligations of the federal government with original maturities of one year or more.

How are funds sold?

Direct-marketed funds= sold through mail, offices, and internet. Investors buy from fund directly.

Eurodollars

Dollar-denominated deposits at foreign banks or foreign branches of American banks.

Capital Allocation Line (Formula)

E(Rp) = Expected Return of the Portfolio Rf = Risk Free Rate E(Ri) = Expected Return of the Investment,https://o.quizlet.com/F.Nv5ZQNNFzs1fyKW580VA_m.png

Utility (Formula)

E(r) = Expected Returns A = Risk aversion,https://o.quizlet.com/RzRr1evf6J79.oZC38-BrQ_m.png

Holding Period Return Compounded (Formula)

Example for a three year period return,https://o.quizlet.com/pmjhz2lKuczRr4GXsWWLYA_m.png

.25, .25 and -.20 been result of single per period return

Example of geometric average

Investment Companies

Financial intermediaries that collects funds from individual investors and invest those funds in a potentially wide range of securities. They provide a mechanism for small investors to "team up" to obtain the benefits of large-scale investing.

Investment Companies

Firms managing funds for investors. An investment company may manage several mutual funds.

Investment Bankers

Firms specializing in the sale of new securities to the public, typically by underwriting the issue.

Index fund

Fund that tries to match the performance of a broad market index, like the SP500. Buys shares in securities in an index in proportion to the security's representation in that index.

Federal Funds

Funds in the accounts of commercial banks at the Federal Reserve Bank.

International Funds

Global funds = invest in securities worldwide, including US.

rate of return over a given investment period over a single period

HPR

Balanced funds

Hold both equities and fixed-income funds.

(Ending Price - Begining Price + Cash dividend)/ Begining Price

Holding Period Return

Money Markets

Include short-term, highly liquid, and relatively low-risk debt instruments.

Market Value-Weighted Index

Index return equals the weighted average of the returns of each component security, with weights proportional to outstanding market value.

Financial Intermediaries

Institutions that "connect" borrowers and lenders by accepting funds from lenders and loaning funds to borrowers.

Money Market MM

Invest in money market securities (commercial paper, repos, or CDs). Average maturity of assets is around 1mo.

Real Estate Investment Trusts

Invest in real estate or loans secured by real estate. Highly leveraged. Equity trusts = invest in real estate directly. Mortgage trusts = mortgage and construction loans.

Equity Funds

Invest mostly in stock, but may hold fixed-income securities. Income funds=hold shares of firms with high dividend yields. Growth funds=focuses on prospects instead of capital gains, but are riskier.

Private Equity

Investments in companies that are not traded on a stock exchange.

LIBOR (London Interbank Offer Rate)

Lending rate among banks in the London market.

Corporate Bonds

Long-term bonds issued by corporations typically paying semiannual coupons and returning the face value of the bond at maturity.

Variance

Measure of the volatility or the dispersion of returns.

Information ratio

Measures the abnormal return per-unit of risk added by the security to a well diversified portfolio.

Venture Capital (VC)

Money invested to finance a new firm.

Unit Investment Trust

Money pooled from many investors that is invested in a portfolio fixed for the life of the fund. Shares of the trust are called "redeemable trust certificates." Has little active management.

__________ is a false statement about the NYSE.

More than 3000 companies are listed on the NYSE

Funds of Funds

Mutual funds that primarily invest in shares of other mutual funds.

The computer-linked price quotation system for the OTC is called __________.

NASDAQ

Total Risk (Variance)

Nonsystematic Risk + Systematic Risk

Preferred Stock

Nonvoting shares in a corporation, usually paying a fixed stream of dividends.

Futures Contract

Obliges traders to purchase or sell an asset at an agreed upon price at a specified future date.

Exchange-Traded Funds

Offshoots of mutual funds that allow investors to trade index portfolios just as they do stocks. ETFs experience price changes throughout the day as they are bought and sold. An ETF does not have its net asset value (NAV) calculated every day like a mutual fund does.

What are the four general classes of fees?

Operating expenses: costs incurred by mutual fund in operating the portfolio, including admin expenses and advisory fees paid to investment manager. Periodically are deducted from assets of fund.

Common Stocks

Ownership shares in a publicly held corporation. Shareholders have voting rights and may receive dividends.

