Exam 2: Risk and Return: Part I
Exam 1: An Overview of Financial Management31 Questions
Exam 2: Risk and Return: Part I86 Questions
Exam 3: Risk and Return: Part II25 Questions
Exam 4: Bond Valuation112 Questions
Exam 5: Basic Stock Valuation92 Questions
Exam 6: Financial Options19 Questions
Exam 7: Accounting for Financial Management67 Questions
Exam 8: Analysis of Financial Statements104 Questions
Exam 9: Financial Planning and Forecasting Financial Statements30 Questions
Exam 10: Determining the Cost of Capital65 Questions
Exam 11: Corporate Valuation and Value-Based Management21 Questions
Exam 12: Capital Budgeting: Decision Criteria82 Questions
Exam 13: Capital Budgeting: Cash Flows and Risk80 Questions
Exam 14: Real Options19 Questions
Exam 15: Capital Structure Decisions: Part I29 Questions
Exam 16: Capital Structure Decisions: Part II31 Questions
Exam 18: Ipos, Investment Banking, and Financial Restructuring27 Questions
Exam 19: Lease Financing23 Questions
Exam 20: Hybrid Financing26 Questions
Exam 21: Working Capital Management142 Questions
Exam 22: Providing and Obtaining Credit39 Questions
Exam 23: Other Topics in Working Capital Management30 Questions
Exam 24: Derivatives and Risk Management14 Questions
Exam 25: Bankruptcy, Reorganization, and Liquidation12 Questions
Exam 26: Mergers, Lbos, Divestitures, and Holding Companies54 Questions
Exam 27: Multinational Financial Management50 Questions
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Which of the following is not a difficulty concerning beta and its estimation?
(Multiple Choice)
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Businesses earn returns for security holders by purchasing and operating physical assets. The relevant risk of any physical asset must be measured in terms of its effect on the risk of the firm's securities.
(True/False)
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An investor has $5,000 invested in a stock which has an estimated beta of 1.2, and another $15,000 invested in the stock of the company for which she works. The risk-free rate is 6 percent and the market risk premium is also 6 percent. The investor calculates that the required rate of return on her total ($20,000) portfolio is 15 percent. What is the beta of the company for which she works?
(Multiple Choice)
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The required return on a firm's common stock is determined by the firm's market risk. If its market risk is known, and if it is expected to remain constant, the analyst has sufficient information to specify the firm's required return.
(True/False)
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A stock's beta is more relevant as a measure of risk to an investor with a well-diversified portfolio than to an investor who holds only one stock.
(True/False)
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You are holding a stock which has a beta of 2.0 and is currently in equilibrium. The required return on the stock is 15 percent, and the return on an average stock is 10 percent. What would be the percentage change in the return on the stock, if the return on an average stock increased by 30 percent while the risk-free rate remained unchanged?
(Multiple Choice)
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HR Corporation has a beta of 2.0, while LR Corporation's beta is 0.5. The risk-free rate is 10 percent, and the required rate of return on an average stock is 15 percent. Now the expected rate of inflation built into rRF falls by 3 percentage points, the real risk-free rate remains constant, the required return on the market falls to 11 percent, and the betas remain constant. When all of these changes are made, what will be the difference in the required returns on HR's and LR's stocks?
(Multiple Choice)
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A mutual fund manager has a $200,000,000 portfolio with a beta = 1.2. Assume that the risk-free rate is 6 percent and that the market risk premium is also 6 percent. The manager expects to receive an additional $50,000,000 in funds soon. She wants to invest these funds in a variety of stocks. After making these additional investments, she wants the fund's expected return to be 13.5 percent. What should be the average beta of the new stocks added to the portfolio?
(Multiple Choice)
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If investors become more averse to risk, the slope of the Security Market Line (SML) will increase.
(True/False)
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If the price of money increases due to greater anticipated inflation, the risk-free rate will reflect this fact. Although rRF will increase, it is possible that the SML required rate of return for a stock will decrease because the market risk premium (rM - rRF) will decrease. (Assume that beta remains constant.)
(True/False)
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Variance is a measure of the variability of returns and since it involves squaring each deviation of the required return from the expected return, it is always larger than its square root, the standard deviation.
(True/False)
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Any change in beta is likely to affect the required rate of return on a security, which implies that a change in beta will likely have an impact on the security's price.
(True/False)
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An investor is forming a portfolio by investing $50,000 in stock A which has a beta of 1.50, and $25,000 in stock B which has a beta of 0.90. The return on the market is equal to 6 percent and Treasury bonds have a yield of 4 percent. What is the required rate of return on the investor's portfolio?
(Multiple Choice)
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Portfolio A has but one security, while Portfolio B has 100 securities. Because of diversification effects, we would expect Portfolio B to have the lower relevant risk, but it is possible for Portfolio A to be less risky.
(True/False)
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Inflation, recession, and high interest rates are economic events which are characterized as
(Multiple Choice)
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Your portfolio consists of $100,000 invested in a stock which has a beta = 0.8, $150,000 invested in a stock which has a beta = 1.2, and $50,000 invested in a stock which has a beta = 1.8. The risk-free rate is 7 percent. Last year this portfolio had a required rate of return of 13 percent. This year nothing has changed except for the fact that the market risk premium has increased by 2 percent (two percentage points). What is the portfolio's current required rate of return?
(Multiple Choice)
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Oakdale Furniture Inc. has a beta coefficient of 0.7 and a required rate of return of 15 percent. The market risk premium is currently 5 percent. If the inflation premium increases by 2 percentage points, and Oakdale acquires new assets which increase its beta by 50 percent, what will be Oakdale's new required rate of return?
(Multiple Choice)
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