Exam 8: Risk and Rates of Return
Exam 1: An Overview of Financial Management97 Questions
Exam 2: Financial Markets and Institutions33 Questions
Exam 3: Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes118 Questions
Exam 4: Analysis of Financial Statements121 Questions
Exam 5: The Value of Money164 Questions
Exam 6: Interest Rates80 Questions
Exam 7: Bonds and Their Valuation91 Questions
Exam 8: Risk and Rates of Return145 Questions
Exam 9: Stocks and Their Valuation86 Questions
Exam 10: The Cost of Capital94 Questions
Exam 11: The Basics of Capital Budgeting94 Questions
Exam 12: Cash Flow Estimation and Risk Analysis65 Questions
Exam 13: Capital Structure and Leverage81 Questions
Exam 15: Working Capital Management122 Questions
Exam 16: Financial Planning and Forecasting36 Questions
Exam 17: Multinational Financial Management50 Questions
Exam 18: Financial and Operating Leverage: Analysis and Calculation67 Questions
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An individual stock's diversifiable risk, which is measured by its beta, can be lowered by adding more stocks to the portfolio in which the stock is held.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
A stock's beta is more relevant as a measure of risk to an investor who holds only one stock than to an investor who holds a well-diversified portfolio.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
Taggart Inc.'s stock has a 50% chance of producing a 25% return, a 30% chance of producing a 10% return, and a 20% chance of producing a −28% return. What is the firm's expected rate of return?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
C
When adding a randomly chosen new stock to an existing portfolio, the higher (or more positive) the degree of correlation between the new stock and stocks already in the portfolio, the less the additional stock will reduce the portfolio's risk.
(True/False)
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Stock A has a beta of 0.7, whereas Stock B has a beta of 1.3. Portfolio P has 50% invested in both A and B. Which of the following would occur if the market risk premium increased by 1% but the risk-free rate remained constant?
(Multiple Choice)
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Stock A has a beta of 0.8 and Stock B has a beta of 1.2. 50% of Portfolio P is invested in Stock A and 50% is invested in Stock B. If the market risk premium (rM − rRF) were to increase but the risk-free rate (rRF) remained constant, which of the following would occur?
(Multiple Choice)
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The slope of the SML is determined by investors' aversion to risk. The greater the average investor's risk aversion, the steeper the SML.
(True/False)
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Nile Food's stock has a beta of 1.4, while Elba Eateries' stock has a beta of 0.7. Assume that the risk-free rate, rRF, is 5.5% and the market risk premium, (rM − rRF), equals 4%. Which of the following statements is CORRECT?
(Multiple Choice)
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Bill Dukes has $100,000 invested in a 2-stock portfolio. $35,000 is invested in Stock X and the remainder is invested in Stock Y. X's beta is 1.50 and Y's beta is 0.70. What is the portfolio's beta?
(Multiple Choice)
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Because of differences in the expected returns on different investments, the standard deviation is not always an adequate measure of risk. However, the coefficient of variation adjusts for differences in expected returns and thus allows investors to make better comparisons of investments' stand-alone risk.
(True/False)
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Which is the best measure of risk for a single asset held in isolation, and which is the best measure for an asset held in a diversified portfolio?
(Multiple Choice)
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Mike Flannery holds the following portfolio: A \ 150,000 1.40 B 50,000 0.80 C 100,000 1.00 D 1.20 Total What is the portfolio's beta?
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose you hold a portfolio consisting of a $10,000 investment in each of 8 different common stocks. The portfolio's beta is 1.25. Now suppose you decided to sell one of your stocks that has a beta of 1.00 and to use the proceeds to buy a replacement stock with a beta of 1.35. What would the portfolio's new beta be?
(Multiple Choice)
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Kollo Enterprises has a beta of 1.10, the real risk-free rate is 2.00%, investors expect a 3.00% future inflation rate, and the market risk premium is 4.70%. What is Kollo's required rate of return?
(Multiple Choice)
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Jim Angel holds a $200,000 portfolio consisting of the following stocks: \ 50,000 0.95 50,000 0.80 50,000 1.00 50,000 1.20 Total
What is the portfolio's beta?
(Multiple Choice)
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Diversification will normally reduce the riskiness of a portfolio of stocks.
(True/False)
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A highly risk-averse investor is considering adding one additional stock to a 3-stock portfolio, to form a 4-stock portfolio. The three stocks currently held all have b = 1.0, and they are perfectly positively correlated with the market. Potential new Stocks A and B both have expected returns of 15%, are in equilibrium, and are equally correlated with the market, with r = 0.75. However, Stock A's standard deviation of returns is 12% versus 8% for Stock B. Which stock should this investor add to his or her portfolio, or does the choice not matter?
(Multiple Choice)
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Bob has a $50,000 stock portfolio with a beta of 1.2, an expected return of 10.8%, and a standard deviation of 25%. Becky also has a $50,000 portfolio, but it has a beta of 0.8, an expected return of 9.2%, and a standard deviation that is also 25%. The correlation coefficient, r, between Bob's and Becky's portfolios is zero. If Bob and Becky marry and combine their portfolios, which of the following best describes their combined $100,000 portfolio?
(Multiple Choice)
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Someone who is risk averse has a general dislike for risk and a preference for certainty. If risk aversion exists in the market, then investors in general are willing to accept somewhat lower returns on less risky securities. Different investors have different degrees of risk aversion, and the end result is that investors with greater risk aversion tend to hold securities with lower risk (and therefore a lower expected return) than investors who have more tolerance for risk.
(True/False)
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If you plotted the returns on a given stock against those of the market, and if you found that the slope of the regression line was negative, the CAPM would indicate that the required rate of return on the stock should be greater than the risk-free rate for a well-diversified investor, assuming that the observed relationship is expected to continue into the future.
(True/False)
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