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Finance
Q:
Firms with the most profitable investment opportunities are willing and able to pay the most for capital, so they tend to attract it away from less efficient firms or from those whose products are not in demand.
a. True
b. False
Q:
If a stock pays a dividend of $10, and the investors need 8 percent return on their investment, then the investors should pay _____ for the stock.
a. $150
b. $200
c. $350
d. $125
e. $75
Q:
The value of an asset is determined by discounting the future cash flows generated by the asset using the:
a. tax rate.
b. interest rate.
c. inflation rate.
d. deficit rate.
e. surplus rate.
Q:
A foreign trade deficit occurs when a country's _____.
a. imports are greater than its exports
b. tax revenues are greater than its expenditures
c. savings rate is higher than its borrowing rate
d. purchase of Treasury securities is more than sale of Treasury securities
e. cash reserves are higher than its expenses
Q:
Everything else equal, if the United States runs a large foreign trade deficit, the financing of the deficit will:
a. decrease sales of Treasury securities.
b. increase interest rates.
c. increase government subsidies.
d. increase the money supply.
e. decrease tax revenue.
Q:
The Federal Reserve purchases U.S. Treasury securities to:
a. increase the money supply.
b. reduce credit availability.
c. increase interest rates.
d. decrease expected inflation.
e. increase tax rates.
Q:
If the Federal Reserve loosens the money supply to control growth in the economy, _____.
a. inflation will decrease
b. interest rates will decrease
c. sale of Treasury securities will increase
d. credit supply will decrease
e. economic activity will decrease
Q:
Open market operations occur when _____.
a. municipal authorities bring out policies that provide better social security benefits.
b. the government improves the infrastructure of the economy to attract foreign investors.
c. the Federal Reserve buys or sells Treasury securities to expand or contract the U.S. money supply.
d. private companies establish agencies to trade their stocks in the market.
e. the public establishes a non-profit entity to trade in the market on behalf of the community.
Q:
When the economy is expanding too quickly and the Federal Reserve (Fed) wants to control future growth in the economy, the Fed will:
a. decrease the money supply.
b. reduce the taxes levied on the public.
c. increase the expenditure incurred on social benefits.
d. purchase securities from the public.
e. provide subsidies to the corporations.
Q:
Which of the following factors will lead to an increase in interest rates?
a. Deflation
b. Federal deficit
c. Contraction
d. Recession
e. Trade surplus
Q:
Which of the following is true of federal deficit?
a. Other things held constant, the larger the federal deficit, the lower the level of government expenses.
b. Other things held constant, the larger the federal deficit, the higher the level of the national income.
c. Other things held constant, the larger the federal deficit, the more taxes the government collects.
d. Other things held constant, the larger the federal deficit, the lower the inflation rate in the economy of a country.
e. Other things held constant, the larger the federal deficit, the higher the level of interest rates on borrowings.
Q:
A federal deficit occurs when _____.
a. the government issues securities to the public
b. stock prices of private companies decrease
c. social security benefits given to citizens are reduced
d. the government's expenses are greater than its tax revenues
e. the money supply in the market decreases
Q:
During _____, both the demand for money and the rate of inflation tend to fall, which prompts the Fed to take actions to decrease interest rates.
a. expansions
b. a fiscal deficit occurrence
c. recessions
d. economic booms
e. a foreign trade deficit occurrence
Q:
During periods of _____, the general tendency is toward higher interest rates.
a. inflation
b. recession
c. contraction
d. fiscal surplus
e. securitization
Q:
If the Federal Reserve sells $50 billion of short-term U.S. Treasury securities to the public, other things held constant, what will this tend to do to short-term security prices and interest rates?
a. Prices and interest rates will both rise.
b. Prices will rise and interest rates will decline.
c. Prices and interest rates will both decline.
d. Prices will decline and interest rates will rise.
e. There will be no changes in either prices or interest rates.