Commingled Funds

Partnerships of investors that pool funds. Ex: a bank manages the fund for a fee. Instead of shares, the offer units.

Fixed-Income (Debt) Securities

Pay a specified cash flow over a period of time.

Securitization

Pooling loans into standardized securities backed by those loans, which can then be traded like any other security.

Passive Portfolio

Portfolios that replicate and track market indices, which are passively constructed on the basis of market prices and market capitalizations

Secondary Market

Previously issued securities are traded among investors.

Functions of an investment company

Record keeping and administration. Diversification and divisibility. Professional management. Lower transaction costs.

___________ investor will weight their portfolio heavily toward ________

Risk averse, Tbills

Systematic Risk

Risk of breakdown in the financial system, particularly due to spillover effects from one market into others.

Systematic Risk

Risk that affects the entire market or economy; it cannot be avoided and is inherent in the overall market. Also known as nondiversifiable or market risk.

Systematic Risk

Risk that affects the entire market or economy; it cannot be avoided and is inherent in the overall market. Systematic risk is also known as nondiversifiable or market risk.

The __________ was established to protect investors from losses if their brokerage firms fail.

SIPC

The __________ system enables exchange members to send orders directly to a specialist over computer lines.

SUPERDOT

The ____ requires full disclosure of relevant information relating to the issue of new securities.

Securities Act of 1933

Derivative Securities

Securities providing payoffs that depend on the values of other assets.

Closed-End Fund

Shares may not be redeemed, but instead are traded at prices that can differ from NAV. Shares are traded on organized exchanges.

Treasury Bills

Short-term government securities issued at a discount from face value and returning the face amount at maturity.

Repurchase Agreements (Repos)

Short-term sales of government securities with an agreement to repurchase the securities at a higher price.

Commercial Paper

Short-term unsecured debt issued by large corporations.

Security Selection

Skill in selecting individual securities within an asset class.

__________ is a false statement regarding specialists.

Specialists can not trade for their own accounts

Risk Objectives

Specifications for portfolio risk that reflect the risk tolerance of the client. Can be stated in absolute or relative terms.

investors would prefer a ________ sloping CAL because that means _____ expected return for any level of risk

Steeper, higher

__________ often accompany short sales, and are used to limit potential losses from the short position.

Stop-buy orders

Beta (Formula)

Systematic risk that is based on the covariance of an asset's or portfolio's return with the return of the overall market https://o.quizlet.com/VrVDPHM2rkx-YuWiWl7gvA_m.png

provide a perfectly risk free asset in the nominal term only

T Bills

Rf

T bills

Municipal Bonds

Tax-exempt bonds issued by state and local governments.

__________ is called the Big Board.

The New York Stock Exchange

Liquidity

The ability to purchase or sell an asset quickly and easily at a price close to fair market value. The ability to meet short-term obligations using assets that are the most readily converted into cash.

Risk Tolerance

The amount of risk an investor is willing and able to bear to achieve an investment goal.

Homogeneity of Expectations

The assumption that all investors have the same economic expectations and thus have the same expectations of prices, cash flows, and other investment characteristics.

Arithmetic Mean Return

The average of the returns on a unit of investment at the beginning of each holding period. Similar to the concept of calculating simple interest.

Tactical Asset Allocation

The decision to deliberately deviate from the strategic asset allocation in an attempt to add value based on forecasts of the near-term relative performance of asset classes.

Jensen's Alpha

The difference between the actual portfolio return and the calculated risk adjusted return. A measure of the portfolios performance relative to the market portfolio.

Risk Budgeting

The establishment of objectives for individuals, groups, or divisions of an organization that takes into account the allocation of an acceptable level of risk.

Indifference curve

The graph of risk-return combinations that an investor would be willing to accept to maintain a given level of utility

Markowitz Efficient Frontier

The graph of the set of portfolios offering the maximum expected return for their level of risk (standard deviation of return).

Money Weighted Return

The internal rate of return on a portfolio, taking account of all cash flows.

Global minimum-variance portfolio

The portfolio on the minimum-variance frontier with the smallest variance of return

Minimum variance portfolio

The portfolio with the minimum variance for each given level of expected return.

Portfolio Planning

The process of creating a plan for building a portfolio that is expected to satisfy a client's investment objectives.

