Midterm 2 practice exam
Refer to the diagram to the right. What is the risk premiumLOADING... on 10-year corporate Baa bonds in 2002?
4.75% (7.75-3)
If 1−year interest rates for the next five years are expected to be 4, 2, 5, 4, and 5 percent, and the 5−year term premium is 1 percent, than the 5−year bond rate will be
5 percent.
Compute the price of a share of stock that pays a $5.00 per year dividend and that you expect to be able to sell in one year for $50, assuming you require a 5% return.
52.38
If the expected path of one−year interest rates over the next five years is 4 percent, 5 percent, 7 percent, 8 percent, and 6 percent, then the expectations theory predicts that today's interest rate on the five−year bond is
6 percent.
The risk that interest payments will not be made, or that the face value of a bond is not repaid when a bond matures is
default risk.
Suppose that a stock paid a dividend of $5 this year and that your required return on equity investments is 8%. Using the Gordon growth model, if you expect the dividends to grow at 4%, you will be willing to pay for the stock the amount Using the Gordon growth model of stock price determination, if a share of stock will pay a $3dividend next year, dividends are expected to grow 3%, and people require an 8% return on equity investments, then the price of the stock is According to the Gordon growth model of stock price determination, at what price should a stock sell for if the required return on equity investments is 12%, the stock will pay a dividend of $1.80 next year, and dividends are expected to grow at a constant rate of 3%?
130 60 20
If 1-year interest rates for the next three years are expected to be 1, 1, and 1 percent, and the 3-year term premium is 1 percent, then the 3-year bond rate will be
2 percent.
Will a U.S. Treasury bill have a risk premium that is higher than, lower than, or the same as that of a similar security (in terms of maturity and liquidity) issued by the government of Colombia?
A U.S. Treasury bill will have a lower risk premium since U.S. government issued securities are usually considered to be default free.
Risk premiums on corporate bonds are usually anticyclical; that is, they decrease during business cycle expansions and increase during recessions. Why is this so? Part 2
As the economy enters an expansion, there is greater likelihood that borrowers will be able to service their debt.
Periodic payments of net earnings to shareholders are known as
dividends.
John values ABC stock at $10 per share. Susan values it at $15 per share, and Bill values it at $20 per share. In a free-market auction, the individual who ends up buying the item is Which of the following is true regarding the pricing of assets? If John, Jennifer, Arthur, and Lisa are the only prospective buyers of a stock, and they have the discount rates 11%, 17%, 7% and 12%, respectively, then the buyer who will be able to obtain the stock is
Bill other things being the same, the price is set by the buyers with the most amount of information regrading the stock Arthur
Which of the following long−term bonds has the highest interest rate?
Corporate Baa bonds
Which of the following securities has the lowest interest rate?
U.S. Treasury bonds
Prior to 2008, mortgage lenders required a house inspection to assess its value, and often used the same one or two inspection companies in the same geographical market. Following the collapse of the housing market in 2008, mortgage lenders required a house inspection, but this was arranged through a third party. How does this illustrate a conflict of interest similar to the role that credit-rating agencies played in the global financial crisis?
Inspection companies may have provided overly optimistic assessments of home values to ensure continued work in the future.
Suppose the interest rates on one-, five-, and ten-year U.S. Treasury bonds are currently 3%, 6%, and 6%, respectively. Investor A chooses to hold only one-year bonds, and Investor B is indifferent with regard to holding five- and ten-year bonds. Which theories best explain the behavior of Investors A and B?
Investor A's preferences are best explained by the segmented markets theory, while Investor B's preferences are more consistent with the expectations theory.
If junk bonds are "junk," then why would investors buy them?
Junk bonds can provide high yields.
What basic principle of finance can be applied to the valuation of any investment asset?
Present value
If monetary policy becomes more transparent about the future course of interest rates, how would that affect stock prices, if at all?
Stock prices will increase, as the risk and required return on the investment will be reduced.
During 2008, the difference in yield (the yield spread) between 3-month AA-rated financial commercial paper and 3-month AA-rated nonfinancial commercial paper steadily increased from its usual level of close to zero, spiking to over a full percentage point at its peak in October 2008. Which of the following explains this sudden increase?
The increase in the yield spread was a result of the decrease in demand for financial commercial paper due to the uncertainty and soundness of financial companies and banks.
Expectations theory Preferred habitat Segmented markets
The interest rate on a long-term bond will equal an average of the short-term interest rates that people expect to occur over the life of the long-term bond. The interest rate on a long-term bond will equal an average of short-term interest rates expected to occur over the life of the long-term bond plus a liquidity premium (also referred to as a term premium) that responds to supply and demand conditions for that bond.. The interest rate for each bond with a different maturity is determined by the supply of and demand for that bond, with no effects from expected returns on other bonds with other maturities.