Q:
The _________ theory that has been developed to explain the shape of the yield curve suggests that the curve should normally be upward sloping, because, everything else equal, an upward sloping curve implies that lenders prefer to lend short-term funds at lower rates than they lend long-term funds.
a. liquidity preference
b. expectations
c. market segmentation
d. open market
e. reinvestment
Q:
Assume that the expectations theory holds and that liquidity and maturity risk premiums are zero. The annual rate of interest on a two-year Treasury bond is 10.5 percent and the rate on a one-year Treasury bond is 12 percent. What is the expected one-year interest rate during the second year?
a. 9.0%
b. 9.5%
c. 10.0%
d. 10.5%
e. 11.0%
Q:
The yield on a one-year Treasury bond is 5 percent, and the yield on a two-year Treasury bond is 6 percent. Assume that the pure expectations theory holds and that the market is in equilibrium. Which of the following statements is correct?
a. The maturity risk premium is negative.
b. Interest rates are expected to fall over the next two years by 3 percent.
c. The market expects one-year interest rate during the second year to be 7 percent.
d. The default risk premium is highest for Year 2.
e. The liquidity risk premium is highest for Year 1.
Q:
A normal yield curve that is upward sloping implies that:
a. the returns on short-term securities are higher than the returns on long-term securities of similar risk.
b. the returns on long-term securities are equal to the returns on short-term securities of similar risk.
c. the returns on short-term securities are lower than the returns on long-term securities of similar risk.
d. the returns on bonds with higher maturity risks are lower than the returns on bonds with lower maturity risks.
e. the returns on bonds with a lower default risks are higher than the returns on bonds with higher default risks.
Q:
Assume that the current yield curve is upward sloping or normal. This implies that:
a. short-term interest rates are more volatile than long-term rates.
b. inflation is expected to subside in the future.
c. the economy is at the trough of a business cycle.
d. long-term bonds are less attractive to investors than short-term bonds.
e. short-term interest rates are lower than the long-term interest rates.
Q:
Everything else the same, if the yield curve is downward sloping, what is the yield to maturity on a 10-year Treasury coupon bond, relative to that on a one-year Treasury bond (T-bond)?
a. The yield on the 10-year bond is less than the yield on a one-year bond.
b. The yield on a 10-year bond will always be higher than the yield on a one-year bond because of maturity premiums.
c. It is impossible to tell without knowing the coupon rates of the bonds.
d. The yields on the two bonds are equal.
e. It is impossible to tell without knowing the relative risks of the two bonds.
Q:
The current interest rate on a one-year bond is 4 percent and the current rate on a two-year bond is 4.4 percent. If the expectations theory of the term structure is correct, what is the one-year interest rate expected during Year 2? That is, compute the rate that is expected to exist only during Year 2. (Base your answer on an arithmetic average rather than a geometric average.)
a. 4.8%
b. 4.2%
c. 4.4%
d. 0.4%
e. 8.4%
Q:
Following are the yields on selected Treasury securities:
Maturity Yield
2 years 1.6%
3 years 2.2
4 years 2.4
Using the expectations theory, compute the expected one-year interest rate in Year 3. That is, compute the rate that is expected to exist only during Year 3. (Base your answer on an arithmetic average rather than a geometric average.)
a. 2.2%
b. 1.6%
c. 3.4%
d. 1.9%
e. 3.0%
Q:
Assume that the current interest rate on a one-year bond is 8 percent, the current rate on a two-year bond is 10 percent, and the current rate on a three-year bond is 12 percent. If the expectations theory of the term structure is correct, what is the one-year interest rate expected during Year 3? (Base your answer on an arithmetic average rather than a geometric average.)
a. 12%
b. 16%
c. 13%
d. 10%
e. 14%
Q:
Following is information about three bonds:
Issuer Yield Time to Maturity
Treasury 2.0% 6 months
Company A 5.0 5 years
Company B 5.3 8 years
Although none of the bonds has a liquidity premium, any bond with a maturity equal to one year or greater has a maturity risk premium (MRP). Except for their terms to maturity, the characteristics of the Company A and Company B bonds are the same (including their default risk). The average inflation rate is expected to remain constant during the next 10 years. What is the default risk premium (DRP) associated with the bonds issued by Company A and Company B?
a. 3.0%
b. 0.3%
c. 0.6%
d. 3.2%
e. 2.5%
Q:
Assume that the expectations theory of the term structure of interest rates is correct, and other term structure theories are invalid. If a downward sloping yield curve is observed, which of the following is a correct statement?
a. Investors expect interest rates to be constant over time.
b. Investors expect interest rates to increase in the future.
c. Investors expect interest rates to decrease in the future.
d. Investors require a negative maturity risk premium.
e. The inflation premium must be greater than 2 percent.