Turnover

The ratio of the trading activity of a portfolio to the assets of the portfolio. Measures the fraction of the portfolio that is "replaced" each year. A small turnover is desired because it means the investor is paying less in commissions to the broker.

Gross Return

The return earned by asset manager prior to deductions for management expenses, custodial fees, taxes, or any other related expenses to the management and administration of an investment.

Holding Period Return

The returned earned from holding an asset for a single specified period of time. The period may be 1 day, 1 month, 5 years, or any specified period. A synonym for Total Return.

Call Option

The right to buy an asset at a specified price on of before a specified expiration date.

Put Option

The right to sell an asset at a specified exercise price on or before a specified expiration date.

Strategic Asset Allocation

The set of exposures to IPS-permissible asset classes that is expected to achieve the client's long-term objectives given the client's investment constraints.

Rebalancing Policy

The set of rules that guide the process of restoring a portfolio's asset class weights to those specified in the strategic asset allocation.

Kurtosis

The statistical measure that indicates the peakedness of a distribution.

Two-fund separation theorem

The theory that all investors regardless of taste, risk preferences, and initial wealth will hold a combination of two portfolios or funds: a risk-free asset and an optimal portfolio of risky assets.

Net Asset Value

The value of each share. =(Mkt value of assets - liabilities)/(Shares outstanding)

Soft Dollars

The value of research services that brokerage houses provide for free in exchange for the investment manager's business. Based on a credit system with a brokerage firm. Not included in the fund's expenses. SEC allows this as long as the proceeds are used for research that may ultimately benefit the shareholder.

__________ is a false statement about the function of investment bankers.

They are commercial banks that accept deposits from savers and lend them out to companies

Certificate of Deposits

Time deposit with a bank that cannot be withdrawn upon demand. The depositor receives interest and principal only at the end of the CD's fixed term. Highly marketable. Denominations larger than 100,000 are usually negotiable in that they can be sold to another investor if the owner has to cash in the CF before the mat. issured by the FDIC for up to 250,000 in case of bank insolvency

__________ do not take place in the secondary market.

Transactions of new issues of stocks

__________ is a false statement regarding best-efforts.

Under the best-effort agreement the investment banker buys the stock issued from the company and resells them to the public

Nonsystematic Risk

Unique risk that is local or limited to a particular asset or industry that need not affect assets outside of that asset class

Specialists on the stock exchanges may do all of the following except __________.

Use their privileged information to make investments on behalf of clients of brokerage firms with which they do business

measure of downside risk. loss that will be suffered given an extreme adverse price change. worse case scenario

VAR - value at risk

what calculation use a typical probability of 5%

VaR

Hedge Funds

Vehicles that allow private investors to pool assets to be invested by a fund manager. Typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors. Exempt from SEC regulation and can therefore pursue more speculative policies than mutual funds.

bankers' acceptances

a customer orders its bank to pay a sum of money at a future date

A prospectus is __________.

a description of a firm and the security it is issuing

prospectus

a description of the firm and the security it is issuing

auction market

a market where all traders meet at one place to buy or sell an asset

bid price

a slightly lower price that security dealers would pay to buy a T-bill from you. If you are willing to pay 23 dollars for a particular share, this is the bid price

high-frequency trading

a subset of algorithmic trading that relies on computer programs to make very rapid trading decisions

specialist

a trader who makes a market in the shares of one or more firms and who maintains a "fair and orderly market" by dealing personally in the market

__________ may be an objective of a stock mutual fund.

a.Growth

The SIPC was established by the _____.

a.Insider Trading Act of 1931

The cost of buying and selling a stock include __________.

a.broker's commissions

Restrictions on trading involving insider information apply to __________.

a.corporate officers and directors

AIMR Standards of Professional Conduct require that members ____.

a.place their clients interests before their own

Trading on insider information is _____.

a.prohibited by federal law

Which of the following are sources of competition for the New York Stock Exchange?

a.regional exchanges

A fund that invests in real estate or loans secured by real estate is __________.

an REIT

Instinet is _______.

an electronic communications network

risk premium

an expected return in excess of that on risk-free securities

over the counter (otc) market

an informal network of brokers and dealers who negotiate sales of securities

limit buy (sell) order

an order specifying a price at which an investor is willing to buy or sell a security

The _________ price is the price at which a dealer is willing to sell a security.

ask

portfolio choice among broad investment classes

asset allocation

S+P

average of 500 firms markt value-weighted index

Why are money market instruments usually out of access to small investors?

because they trade in large denominations

The _________ price is the price at which a dealer is willing to purchase a security.

bid

The difference between the price at which a dealer is willing to buy, and the price at which a dealer is willing to sell, is called the __________.

bid-ask spread

Eurobond

bond denominated in a currency other than that of the country in which it is issued.

