投资学题库Chap001
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Chapter 01
The Investment Environment
Multiple Choice Questions
1. The material wealth of a society is a function of
A. all financial assets.
B. all real assets.
C. all financial and real assets.
D. all physical assets.
2. _______ are real assets.
A. Land
B. Machines
C. Stocks and bonds
D. Knowledge
E. Land, machines, and knowledge
1-1
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3. The means by which individuals hold their claims on real assets in a well-developed economy
are
A. investment assets.
B. depository assets.
C. derivative assets.
D. financial assets.
E. exchange-driven assets.
4. _______ are financial assets.
A. Bonds
B. Machines
C. Stocks
D. Bonds and stocks
E. Bonds, machines, and stocks
5. _________ financial asset(s).
A. Buildings are
B. Land is a
C. Derivatives are
D. U.S. agency bonds are
E. Derivatives and U.S. agency bonds are
1-2
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6. Financial assets
A. directly contribute to the country's productive capacity.
B. indirectly contribute to the country's productive capacity.
C. contribute to the country's productive capacity both directly and indirectly.
D. do not contribute to the country's productive capacity either directly or indirectly.
E. are of no value to anyone.
7. In 2012, ____________ was the most significant real asset of U.S. households in terms of total
value.
A. consumer durables
B. automobiles
C. real estate
D. mutual fund shares
E. bank loans
8. In 2012, ____________ was the least significant financial asset of U.S. households in terms of
total value.
A. real estate
B. mutual fund shares
C. debt securities
D. life insurance reserves
E. pension reserves
1-3
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9. In 2012, ____________ was the most significant financial asset of U.S. households in terms of
total value.
A. real estate
B. mutual fund shares
C. debt securities
D. life insurance reserves
E. pension reserves
10. In 2012, ____________ was the most significant asset of U.S. households in terms of total
value.
A. real estate
B. mutual fund shares
C. debt securities
D. life insurance reserves
E. pension reserves
11. In 2012, ____________ was the most significant liability of U.S. households in terms of total
value.
A. credit cards
B. mortgages
C. bank loans
D. student loans
E. other debt
1-4
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McGraw-Hill Education.
12. Which of the following financial assets made up the greatest proportion of the financial assets
held by U.S. households?
A. Pension reserves
B. Life insurance reserves
C. Mutual fund shares
D. Debt securities
E. Personal trusts
13. In 2012 _______ of the assets of U.S. households were financial assets as opposed to
tangible assets.
A. 20.4%
B. 34.2%
C. 68.8%
D. 71.7%
E. 82.5%
14. The largest component of domestic net worth in 2012 was
A. nonresidential real estate.
B. residential real estate.
C. inventories.
D. consumer durables.
E. equipment and software.
1-5
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McGraw-Hill Education.
15. The smallest component of domestic net worth in 2012 was
A. nonresidential real estate.
B. residential real estate.
C. inventories.
D. consumer durables.
E. equipment and software.
16. The national net worth of the U.S. in 2012 was
A. $15.411 trillion.
B. $26.431 trillion.
C. $42.669 trillion.
D. $48.616 trillion.
E. $70.983 trillion.
17. A fixed-income security pays
A. a fixed level of income for the life of the owner.
B. a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a specified formula for the life of the security.
C. a variable level of income for owners on a fixed income.
D. a fixed or variable income stream at the option of the owner.
1-6
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McGraw-Hill Education.
18. A debt security pays
A. a fixed level of income for the life of the owner.
B. a variable level of income for owners on a fixed income.
C. a fixed or variable income stream at the option of the owner.
D. a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a specified formula for the life of the security.
19. Money market securities
A. are short term.
B. are highly marketable.
C. are generally very low risk.
D. are highly marketable and are generally very low risk.
E. All of the options
20. An example of a derivative security is
A. a common share of Microsoft.
B. a call option on Intel stock.
C. a commodity futures contract.
D. a call option on Intel stock and a commodity futures contract.
E. a common share of Microsoft and a call option on Intel stock.
1-7
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McGraw-Hill Education.
21. The value of a derivative security
A. depends on the value of the related security.
B. is unable to be calculated.
C. is unrelated to the value of the related security.
D. has been enhanced due to the recent misuse and negative publicity regarding these instruments.
E. is worthless today.
22. Although derivatives can be used as speculative instruments, businesses most often use
them to
A. attract customers.
B. appease stockholders.
C. offset debt.
D. hedge risks.
E. enhance their balance sheets.
23. Financial assets permit all of the following except
A. consumption timing.
B. allocation of risk.
C. separation of ownership and control.
D. elimination of risk.
1-8
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McGraw-Hill Education.
