Deck 12: Risky Assets

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Question
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 5% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 10%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 6.25%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 0.63%.
B) 2.50%.
C) 1.25%.
D) 4.25%.
E) None of the above.
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Question
Bill owns an export business. The expected profit from his business is $100,000 a year. For every 1% increase in the value of the Japanese yen relative to the dollar, its profits increase by $20,000. Bill plans to buy one of two firms. One is an import business which returns an expected profit of $70,000. For every 1% increase in the value of the Japanese yen relative to the dollar, the profits of this firm shrink by $5,000. The second is a safe domestic firm which is certain to yield him $70,000 a year. The two firms cost the same. If Bill is risk averse,

A) he should buy the domestic firm.
B) he should buy the import firm.
C) he should buy half of each of these two firms.
D) it doesn't matter which he buys.
E) he should buy 80% of the domestic firm and 20% of the import firm.
Question
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 15% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 55% and has a standard deviation of 10%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 2.
B) -4.
C) 4.
D) -2.
E) 6.
Question
If you invest half your money in a risk-free asset and half your money in a risky asset such that the standard deviation of the return on the risky asset is s, then the standard deviation of the return on your investment portfolio is If you invest half your money in a risk-free asset and half your money in a risky asset such that the standard deviation of the return on the risky asset is s, then the standard deviation of the return on your investment portfolio is   .<div style=padding-top: 35px> .
Question
If two assets have the same expected rate of return but different variances, a risk-averse investor should always choose the one with the smaller variance, no matter what other assets she holds.
Question
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 10% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 15%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 12.50%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 5%.
B) 5.50%.
C) 2.50%.
D) 1.25%.
E) None of the above.
Question
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 15% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 30% and has a standard deviation of 5%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 3.
B) -3.
C) 1.50.
D) -1.50.
E) 4.50.
Question
Marvin is an expected utility maximizer. He chooses his portfolio so as to maximize the expected value of 2,000,000x - x2. If m is the mean of Marvin's income and s is the standard deviation, Marvin's income as a function of the mean and standard deviation is

A) U = 2,000,000m - s2.
B) U = 2,000,000m - s.
C) U = m -.
D) U = 2,000,000 + s.
E) None of the above.
Question
You have been hired as a portfolio manager for a stock brokerage. Your first job is to invest $100,000 in a portfolio of two assets. The first asset is a safe asset with a sure return of 4% interest. The second asset is a risky asset with a 26% expected rate of return, but the standard deviation of this return is 10%. Your client wants a portfolio with as high a rate of return as possible consistent with a standard deviation no larger than 4%. How much of her money do you invest in the safe asset?

A) $22,000
B) $40,000
C) $64,000
D) $36,000
E) $60,000
Question
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 10% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 25%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 25%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 2.50%.
B) 8%.
C) 5%.
D) 10%.
E) None of the above.
Question
If the returns on two assets are negatively correlated, then a portfolio that contains some of each will have less variance in its return per dollar invested than either asset has by itself.
Question
A risk-free asset is available at 5% interest. Another asset is available with a mean rate of return of 15% but with a standard deviation of 5%. An investor is considering an investment portfolio consisting of some of each stock. On a graph with standard deviation on the horizontal axis and mean on the vertical axis, the budget line that expresses the alternative combinations of mean return and standard deviation possible with portfolios of these assets is a straight line with

A) slope 2.
B) slope -3.
C) increasing slope as you move left.
D) slope -1.
E) slope -.
Question
Firm A sells lemonade and firm B sells hot chocolate. If you invest $100 if firm A, in one year you will get back $(30 + T) where T is the average temperature (Fahrenheit) during the summer. If you invest $100 in firm B, in one year you will get back $(150 - T), where T is the average temperature during the summer. The expected value of T is 70 and the standard deviation of T is 10. If you invest $50 in firm A and $50 in firm B, what is the standard deviation of your return on your investment?

A) 10
B) 20
C) 5
D) 0
E) None of the above.
Question
If you invest $100 now in firm A, in one year you will get back $(30 + T), where T is the average temperature during the next summer. If you invest $100 now in firm B, in one year you will get back $(180 - T). The expected value of T is 70 and the standard deviation of T is 10.
a. Draw a graph showing the combinations of expected return and standard deviation that you can have by dividing $100 between stock in A and stock in B. (Hint: Expected value has the property that E(ax + b) = aE(x) + b and standard deviation has the property that SD(ax + b) = [(absolute value of a) times SD(x)] +b).
b. What is the expected value and standard deviation of the safest investment strategy you can make by this means?
c. What is the highest expected value you can achieve?
Question
If the mean is plotted on the horizontal axis, and the variance on the vertical, then indifference curves for a risk averter must slope upward and to the right.
Question
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 10% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 25% and has a standard deviation of 5%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 1.50.
B) -1.50.
C) -3.
D) 3.
E) 4.50.
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Deck 12: Risky Assets
1
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 5% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 10%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 6.25%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 0.63%.
B) 2.50%.
C) 1.25%.
D) 4.25%.
E) None of the above.
C
2
Bill owns an export business. The expected profit from his business is $100,000 a year. For every 1% increase in the value of the Japanese yen relative to the dollar, its profits increase by $20,000. Bill plans to buy one of two firms. One is an import business which returns an expected profit of $70,000. For every 1% increase in the value of the Japanese yen relative to the dollar, the profits of this firm shrink by $5,000. The second is a safe domestic firm which is certain to yield him $70,000 a year. The two firms cost the same. If Bill is risk averse,