The process of polling potential investors regarding their interest in a forthcoming initial public offering (IPO) is called _________.

book building

Annualized Rate of Return (Formula)

c: number of periods in a year,https://o.quizlet.com/D4SxaPSTKHA2V9Vaq6.PUw_m.png

the _______ is the CAL that result from using a passive investment strategy that treats a market index portfolio such as SP500

capital market line

Federal Agency Debt

channels credit to a sector of the economy Congress believes is not receiving adequate funds. Assumed government would assist if default Ex. Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac

The market collapse of 1987 prompted __________ as a suggestion for regulatory reform.

circuit breakers to halt trading

Federal funds

commercial banks overnight borrowing of funds

entire portfolio including risky and risk free assets

complete portfolio

electronic communication networks (ECNs)

computer networks that allow direct trading without the need for market makers

69. If the simple CAPM is valid and all portfolios are priced correctly, which of the situations below are possible? Consider each situation independently and assume the risk free rate is 5%. a. b. c. D.

d. market 30%

provide price continuity in the stocks in which they specialize

dealers trading with their customers at the officially published price even when a better one is available

margin

descrbies securities purchased with money borrowed in part from a broker. net worth of the investors account

TED spread

difference between Libor and T-bill spread

The fourth market refers to __________.

direct trading between investors in exchange-listed securities without benefit of a broker

Euro dollars

dollar denominated dollars at foreign bank or foreign branches of American banks usually for large sums and time deposits of less than 6 months

internal rate of return (IRR) of an investment

dollar weighted average return

dark pools

electronic trading networks where participants can anonymously buy or sell large blocks of securities

rate of return in excess of the risk free rate

excess return

mean value of the distribution of HPR

expected return

In a __________ underwriting arrangement, the underwriter assumes the full risk that shares cannot be sold to the public at the stipulated offering price.

firm commitment

initial public offering (ipo)

first sale of stock by a formerly private company

2 types of municipal bonds

general obligation bonds- backed by the full faith and credit revenue bonds- issued to finance a project whose revenues then back up the bond.

the single per period return that gives the same cumulative performance as the sequence of actual return. Aslo called the time weighted average return

geometric average

According to Loughran and Ritter, initial public offerings tend to exhibit __________ performance initially, and __________ performance over the long term.

good; bad

who only can issue default free bonds (treasury bonds)

governments

Spring Street Brewing Company was the first company to _____.

have an internet IPO

M-Squared (M2 Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/.8o5sJHUvmKozxhNp7t2QQ_m.png

Expected return of a Portfolio (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/2muyVEIRMahYIk4XOzVF0Q_m.png

Capital Market Line Return (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/34j4XapS2q.7U3MbjNNKzg_m.png

Treynor Ratio (Focus on Systematic Risk)

https://o.quizlet.com/3Sa4qRXut-UUEN3sXi-EqA_m.png

Portfolio Beta and Expected Return (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/7maPv6U.cXBu2dmLJkH0lQ_m.png

Sharpe Ratio (Focus on Total Risk)

https://o.quizlet.com/Rmr4YnAj.Md2UaT9yK0YXw_m.png

Information ratio (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/SyX4U4rpaYhzzGJJOxUYaw_m.png

Market Model (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/Y5hB4b2wTPTQh84CEYo82w_m.png

Risk of a Portfolio (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/eTPK7dnniR9iOq16X0hgyw_m.png

Capital Asset Pricing Model (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/n0Y-71p4ym77Fw1Na5kkig_m.png

Risk of a Leveraged Portfolio (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/r1-Xniw0YTYeNqH.4ujn0Q_m.png

Jensen's Alpha (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/tq4n3GhDkA1aUpZ68Y5MKQ_m.png