If a yield curve looks like the one shown in the figure to the right, what is the market predicting about the movement of future short-term interest rates? What might the yield curve indicate about the market's predictions for the inflation rate in the future?
The market is predicting that future short-term interest rates will increase The market's predictions indicate that inflation will be higher in the future.
If a yield curve looks like the one shown in the diagram to the right, what is the market predicting about the movement of future short-term interest rates? What might the yield curve indicate about the market's predictions for the inflation rate in the future?
The market is predicting that short-term interest rates will increase in the near term, then decrease in the long term The market's predictions indicate that inflation will increase in the near term, then decrease in the long term
Consider tight money policy and its effects on stock prices via the simplified Gordon growth model equation Which of the following accurately describes the effects of tight money policy on stock prices, according to this model? Again, consider the effect of tight money policy on stock prices. Which of the following accurately describes the effects of tight money policy on stock prices, according to this model?
The return on bonds and the required return on an equity investment (ke) would rise, while the price of stock (P0) would fall. The economy would slow down, causing an increase in the denominator of the simplified Gordon growth model and a decrease in the price of stock (P0).
In 2010 and 2011, the government of Greece risked defaulting on its debt due to a severe budget crisis. Using bond market graphs, determine how default would affect the risk premium between U.S. Treasury debt and Greek debt with comparable maturity. In the case of default, what would happen to the risk premium between U.S. Treasury debt and comparable maturity Greek debt?
The risk premium would increase, which corresponds to segment B on the graphs above
In the fall of 2008, AIG, the largest insurance company in the world at the time, was at risk of defaulting due to the severity of the global financial crisis. As a result, the U.S. government stepped in to support AIG with large capital injections and an ownership stake. How would this affect, if at all, the yield and risk premium on AIG corporate debt?
The yield and risk premium will fall since demand for AIG corporate debt will increase.
If expectations of future short-term interest rates suddenly fall, what would happen to the slope of the yield curve?
The yield curve would become flatter
Following a policy meeting on March 19, 2009, the Federal Reserve made an announcement that it would purchase up to $300 billion of longer-term Treasury securities over the following six months. What effect might this policy have on the yield curve?
The yield curve would shift down, but mostly on medium- and long-term maturities.
Which of the following bonds are considered to be default−risk free?
U.S. Treasury bonds
Just before the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in 2007, the most important credit-rating agencies rated mortgage-backed securities with Aaa and AAA ratings. Explain how it was possible that a few months into 2008, the same securities had the lowest possible ratings. Should we always trust credit-rating agencies?
When housing prices began to fall and subprime mortgages began to default, many AAA-rated products had to be downgraded over and over again. No. Sometimes there are conflicts of interests in credit-rating agencies.
If the yield curve suddenly becomes steeper, how would you revise your predictions of interest rates in the future?
You would raise your predictions of future interest rates.
Suppose that you are asked to forecast future stock prices of ABC Corporation, so you proceed to collect all available information. The day you announce your forecast, competitors of ABC Corporation announce a brand new plan to merge and reshape the structure of the industry. Would your forecast still be considered optimal? (Select all that apply.)
Your forecast is considered optimal, but for a short period of time. Your forecast is still considered to be optimal, since it was made with all available information at the time.
Some economists think that central banks should try to prick bubbles in the stock market before they get out of hand and cause later damage when they burst. How can monetary policy be used to prick a bubble? Explain how it can do this using the Gordon growth model.
a bubble is created that when investors belive they have valid information that the growth of a dividnet will be very high and so g is hisg leading to making the bottom of the function small and dividnet outcome high. The government can come in and rise its interest rates that leads to the rising of the rquired rate of return and a decrease in teh expected dividens. If investors lower the required rate of return this bubble can be created to and with lowering interest rates the gocernemtn can increase the required rate of return.
If you have a very low tolerance for risk, which of the following bonds would you be least likely to hold in your portfolio?
a corporate bond with a rating of Baa
If the yield curve is flat for short maturities and then slopes downward for longer maturities, the liquidity premium theory (assuming a mild preference for shorter−term bonds) indicates that the market is predicting.
a decline in short−term interest rates in the near future and an even steeper decline further out in the future.
When the yield curve is flat or downward−sloping, it suggest that the economy is more likely to enter
a recession.
A plot of the yields on bonds with different terms to maturity but the same risk, liquidity, and tax considerations is known as
a yield curve.
A key assumption in the segmented markets theory is that bonds of different maturities
are not substitutes at all.
According to the expectations theory of the term structure, the interest rate on a long−term bond will equal the ________ of the short−term interest rates that people expect to occur over the life of the long−term bond.
average
When short−term interest rates are expected to fall sharply in the future, the yield curve will
be inverted.