Q:
Which of the following is true of the market segmentation theory?
a. According to the market segmentation theory, the shape of the yield curve depends on investors' expectations about future inflation rates.
b. According to the market segmentation theory, the yield curve can only be upward sloping at any given time.
c. According to the market segmentation theory, lenders prefer to make short-term loans rather than long-term loans.
d. According to the market segmentation theory, the yield curve can only be flat at any given time.
e. According to the market segmentation theory, the slope of the yield curve depends on supply/demand conditions of a security in the long- and short-term markets.
Q:
Which of the following statements is correct?
a. Other things held constant, the "liquidity preference theory" would generally lead to an upward sloping yield curve.
b. Other things held constant, the "market segmentation theory" would generally lead to an upward sloping yield curve.
c. Other things held constant, the "expectations theory" would generally lead to an upward sloping yield curve.
d. Other things held constant, the yield curve under "normal" conditions would be horizontal (i.e., flat).
e. Other things held constant, a downward sloping yield curve would suggest that investors expect interest rates to increase in the future.
Q:
Securities that can be easily converted into cash on short notice at a price that is close to the original cost generally have a:
a. low liquidity premium.
b. high maturity risk premium.
c. high inflation premium.
d. low budget risk premium.
e. high real risk premium.
Q:
Which of the following bonds has the greatest default risk?
a. A U.S Treasury bond with a two-year maturity
b. An AAA corporate bond with a seven-year maturity
c. A BBB corporate bond with a three-year maturity
d. A CCC corporate bond with a 10-year maturity
e. An AAA corporate bond with a 10-year maturity
Q:
Which of the following statements is true?
a. Treasury bonds have zero default risk.
b. The longer the maturity of a bond, the less risky it is.
c. The real risk-free rate incorporates an inflation premium.
d. Liquidity premium is included only for highly liquid securities.
e. The default risk is greater for AAA-rated corporate bonds than for BBB-rated bonds with the same features.
Q:
Which of the following is the yield of a bond that offers a risk-free rate of 4 percent and a risk premium of 2 percent?
a. 2%
b. 8%
c. 12%
d. 6%
e. 9%
Q:
A corporate bond that yields 12 percent includes a risk-free rate of 7 percent and a default risk premium of 3 percent. The bond's maturity risk premium is _____.
a. 1 percent
b. 10 percent
c. 4 percent
d. 2 percent
e. 6 percent
Q:
You are given the following data:
r* = real risk-free rate 4%
Constant inflation premium (IP) 7%
Maturity risk premium (MRP) 1%
Default risk premium for AAA bonds (DRP) 3%
Liquidity premium for long-term Treasury bonds (T-bonds) (LP) 2%
Assume that a highly liquid market does not exist for long-term T-bonds, and the expected rate of inflation is a constant. Given these conditions, the rate on long-term Treasury bonds is _____.
a. 23 percent
b. 11 percent
c. 14 percent
d. 19 percent
e. 27 percent
Q:
Assume that real risk-free rate (r*) = 1.00%; the maturity risk premium is found as MRP = 0.20% (t 1), where t = years to maturity; the default risk premium for AT&T bonds is found as DRP = 0.07% (t 1); the liquidity premium (LP) is 0.50 percent for AT&T bonds but zero for Treasury bonds; and inflation is expected to be 7 percent, 6 percent, and 5 percent during the next three years and then 4 percent thereafter. What is the difference in interest rates between 10-year AT&T bonds and 10-year Treasury bonds? (Round answer to two decimal places.)
a. 0.25%
b. 0.50%
c. 0.63%
d. 1.00%
e. 1.13%
Q:
Which of the following statements describes a liquidity premium?
a. It is a premium added by investors to the real risk-free rate of return to account for inflation that is expected to exist during the life of an investment.
b. It is a premium that denotes the difference between the interest rate on a U.S. Treasury bond and a corporate bond of equal maturity and marketability.
c. It is a premium that investors add to account for the risk of fluctuations in the interest rate of an investment.
d. It is a premium investors add to the real risk-free rate of return to account for the risk of longer maturity bonds having greater default risks.
e. It is a premium that is added to the rate on a security if the security cannot be converted to cash on short notice at a price that is close to the original cost.
