Exam 3: What Do Interest Rates Mean and What Is Their Role in Valuation
Exam 1: Why Study Financial Markets and Institutions63 Questions
Exam 2: Overview of the Financial System80 Questions
Exam 3: What Do Interest Rates Mean and What Is Their Role in Valuation95 Questions
Exam 4: Why Do Interest Rates Change106 Questions
Exam 5: How Do Risk and Term Structure Affect Interest Rates98 Questions
Exam 6: Are Financial Markets Efficient58 Questions
Exam 7: Why Do Financial Institutions Exist119 Questions
Exam 8: Why Do Financial Crises Occur and Why Are They so Damaging to the Economy55 Questions
Exam 9: Central Banks and the Federal Reserve System98 Questions
Exam 10: Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics95 Questions
Exam 11: The Money Markets76 Questions
Exam 12: The Bond Market88 Questions
Exam 13: The Stock Market68 Questions
Exam 14: The Mortgage Markets75 Questions
Exam 15: The Foreign Exchange Market85 Questions
Exam 16: The International Financial System88 Questions
Exam 17: Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions104 Questions
Exam 18: Financial Regulation73 Questions
Exam 19: Banking Industry: Structure and Competition134 Questions
Exam 20: The Mutual Fund Industry57 Questions
Exam 21: Insurance Companies and Pension Funds79 Questions
Exam 22: Investment Banks, Security Brokers and Dealers, and Venture Capital Firms84 Questions
Exam 23: Risk Management in Financial Institutions63 Questions
Exam 24: Hedging With Financial Derivatives114 Questions
Exam 25: Savings Associations and Credit Unions87 Questions
Exam 26: Finance Companies41 Questions
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What is the purpose of discounting cash flows?
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Bonds with a maturity that is longer than the holding period have no interest-rate risk.
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If a $10,000 face value discount bond maturing in one year is selling for $8,000, then its yield to maturity is
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If a $10,000 face value discount bond maturing in one year is selling for $5,000, then its yield to maturity is
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How does reinvestment risk differ from interest-rate risk?
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If an investor's holding period is longer than the term to maturity of a bond, he or she is exposed to
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What concept is used to value a bond?
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The yield to maturity on a consol bond that pays $100 yearly and sells for $500 is
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A frequently used approximation for the yield to maturity on a long-term bond is the
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The yield to maturity of a one-year, simple loan of $400 that requires an interest payment of $50 is
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An $8,000 coupon bond with a $400 annual coupon payment has a coupon rate of
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When a bond's price falls, its yield to maturity ________ and its current yield ________.
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All else being equal, the greater the interest rate the greater the duration is.
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A $10,000, 8 percent coupon bond that sells for $10,000 has a yield to maturity of
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A bond's current market value is equal to the present value of the coupon payments plus the present value of the face amount.
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The concept of ________ is based on the notion that a dollar paid to you in the future is less valuable to you than a dollar today.
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The nominal interest rate minus the expected rate of inflation
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