Expected Return of Leveraged Portfolio (Formula)

https://o.quizlet.com/wY-rBp7igtGkrWuf1VazLg_m.png

Purchases of new issues of stock take place __________.

in the primary market

NASDAQ

index of 3000 firms equally weighted index- places equal dollars in each stock

rate at which prices are rising, measured as the rate of increase of the CPI

inflation rate

The bulk of most initial public offerings (IPOs) of equity securities go to ____________.

institutional investors

Underwriting is one of the services provided by ____.

investment bankers

passive strategy

investment policy that avoids security analysis

A recent challenge to traditional intermediary role of brokerage firms has come from __________.

issuing firms offering securities trading in their own shares on the internet

industrial development bond

kind of revenue bond that is issued to finance commercial enterprises- like construction of factory that can be operated by private firm.

measure of the fatness of the tails of a probability distribution. indicates probability of extreme outcome

kurtosis

blocks

large transactions in which at least 10,000 shares of stock are bought or sold

LIBOR market

lending rate at which large banks in London are willing to lend to other banks.

too many observation in the tail

leptokurtosis

You purchased XYZ stock at $50 per share. The stock is currently selling at $65. Your gains could be protected by placing a __________.

limit-sell order

probability distribution

list of possible outcomes with associated probabilities

The largest and most liquid companies trading over-the-counter are ______.

listed on the NASDAQ National Market System

inside information

major owners, or other individuals with privileged access to information about the firm,nonpublic knowledge about a corporation possessed by corporate officers

secondary market

market for already-existing securities

primary market

market for new issues of securities

dealer markets

markets in which traders specializing in particular assets buy and sell for their own accounts

atihmetic average

mean

ranking portoflios by their sharpe measures

mean variance analysis

value at risk (VaR)

measure of downside risk; loss that will be suffered given an extreme, adverse, price change

skew

measure of the asymmetry of a probability distribution

kurtosis

measure of the fatness of the tails of probability distribution. indicates likelihood of extreme outcomes.

middle observation

median

bond market indicators

merrill lunch barclays salomon smith barney

The Nasdaq Stock Market is an example of

more than one of the above

interest rate in terms of nominal dollars

nominal interest rate

familiar bellshaped plot is symetric with identical values for all three standard measure of results: the mean, the median and the mode.

normal distribution

If the Dow Jones Industrial Average falls by 10% by 11 am, trading will be halted for _____.

one hour

price indexed government bond

only risk free asset in real term

mortgage backed security

ownership claim in a pool of mortgages or an obligation that is secured by such a pool

An ECN is _______.

part of the fourth market

investment policy that avoids security analysis

passive strategy

capital allocation line

plot of risk-return combinations available by varying portfolio allocation between a risk-free asset and a risky portfolio

asset allocation

portfolio choice among broad investment classes

Dow Jones

price weighted average- measures the return on a portfolio that holds one share of each stock 30 companies

ask price

price you would pay for a security if you bought from a securities dealer. If you want to sell 100 shares at 25 dollars per share, this is the ask price

private placement

primary offerings in which shares are sold directly to a small group of institutional or wealthy investors

TIPS

principal is adjusted in proportion to increases in the CPI. constant stream of income

list of possible outcomes with associated probabilities

probability distribution

scenario analysis

process of devising a list of possible economic scenarios and specifying the likelihood of each one, as well as the HPR that will be realized in each case

Specialists are obligated to _____________.

provide price continuity in the stocks in which they specialize

underwriters

purchase securities from the issuing company and resell them to the public

how to decide between taxed and tax exempt bonds equation?

r(1-t) = rm or r= rm / (1-t)

equivalent tax yield

r/ (a-tax rate)

