A) 1.07
B) 1.13
C) 1.18
D) 1.24
E) 1.30
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Company X has a lower coefficient of variation than Company Y.
B) Company X has less market risk than Company Y.
C) Company X's returns will be negative when Y's returns are positive.
D) Company X's stock is a better buy than Company Y's stock.
E) Company X has more diversifiable risk than Company Y.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Each stock's expected return should equal its required return as seen by the marginal investor.
B) All stocks should have the same expected return as seen by the marginal investor.
C) The expected and required returns on stocks and bonds should be equal.
D) All stocks should have the same realized return during the coming year.
E) Each stock's expected return should equal its realized return as seen by the marginal investor.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 2.75%
B) 2.89%
C) 3.05%
D) 3.21%
E) 3.38%
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A portfolio with a large number of randomly selected stocks would have more market risk than a single stock that has a beta of 0.5, assuming that the stock's beta was correctly calculated and is stable.
B) If a stock has a negative beta, its expected return must be negative.
C) A portfolio with a large number of randomly selected stocks would have less market risk than a single stock that has a beta of 0.5.
D) According to the CAPM, stocks with higher standard deviations of returns must also have higher expected returns.
E) If the returns on two stocks are perfectly positively correlated and these stocks have identical standard deviations, an equally weighted portfolio of the two stocks will have a standard deviation that is less than that of the individual stocks.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the past realized return must be equal to the expected return during the same period.
B) the required return must equal the realized return in all periods.
C) the expected return must be equal to both the required future return and the past realized return.
D) the expected future returns must be equal to the required return.
E) the expected future return must be less than the most recent past realized return.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 14.38%
B) 14.74%
C) 15.11%
D) 15.49%
E) 15.87%
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Portfolio AC has an expected return that is greater than 25%.
B) Portfolio AB has a standard deviation that is greater than 25%.
C) Portfolio AB has a standard deviation that is equal to 25%.
D) Portfolio AC has a standard deviation that is less than 25%.
E) Portfolio AC has an expected return that is less than 10%.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 10.56%
B) 10.83%
C) 11.11%
D) 11.38%
E) 11.67%
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Suppose the returns on two stocks are negatively correlated. One has a beta of 1.2 as determined in a regression analysis using data for the last 5 years, while the other has a beta of −0.6. The returns on the stock with the negative beta must have been negatively correlated with returns on most other stocks during that 5-year period.
B) Suppose you are managing a stock portfolio, and you have information that leads you to believe the stock market is likely to be very strong in the immediate future. That is, you are convinced that the market is about to rise sharply. You should sell your high-beta stocks and buy low-beta stocks in order to take advantage of the expected market move.
C) You think that investor sentiment is about to change, and investors are about to become more risk averse. This suggests that you should re-balance your portfolio to include more high-beta stocks.
D) If the market risk premium remains constant, but the risk-free rate declines, then the required returns on low-beta stocks will rise while those on high-beta stocks will decline.
E) Paid-in-Full Inc. is in the business of collecting past-due accounts for other companies, i.e., it is a collection agency. Paid-in-Full's revenues, profits, and stock price tend to rise during recessions. This suggests that Paid-in-Full Inc.'s beta should be quite high, say 2.0, because it does so much better than most other companies when the economy is weak.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The required return on Ann's portfolio will be lower than that on Tom's portfolio because Ann's portfolio will have less total risk.
B) Tom's portfolio will have more diversifiable risk, the same market risk, and thus more total risk than Ann's portfolio, but the required (and expected) returns will be the same on both portfolios.
C) If the two portfolios have the same beta, their required returns will be the same, but Ann's portfolio will have less market risk than Tom's.
D) The expected return on Jane's portfolio must be lower than the expected return on Dick's portfolio because Jane is more diversified.
E) Ann's portfolio will have less diversifiable risk and also less market risk than Tom's portfolio.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) If you found a stock with a zero historical beta and held it as the only stock in your portfolio, you would by definition have a riskless portfolio.
B) The beta coefficient of a stock is normally found by regressing past returns on a stock against past market returns. One could also construct a scatter diagram of returns on the stock versus those on the market, estimate the slope of the line of best fit, and use it as beta. However, this historical beta may differ from the beta that exists in the future.
C) The beta of a portfolio of stocks is always larger than the betas of any of the individual stocks.
D) It is theoretically possible for a stock to have a beta of 1.0. If a stock did have a beta of 1.0, then, at least in theory, its required rate of return would be equal to the risk-free (default-free) rate of return, rRF.
E) The beta of a portfolio of stocks is always smaller than the betas of any of the individual stocks.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The required rate of return will decline for stocks whose betas are less than 1.0.
B) The required rate of return on the market, rM, will not change as a result of these changes.
C) The required rate of return for each individual stock in the market will increase by an amount equal to the increase in the market risk
D) The required rate of return on a riskless bond will decline.
E) The required rate of return for an average stock will increase by an amount equal to the increase in the market risk premium.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 5.80%
B) 5.95%
C) 6.09%
D) 6.25%
E) 6.40%
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) bA > +1; bB = 0.
B) bA = 0; bB = −1.
C) bA < 0; bB = 0.
D) bA < −1; bB = 1.
E) bA > 0; bB = 1.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) If the market risk premium increases but the risk-free rate remains unchanged, Dixon's required return will increase because it has a beta greater than 1.0 but Clark's required return will decline because it has a beta less than 1.0.
B) Since Dixon's beta is twice that of Clark's, its required rate of return will also be twice that of Clark's.
C) If the risk-free rate increases while the market risk premium remains constant, then the required return on an average stock will increase.
D) If the market risk premium decreases but the risk-free rate remains unchanged, Dixon's required return will decrease because it has a beta greater than 1.0 and Clark's will also decrease, but by more than Dixon's because it has a beta less than 1.0.
E) If the risk-free rate increases but the market risk premium remains unchanged, the required return will increase for both stocks but the increase will be larger for Dixon since it has a higher beta.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The required return on all stocks will remain unchanged.
B) The required return will fall for all stocks, but it will fall more for stocks with higher betas.
C) The required return for all stocks will fall by the same amount.
D) The required return will fall for all stocks, but it will fall less for stocks with higher betas.
E) The required return will increase for stocks with a beta less than 1.0 and will decrease for stocks with a beta greater than 1.0.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A portfolio that consists of 40 stocks that are not highly correlated with "the market" will probably be less risky than a portfolio of 40 stocks that are highly correlated with the market, assuming the stocks all have the same standard deviations.
B) A two-stock portfolio will always have a lower beta than a one-stock portfolio.
C) If portfolios are formed by randomly selecting stocks, a 10-stock portfolio will always have a lower beta than a one-stock portfolio.
D) A stock with an above-average standard deviation must also have an above-average beta.
E) A two-stock portfolio will always have a lower standard deviation than a one-stock portfolio.
Correct Answer
verified
Showing 61 - 80 of 146
Related Exams