If the yield curve has a mild upward slope, the liquidity premium theory (assuming a mild preference for shorter−term bonds) indicates that the market is predicting
constant short−term interest rates in the near future and further out in the future.
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure, a flat yield curve indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
decline moderately in the future.
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure, a downward sloping yield curve indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
decline sharply in the future.
If the dividend of a stock decreases, then according to the Gordon Growth Model, holding everything else constant, the price of the stock will
decrease
The ________ of the term structure of interest rates states that the interest rate on a long−term bond will equal the average of short−term interest rates that individuals expect to occur over the life of the long−term bond, and investors have no preference for short−term bonds relative to long−term bonds.
expectations theory
The U−shaped yield curve in the figure above indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
fall sharply in the near−term and rise later on.
Forecasters' predictions of inflation are notoriously inaccurate, so their expectations of inflation cannot be rationalLOADING....' Is this statement true, false, or uncertain? Explain your answer.
false under the rational expectations theory it is says that all expectations are rational since they where made with the best possible information at the time and so they are rational
The typical shape for a yield curve is
gently upward sloping.
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure.
if yield curves are downward sloping, then short−term interest rates are expected to fall by so much that, even when the positive term premium is added, long−term rates fall below short−term rates.
If DuWop announces an increase in the annual dividend, Div, the price of a share of DuWop will If investors develop a greater aversion to risk or view DuWop stock as having greater risk, k, the share price will If investors expect an increase in the growth, g, of earnings and dividends over the next 5 years, the price of a share of DuWop wil
increase decrease increase
A(n) ________ in the liquidity of corporate bonds will ________ the price of corporate bonds and ________ the yield on corporate bonds, all else equal.
increase; increase; decrease
The coronavirus pandemic
increased the Baa-Aaa spread.
According to the segmented markets theory of the term structure.
interest rates on bonds of different maturities do not move together over time.
According to the expectations theory of the term structure
interest rates on bonds of different maturities move together over time.
Bonds with relatively low risk of default are called ________ securities and have a rating of Baa (or BBB) and above; bonds with ratings below Baa (or BBB) have a higher default risk and are called ________.
investment grade; junk bonds
Given the market activity shown in the diagrams above, the risk premium Based on this information, it is more likely that the economy is entering
is decreasing. an expansion
Bonds with relatively high risk of default are called
junk bonds.
The ________ of the term structure states the following: the interest rate on a long−term bond will equal an average of short−term interest rates expected to occur over the life of the long−term bond plus a term premium that responds to supply and demand conditions for that bond.
liquidity premium theory
The preferred habitat theory of the term structure is closely related to the
liquidity premium theory of the term structure.
When yield curves are steeply upward sloping,
long−term interest rates are above short−term interest rates.
The Obama administration increased the tax on the top income tax bracket from 35% to 39%. Supply and demand analysis predicts the impact of this change was a ________ interest rate on municipal bonds and a ________ interest rate on Treasury bonds.
lower; higher
math
math
graph problem
no answer
math problem
no answer
If the expected path of 1−year interest rates over the next five years is 2 percent, 4 percent, 1 percent, 4 percent, and 3 percent, the expectations theory predicts that the bond with the lowest interest rate today is the one with a maturity of
one year.
The value of any investment is found by computing the
present value of all future cash flows.
According to the Generalized Dividend Model, the final sales price of a stock depends on the following except the If a company called Advanced Technologies has yet to pay a dividend on its stock, the generalized dividend model predicts that the company's stock may still have value because
price of the stock in the last period. people expect Advanced Technologies to pay dividends in the future.
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure, a slightly upward sloping yield curve indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
remain unchanged in the future.
According to the Gordon Growth Model, the price of stocks depend on the following except When your required return on an equity investment decreases, then according to the Gordon Growth Model you will be willing to pay
return on Treasure bills more for the investment
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure, a steeply upward sloping yield curve indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
rise in the future.
The mound−shaped yield curve in the figure above indicates that short−term interest rates are expected to
rise in the near−term and fall later on.
The spread between the interest rates on bonds with default risk and default−free bonds is called the
risk premium.
When yield curves are flat,
short−term interest rates are about the same as long−term interest rates.
When yield curves are downward sloping,
short−term interest rates are above long−term interest rates.
The steeply upward sloping yield curve in the figure above indicates that
short−term interest rates are expected to rise in the future.
An inverted yield curve
slopes down
A ________ yield curve predicts a future increase in inflation.
steeply upward sloping
table
table
The spread between the interest rate on a one-year U.S. Treasury bond and a 20-year U.S. Treasury bond is known as the According to the expectations theory of the term structure of interest rates, if the one-year bond rate is 3%, and the two-year bond rate is 4%, next year's one-year rate is expected to be
term premium 5%
The additional incentive that the purchaser of a Treasury security requires to buy a long−term security rather than a short−term security is called the
term premium.