Q:
Assume that a three-year Treasury note (T-note) has no maturity premium, and that the real risk-free rate of interest is 3 percent. If the T-note carries a nominal risk-free rate of return of 13 percent and if the expected average inflation rate over the next two years is 9 percent, what is the implied expected inflation rate during Year 3?
a. 7%
b. 12%
c. 9%
d. 11%
e. 18%
Q:
Assume that the real risk-free rate is 4 percent, and that inflation is expected to be 9 percent in Year 1, 6 percent in Year 2, and 4 percent thereafter. Also, assume that all Treasury bonds are highly liquid and free of default risk. If 2-year and 5-year Treasury bonds both yield 12 percent, what is the difference in the maturity risk premiums (MRPs) on the two bonds, i.e., what is MRP5 MRP2? (Round answer to one decimal place.)
a. 2.1%
b. 1.8%
c. 0.5%
d. 3.1%
e. 2.6%
Q:
Assume that the expected rates of inflation over the next 5 years are 4 percent, 7 percent, 10 percent, 8 percent, and 6 percent, respectively. What is the average expected inflation rate over this 5-year period?
a. 6%
b. 9%
c. 8%
d. 5%
e. 7%
Q:
You read in The Wall Street Journal that 30-day T-bills are currently yielding 8 percent. Your brother-in-law, a broker at Kyoto Securities, has given you the following estimates of current interest rate premiums:
Inflation premium 5%
Liquidity premium 1%
Maturity risk premium 2%
Default risk premium 2%
Based on these data, the real risk-free rate of return is:
a. 0 percent.
b. 1 percent.
c. 2 percent.
d. 3 percent.
e. 4 percent.
Q:
Treasury securities that mature in 6 years currently have an interest rate of 8.50 percent. Inflation is expected to be 5 percent in each of the next three years and 6 percent each year thereafter. The maturity risk premium is estimated to be 0.10% (t 1), where t is equal to the maturity of the bond (i.e., the maturity risk premium of a one-year bond is zero). The real risk-free rate is assumed to be constant over time. What is the real risk-free rate of interest?
a. 5.50%
b. 0.50%
c. 1.00%
d. 1.75%
e. 2.50%
Q:
Which of the following is true of the real risk-free rate of interest?
a. Most experts think that the real risk-free rate fluctuates in the range of 15 to 20 percent in the United States.
b. The real risk-free rate must include a component for the average inflation.
c. The real risk-free rate is the sum of nominal rate of interest and the average inflation rate.
d. It is easy to measure the real risk-free rate precisely.
e. It is the rate of interest that would exist on default-free U.S. Treasury securities if no inflation were expected in the future.
Q:
Which of the following statements is correct?
a. The probability of default is higher on short-term bonds than on long-term bonds.
b. Reinvestment rate risk is lower, other things held constant, on long-term than on short-term bonds.
c. According to the market segmentation theory, the yield curve is expected to slope downward.
d. Borrowers prefer to borrow on a short-term basis, as a result, the yield curve is downward sloping.
e. If the inflation is expected to decrease in the future, then the yield curve should have an upward slope.
Q:
Your uncle would like to restrict his interest rate risk and his default risk, but he would still like to invest in corporate bonds. Which of the bonds listed below best satisfies your uncle's criteria?
a. An AAA bond with 10 years to maturity
b. A BBB perpetual bond
c. A BBB bond with 10 years to maturity
d. An AAA bond with 5 years to maturity
e. A BBB bond with 5 years to maturity
Q:
Which of the following indicates that the cost of money will increase?
a. Increase in the rate of inflation in an economy
b. Increase in liquidity of an asset
c. Decrease in federal deficit of a country
d. Increase in money supply
e. Decrease in tax rates for corporations
Q:
Everything else the same, the higher the expected rate of inflation, _____.
a. the lower the loss in purchasing power of investors
b. the higher the required rate of return on an investment
c. the lower the maturity premium required by the investors
d. the higher the money supply in the economy
e. the lower the tax rate in the economy
Q:
The change in the market value of an asset over a particular time period is called the _____.
a. yield
b. maturity
c. capital gain
d. interest income
e. dividend income
Q:
Andrew purchased a stock for $175 and sold it for $250 one year later. If he earned a dividend income of $30, the stock's yield is:
a. 42 percent.
b. 53 percent.
c. 81 percent.
d. 60 percent.
e. 72 percent.