Nominal Return (Formula)

rF = Risk Free Rate pi= Inflation Rate RP= Risk Premium,https://o.quizlet.com/gERqb7mkB0gM.5V-ji.2Mg_m.png

mean-variance analysis

ranking portfolios by their Sharpe measures

excess return

rate of return in excess of the risk-free rate

holding-period return

rate of return over a given investment period

excess of the interest rate over the inflation rate. the growth rate of pruchasing power derived from an investment

real interest rate

risk aversion

reluctance to accept risk

a risky investment portfolio (risky asset) is characterised by its

reward to volatility ratio

his ratio is the slope of the Capital alocation line

reward to volatility ration (sharpe ratio)

sharpe measure

reward-to-volitility, ratio of portfolio risk premium to standard deviation

shifting funds from the risky portfolio to the risk free asset and diversifying the risky portfolio are 2 ways to reduce

risk

investor preferred choice among the protfolio on the CAL will depend on ______

risk aversion

reluctance to accept risk

risk avertion

rate of return that can be earned with certainty

risk free rate

expected return in excess of that on risk free securities

risk premium

_______ investors will weight their portfolio toward ____________

risk tolerant, risky asset

devising a list of possible economic outcomes or scenarios and specify both the likelihood (probability) of each scenario and the HPR the asset will realize in each scenario

scenario analysis

Transactions that do not involve the original issue of securities take place in __________.

secondary markets

stock exchanges

secondary markets where already-issued securities are bought and sold by members

Portfolio risk premium (Erp - rf)/ standard deviation of portfolio excess return

sharp ratio

reward to volatiliy measure

sharpe measure

ratio of portfolio risk premium to standar deviation

sharpe ratio (reward to volatility ratio

T-bills

short term government securities that are sold at a discount the return is the face value can be purchased on primary and secondary markets issued at initial maturities of 4, 13, 26, 52 min of 100

Repos

short term sales of government securities with an agreement to repurchase securities at a higher price. Securities serve as collateral. Usually an overnight loan.

commercial paper

short term unsecured debt issued by large corporations. Issued by these companies instead of borrowing from banks. Issued in denominations of 100,000. Maturities up to 70 days Trades in secondary markets and are quite liquid

maturities of bonds

short term- less than 1 years intermediate- 1-10 years long- more than 10

Borrowing a security from your broker in order to sell it, with the intention of repurchasing it later when the price is lower, is called ____________.

short-selling

measure of the asymetry of a probability distribution

skew

long tailed disctribution

skewness

square root of the variance

standard deviation

municipal bonds

tax exempt bonds issued by state and local governments maturities up to 30 years

Initial margin requirements on stocks are set by __________.

the Federal Reserve

capital market line

the capital allocation line using the market index portfolio as the risky asset

nasdaq stock market

the computer-linked price quotation and trade execution system

bid-ask spread

the difference between the bid and asked prices

complete portfolio

the entire portfolio including risky and risk-free assets

real interest rate

the excess of the internet rate over the inflation rate. the growth rate of purchasing power derived from an investment

variance

the expected value of the squared deviation from the mean

nominal interest rate

the interest rate in terms of nominal (not adjusted for purchasing power) dollars

dollar-weighted average return

the internal rate of return on an investment

expected return

the mean value of the distribution of HPR

The bid-ask spread exists because of ________________.

the need for dealers to cover expenses and make a modest profit

A red herring becomes a prospectus when _____.

the preliminary registration statement is approved by the SEC

bid price

the price at which a dealer of other trader is willing to purchase a security

ask price

the price at which a dealer or other trader will sell a security

inflation rate

the rate at which prices are rising, measured as the rate of increase of the CPI

risk-free rate

the rate of return that can be earned with certainty

short sale

the sale of shares not owned by the investor but borrowed through a broker and later purchases to replace the loan

geometric average

the single per-period return that gives the same cumulative performance as the sequence of actual returns

standard deviation

the square root of the variance

arithmetic average

the sum of returns in each period divided by the number of periods

latency

the time it takes to accept, process, and deliver a trading order

algorithmic trading

the use of computer programs to make rapid trading decisions

Many exchange-listed securities are also traded in the over-the-counter market. Trading of this sort is said to take place in the ____________.

third market

stop order

trade is not to be executed unless stock hits a price limit

Registered traders __________________.

trade on their own account only

Initial public offerings (IPOs) are usually ___________ relative to the levels at which their prices stabilize within a few months.

under priced

Under firm commitment underwriting the ______ assumes the full risk that the shares cannot be sold to the public at the stipulated offering price.

underwriter

You short-sell 200 shares of Tuckerton Trading Co., now selling for $50 per share. What is your maximum possible loss?

unlimited

dispersion around mean

variance

expected value f the squared deviation from the mean

variance

Brokerage firms can change margin-loan practices _____.

without notice


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