Exam 5: Understanding Risk
Exam 1: An Introduction to Money and the Financial System31 Questions
Exam 2: Money and the Payments System110 Questions
Exam 3: Financial Instruments, Financial Markets, and Financial Institutions129 Questions
Exam 4: Future Value, Present Value, and Interest Rates123 Questions
Exam 5: Understanding Risk119 Questions
Exam 6: Bonds, Bond Prices, and the Determination of Interest Rates135 Questions
Exam 7: The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates121 Questions
Exam 8: Stocks, Stock Markets, and Market Efficiency125 Questions
Exam 9: Derivatives: Futures, Options, and Swaps123 Questions
Exam 10: Foreign Exchange120 Questions
Exam 11: The Economics of Financial Intermediation120 Questions
Exam 12: Depository Institutions: Banks and Bank Management121 Questions
Exam 13: Financial Industry Structure126 Questions
Exam 14: Regulating the Financial System125 Questions
Exam 15: Central Banks in the World Today123 Questions
Exam 16: The Structure of Central Banks: the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank128 Questions
Exam 17: The Central Bank Balance Sheet and the Money Supply Process126 Questions
Exam 18: Monetary Policy: Stabilizing the Domestic Economy133 Questions
Exam 19: Exchange-Rate Policy and the Central Bank127 Questions
Exam 20: Money Growth, Money Demand, and Modern Monetary Policy120 Questions
Exam 21: Output, Inflation, and Monetary Policy127 Questions
Exam 22: Understanding Business Cycle Fluctuations120 Questions
Exam 23: Modern Monetary Policy and the Challenges Facing Central Bankers112 Questions
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The most a risk-averse individual would pay to participate in a flip of a fair coin with a payoff of $500 if the correct outcome is called is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Comparing a lottery where a $1 ticket purchases a chance to win $1 million with another lottery in which a $5,000 ticket purchases a chance to win $5 billion, we notice many people would participate in the first but not the second, even though the odds of winning both lotteries are the same.We can perhaps best explain this outcome by:
(Multiple Choice)
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A $600 investment has the following payoff frequency: a quarter of the time it will be $0; three quarters of the time it will pay off $1000.Its standard deviation and value at risk respectively are:
(Multiple Choice)
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Explain the following: Risk results from the fact that more outcomes could happen than will happen.
(Essay)
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When the home construction industry does poorly due to a recession, this is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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If an investment will return $1,500 half of the time and $700 half of the time, the expected value of the investment is:
(Multiple Choice)
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The fact that not everyone places all of his/her savings in U.S.Treasury bonds indicates that:
(Multiple Choice)
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Investing in a mutual fund made up of hundreds of stocks of different companies is an example of all of the following except:
(Multiple Choice)
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A portfolio of assets has lower risk than holding one asset, but the same expected return and higher transaction costs.Which of the following statements is most correct?
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose a saver is looking for the opportunity to make a very large return in a very short period of time.Would you recommend diversification for this individual?
(Essay)
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We observe an increase in the price for Apple stock, while other Nasdaq-listed companies experience no change in their share prices.The increase in Apple's stock price most likely reflects (with respect to Apple):
(Multiple Choice)
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Uncertainty associated with the expected rate of return on an individual stock reflects all of the following except:
(Multiple Choice)
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