A) he should buy the domestic firm.
B) he should buy the import firm.
C) he should buy half of each of these two firms.
D) it doesn't matter which he buys.
E) he should buy 80% of the domestic firm and 20% of the import firm.
B
3
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 15% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 55% and has a standard deviation of 10%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 2.
B) -4.
C) 4.
D) -2.
E) 6.
C
4
If you invest half your money in a risk-free asset and half your money in a risky asset such that the standard deviation of the return on the risky asset is s, then the standard deviation of the return on your investment portfolio is If you invest half your money in a risk-free asset and half your money in a risky asset such that the standard deviation of the return on the risky asset is s, then the standard deviation of the return on your investment portfolio is   . .
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5
If two assets have the same expected rate of return but different variances, a risk-averse investor should always choose the one with the smaller variance, no matter what other assets she holds.
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6
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 10% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 15%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 12.50%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 5%.
B) 5.50%.
C) 2.50%.
D) 1.25%.
E) None of the above.
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7
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 15% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 30% and has a standard deviation of 5%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 3.
B) -3.
C) 1.50.
D) -1.50.
E) 4.50.
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8
Marvin is an expected utility maximizer. He chooses his portfolio so as to maximize the expected value of 2,000,000x - x2. If m is the mean of Marvin's income and s is the standard deviation, Marvin's income as a function of the mean and standard deviation is

A) U = 2,000,000m - s2.
B) U = 2,000,000m - s.
C) U = m -.
D) U = 2,000,000 + s.
E) None of the above.
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9
You have been hired as a portfolio manager for a stock brokerage. Your first job is to invest $100,000 in a portfolio of two assets. The first asset is a safe asset with a sure return of 4% interest. The second asset is a risky asset with a 26% expected rate of return, but the standard deviation of this return is 10%. Your client wants a portfolio with as high a rate of return as possible consistent with a standard deviation no larger than 4%. How much of her money do you invest in the safe asset?

A) $22,000
B) $40,000
C) $64,000
D) $36,000
E) $60,000
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10
Suppose that Ms. Lynch in Workouts Problem 13.1 can make up her portfolio using a risk-free asset that offers a surefire rate of return of 10% and a risky asset with an expected rate of return of 25%, with standard deviation 5. If she chooses a portfolio with an expected rate of return of 25%, then the standard deviation of her return on this portfolio will be

A) 2.50%.
B) 8%.
C) 5%.
D) 10%.
E) None of the above.
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11
If the returns on two assets are negatively correlated, then a portfolio that contains some of each will have less variance in its return per dollar invested than either asset has by itself.
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12
A risk-free asset is available at 5% interest. Another asset is available with a mean rate of return of 15% but with a standard deviation of 5%. An investor is considering an investment portfolio consisting of some of each stock. On a graph with standard deviation on the horizontal axis and mean on the vertical axis, the budget line that expresses the alternative combinations of mean return and standard deviation possible with portfolios of these assets is a straight line with

A) slope 2.
B) slope -3.
C) increasing slope as you move left.
D) slope -1.
E) slope -.
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13
Firm A sells lemonade and firm B sells hot chocolate. If you invest $100 if firm A, in one year you will get back $(30 + T) where T is the average temperature (Fahrenheit) during the summer. If you invest $100 in firm B, in one year you will get back $(150 - T), where T is the average temperature during the summer. The expected value of T is 70 and the standard deviation of T is 10. If you invest $50 in firm A and $50 in firm B, what is the standard deviation of your return on your investment?

A) 10
B) 20
C) 5
D) 0
E) None of the above.
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14
If you invest $100 now in firm A, in one year you will get back $(30 + T), where T is the average temperature during the next summer. If you invest $100 now in firm B, in one year you will get back $(180 - T). The expected value of T is 70 and the standard deviation of T is 10.
a. Draw a graph showing the combinations of expected return and standard deviation that you can have by dividing $100 between stock in A and stock in B. (Hint: Expected value has the property that E(ax + b) = aE(x) + b and standard deviation has the property that SD(ax + b) = [(absolute value of a) times SD(x)] +b).
b. What is the expected value and standard deviation of the safest investment strategy you can make by this means?
c. What is the highest expected value you can achieve?
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15
If the mean is plotted on the horizontal axis, and the variance on the vertical, then indifference curves for a risk averter must slope upward and to the right.
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16
Suppose that Fenner Smith of Workouts Problem 13.2 must divide his portfolio between two assets, one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 10% with zero standard deviation and one of which gives him an expected rate of return of 25% and has a standard deviation of 5%. He can alter the expected rate of return and the variance of his portfolio by changing the proportions in which he holds the two assets. If we draw a "budget line" with expected return on the vertical axis and standard deviation on the horizontal axis, depicting the combinations that Smith can obtain, the slope of this budget line is

A) 1.50.
B) -1.50.
C) -3.
D) 3.
E) 4.50.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 16 flashcards in this deck.