Q:
A bond purchased for $950 was sold for $980 after one year. The interest received during the year is $25. Which of the following is the bond's yield?
a. 2.23%
b. 5.79%
c. 8.12%
d. 5.25%
e. 9.36%
Q:
_____ can be negative if the value of the investment decreases during the period it is held.
a. Risk
b. Dividends
c. Maturity
d. Interests
e. Capital gains
Q:
In the financial market context, _____ is the chance that a financial asset will not earn the return promised.
a. maturity
b. production opportunity
c. time preference for consumption
d. risk
e. inflation
Q:
_____ is the tendency of prices to increase over time.
a. Maturity
b. Recession
c. Inflation
d. Risk
e. Liquidity
Q:
The production opportunities that exist in the economy represents one of the four fundamental factors that affect the:
a. creditworthiness of investors.
b. cost of money.
c. liquidity of securities.
d. political risk that is inherent in an economy.
e. maturity of an investment.
Q:
Everything else equal, which of the following actions would tend to increase interest rates in the financial markets?
a. Investors' time preferences for consumption increase.
b. Investors are exposed to fewer economic risks.
c. Production opportunities decrease throughout the economy.
d. The overall creditworthiness of borrowers improves significantly.
e. The default probabilities of corporations decline substantially.
Q:
If a loan is to be repaid in equal periodic amounts (monthly, quarterly, or annually), it is said to be an amortized loan.
a. True
b. False
Q:
Everything else equal, the greater the number of compounding periods per year, the greater the effective rate of return that is earned on an investment.
a. True
b. False
Q:
The effective annual rate (rEAR) considers the effect of compounding, whereas annual percentage rate (APR) does not consider the effect of compounding.
a. True
b. False
Q:
The present value of an uneven cash flow can be determined by using the annuity equations.
a. True
b. False
Q:
The present value of an investment increases as the opportunity cost rate increases.
a. True
b. False
Q:
An investment carries an interest rate of 8 percent compounded annually. When using the time value of money functions of a financial calculator, the interest rate is entered as 8, whereas it is entered as 0.08 when using a spreadsheet to make the time value of money calculations.
a. True
b. False
Q:
The rate of return on the best available alternative investment of equal risk is the risk-adjusted required rate of return.
a. True
b. False
Q:
Gale Corporation leases the printing equipment it uses. The terms of the lease require the monthly lease payments to be made at the beginning of every month. This is an example of an annuity due.
a. True
b. False
Q:
Ordinary annuity is an annuity with payments that occur at the beginning of each period.
a. True
b. False
Q:
David borrowed $120,000 for his business to be repaid in six equal annual installment. The lender charges 6.5 percent interest on the amount of the loan balance that is outstanding at the beginning of each year. The interest component in the amount of the annual installment will be the smallest at the end of:
a. sixth year.
b. first year.
c. third year.
d. fourth year.
e. fifth year.
Q:
Frank purchased his house 16 years ago by taking out a 25-year mortgage for $150,000. The mortgage has a fixed interest rate of 5 percent compounded monthly. If he wants to pay off his mortgage today, how much money does he need? He made his most recent mortgage payment earlier today. (Round your intermediate calculation and your answer to two decimal places.)
a. $65,459.98
b. $70,856.65
c. $76,136.95
d. $80,425.21
e. $85,024.66
Q:
Ross purchased a new commercial vehicle today for $25,000. The entire amount was financed using a five-year loan with a 4 percent interest rate (compounded monthly). How much will Ross owe on his vehicle loan after making payments for three years (i.e., when two years of payments remain)?
a. $10,089.56
b. $10,602.44
c. $10,857.28
d. $11,345.77
e. $11,568.25
Q:
Kim has just graduated from law school. She had taken an education loan of $45,000, which now must be repaid in equal monthly installments over the next six years. What is the amount of the monthly loan repayment, if the loan carries a simple annual interest of 5 percent? The first payment will be made in one month.