Municipal bonds have default risk, yet their interest rates are usually lower than the rates on default−free Treasury bonds. This suggests that
the benefit from the tax−exempt status of municipal bonds exceeds their default risk.
The current one-year bond and two-year bond interest rates are both 4% and the one-year and two-year term premia are 0 and 1%, respectively. The liquidity premium theory of the term structure predicts that the expected one-year bond interest rate next year is
2%.
Monetary policy affects stock prices through the following except Suppose that the Fed engages in an expansionary monetary policy, which reduces interest rates. Which of the following statements best describes the impact of this event on the stock market?
the changes in the price level. There will be an DECREASE in the required rate of return on equities, a increase in the growth rate on dividends, and stock prices will rise.
According to the segmented markets theory of the term structure
the interest rate for each maturity bond is determined by supply and demand for that maturity bond.
Everything else held constant, if the tax−exempt status of municipal bonds were eliminated, then
the interest rate on municipal bonds would exceed the rate on Treasury bonds.
According to the liquidity premium theory of the term structure
the rate on long−term bonds will equal an average of short−term interest rates that people expect to occur over the life of the long−term bonds plus a term premium.
The risk structure of interest rates is
the relationship among interest rates of different bonds with the same maturity.
The segmented markets theory can explain
why yield curves usually tend to slope upward.
The spread between interest rates on low quality corporate bonds and U.S. government bonds
widened significantly during the Great Depression.
An inverted yield curve predicts that short−term interest rates
will fall in the future.
The current one-year bond and two-year bond interest rates are both 4% and the market expects the one-year bond interest rate to go down by 1% next year. This implies that the two-year term premium is
0.5%.
Over the next three years, the expected path of 1-year interest rates is 4%, 1%, and 1%, and the current one-year, two-year, and three-year bond interest rates are 4%, 2%, and 4%, respectively. Then the three-year term premium is Part 2
2%
Over the next three years, the expected path of one-year interest rates is 4%, 1%, and 1%. Today if you buy $1 of a one-year bond and when it matures you use the money you receive to buy another one-year bond, then your expected rate of return for this $1 investment is _______%. The expectations theory of the term structure implies that the current interest rate on a two-year bond must be _______%. Part 2
5; 2.5
Everything else held constant, if the federal government were to guarantee today that it will pay creditors if a corporation goes bankrupt in the future, the interest rate on corporate bonds will ________ and the interest rate on Treasury securities will ________.
decrease; increase
The Trump administration decreased the tax on high-income taxpayers from 39.6% to 37%. Supply and demand analysis predicts the impact of this change is a _______ interest rate on municipal bonds and a _______ interest rate on Treasury bonds, all else the same. Part 2
higher; lower
If the probability of a bond default increases because corporations begin to suffer large losses, then the default risk on corporate bonds will ________ and the expected return on these bonds will ________, everything else held constant.
increase; decrease
Consider the bull market, led in large part by the strong performance of tech stocks, that existed in the US in July 1997. On 17 July of that year, the Dow hit one in a long series of record highs at it exceeded 8000 (8038.88, to be exact - to put that into perspective, consider that it stayed mostly in the 2000s during the preceding decade). A number of contributing factors have been credited, at least partially, for this strong performance: —Low interest rates —High dividends —High projected dividend growth We will consider each of these factors separately in the questions that follow. Consider the factor of low interest rates that existed during the bull market in July 1997. Which of the following accurately describes the role these low interest rates played in high stock prices? Now consider the factor of high dividends that existed during the bull market of July 1997. Which of the following accurately describes the role these high dividends played in high stock prices? Finally, consider the factor of high projected dividend growth that existed during the bull market of July 1997. Which of the following accurately describes the role this high projected dividend growth played in high stock prices?
ke decreased, causing a decrease in the denominator of the Gordon growth model equation D0 was high, causing an increase in the numerator of the Gordon growth model equationg was high, causing an increase in the numerator and a decrease in the denominator of the Gordon growth model equation g was high, causing an increase in the numerator and a decrease in the denominator of the Gordon growth model equation
When the Treasury bond market becomes more liquid, other things equal, the demand curve for corporate bonds shifts to the ________ and the demand curve for Treasury bonds shifts to the ________.
left; right
A bond with default risk will always have a ________ risk premium and an increase in its default risk will ________ the risk premium.
positive; raise
An increase in the riskiness of corporate bonds will ________ the price of corporate bonds and ________ the price of Treasury bonds, everything else held constant.
reduce; increase