a. $689.76
b. $721.71
c. $702.46
d. $658.92
e. $724.72
Q:
Mira has saved $25,000 over the years and she has the option of investing it in either of the two investment plans. Investment A offers 12 percent interest compounded monthly, whereas Investment B pays 13 percent interest compounded semiannually. What would be the difference between the future values of the two investments if Mira's investment horizon is seven years?
a. $4,204.52
b. $3,577.87
c. $1,152.34
d. $2,703.78
e. $3,250.22
Q:
If Alvin invests $5,500 today in a savings account, the money will grow to $8,500 at the end of Year 4. Assuming that the interest is paid once per year, the effective annual rate of the investment is _____.
a. 10.8%
b. 11.5%
c. 12.2%
d. 12.9%
e. 13.6%
Q:
Identify the correct expression for the effective annual rate (EAR).
a. (1 + Periodic rate of interest)Number of borrowing (interest) periods in one year 1
b. (1 / Periodic rate of interest)Number of borrowing (interest) periods in one year 1
c. (1 Periodic rate of interest)Number of borrowing (interest) periods in one year 1
d. (1 + Periodic rate of interest)Number of borrowing (interest) periods in one year + 1
e. (1 Periodic rate of interest)Number of borrowing (interest) periods in one year + 1
Q:
A leading bank offers an investment that pays 8 percent interest, compounded semiannually. What is the investment's effective annual rate (rEAR)?
a. 8.16%
b. 8.36%
c. 8.56%
d. 8.76%
e. 8.96%
Q:
The effective annual rate of an investment is equal to its quoted interest rate when the investment is compounded _____.
a. continuously
b. daily
c. monthly
d. semi-annually
e. annually
Q:
LeGo Financials offer two investment plans. Investment A pays 9 percent interest compounded monthly, whereas Investment B pays 10 percent interest compounded semiannually. What are the effective annual rates of Investment A and Investment B?
a. 9.38 percent and 10.50 percent, respectively
b. 9.38 percent and 10.25 percent, respectively
c. 9.75 percent and 10.25 percent, respectively
d. 9.75 percent and 10.50 percent, respectively
e. 9.94 percent and 10.45 percent, respectively
Q:
Bill is considering investing $450 at the end of every month in a fixed income instrument. He will receive $27,000 at the end of four years. If interest is compounded monthly, what is the effective annual rate of return earned on the investment?
a. 11.6%
b. 22.3%
c. 15.1%
d. 11.1%
e. 13.6%
Q:
Mike is considering investing $18,500 in an investment that will have a maturity value of $32,500 in eight years. If the interest is compounded monthly, what is the effective annual rate of return earned on the investment?
a. 4.3%
b. 5.7%
c. 6.5%
d. 7.3%
e. 8.8%
Q:
Zoey is planning to invest $5,000 in a fixed income security at the end of each of the next four years. She will receive $23,000 at the end of four years. If interest is compounded annually, what is the annual rate of return earned on the investment?
a. 5.7%
b. 7.3%
c. 8.7%
d. 10.2%
e. 9.4%
Q:
Dire invested $10,000 today in an investment that has a maturity value of $13,500 in five years. If the interest is compounded annually, what is the annual rate of return earned on the investment?
a. 7.8%
b. 8.2%
c. 6.2%
d. 4.5%
e. 9.5%
Q:
Five years ago, Brian had invested $14,850 in a growth fund. The investment is worth $22,000 today. If the interest was compounded annually, what is the annual rate of return earned on the investment?
a. 7.3%
b. 8.2%
c. 9.5%
d. 10.8%
e. 11.7%
Q:
Rebecca is currently working, but is planning to start a college in few years. For this purpose, she would need $20,000. Today she can start investing $750 monthly in an investment account that pays 6 percent compounded monthly. How long would it take her to have enough money to start college?
a. 28.5 months
b. 27.8 months
c. 25.0 months
d. 22.6 months
e. 30.3 months
Q:
Paul wants to accumulate $14,500 for the down payment for a new condo. He plans to start investing $2,500 annually beginning today. The investment account will pay 10 percent interest compounded annually. How long would it take him to accumulate enough money to make the down payment?
a. 3.5 years
b. 5.9 years
c. 6.1 years
d. 4.4 years
e. 4.8 years