24. The ____________ refers to the potential conflict between management and shareholders.
A. agency problem
B. diversification problem
C. liquidity problem
D. solvency problem
E. regulatory problem
25. A disadvantage of using stock options to compensate managers is that
A. it encourages managers to undertake projects that will increase stock price.
B. it encourages managers to engage in empire building.
C. it can create an incentive for managers to manipulate information to prop up a stock price temporarily, giving them a chance to cash out before the price returns to a level reflective of the firm's true prospects.
D. All of the options
1-9
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McGraw-Hill Education.
26. Which of the following are mechanisms that have evolved to mitigate potential agency
problems?
I) Using the firm's stock options for compensation II) Hiring bickering family members as corporate spies
III) Boards of directors forcing out underperforming management IV) Security analysts monitoring the firm closely V) Takeover threats
A. II and V
B. I, III, and IV
C. I, III, IV, and V
D. III, IV, and V
E. I, III, and V
27. Corporate shareholders are best protected from incompetent management decisions by
A. the ability to engage in proxy fights.
B. management's control of pecuniary rewards.
C. the ability to call shareholder meetings.
D. the threat of takeover by other firms.
E. one-share/one-vote election rules.
1-10
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McGraw-Hill Education.
28. Theoretically, takeovers should result in
A. improved management.
B. increased stock price.
C. increased benefits to existing management of taken-over firm.
D. improved management and increased stock price.
E. All of the options
29. During the period between 2000 and 2002, a large number of scandals were uncovered. Most
of these scandals were related to
I) manipulation of financial data to misrepresent the actual condition of the firm. II) misleading and overly optimistic research reports produced by analysts. III) allocating IPOs to executives as a quid pro quo for personal favors. IV) greenmail.
A. II, III, and IV
B. I, II, and IV
C. II and IV
D. I, III, and IV
E. I, II, and III
1-11
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McGraw-Hill Education.
30. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
A. requires corporations to have more independent directors.
B. requires the firm's CFO to personally vouch for the firm's accounting statements.
C. prohibits auditing firms from providing other services to clients.
D. requires corporations to have more independent directors and requires the firm's CFO to personally vouch for the firm's accounting statements.
E. All of the options
31. Asset allocation refers to
A. choosing which securities to hold based on their valuation.
B. investing only in \
C. the allocation of assets into broad asset classes.
D. bottom-up analysis.
32. Security selection refers to
A. choosing which securities to hold based on their valuation.
B. investing only in \
C. the allocation of assets into broad asset classes.
D. top-down analysis.
1-12
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McGraw-Hill Education.
33. Which of the following portfolio construction methods starts with security analysis?
A. Top-down
B. Bottom-up
C. Middle-out
D. Buy and hold
E. Asset allocation
34. Which of the following portfolio construction methods starts with asset allocation?
A. Top-down
B. Bottom-up
C. Middle-out
D. Buy and hold
E. Asset allocation
35. _______ are examples of financial intermediaries.
A. Commercial banks
B. Insurance companies
C. Investment companies
D. Credit unions
E. All of the options
1-13
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36. Financial intermediaries exist because small investors cannot efficiently
A. diversify their portfolios.
B. assess credit risk of borrowers.
C. advertise for needed investments.
D. diversify their portfolios and assess credit risk of borrowers.
E. All of the options
37. ________ specialize in helping companies raise capital by selling securities.
A. Commercial bankers
B. Investment bankers
C. Investment issuers
D. Credit raters
38. Commercial banks differ from other businesses in that both their assets and their liabilities are
mostly
A. illiquid.
B. financial.
C. real.
D. owned by the government.
E. regulated.
1-14
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McGraw-Hill Education.
39. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the most significant financial asset(s) of U.S. commercial
banks in terms of total value.
A. loans and leases
B. cash
C. real estate
D. deposits
E. investment securities
40. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the most significant liability(ies) of U.S. commercial banks
in terms of total value.
A. loans and leases
B. cash
C. real estate
D. deposits
E. investment securities
41. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the most significant real asset(s) of U.S. nonfinancial
businesses in terms of total value.
A. equipment and software
B. inventory
C. real estate
D. trade credit
E. marketable securities
1-15
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McGraw-Hill Education.
42. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the least significant real asset(s) of U.S. nonfinancial
businesses in terms of total value.
A. equipment and software
B. inventory
C. real estate
D. trade credit
E. marketable securities
43. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the least significant liability(ies) of U.S. nonfinancial
businesses in terms of total value.
A. bonds and mortgages
B. bank loans
C. inventories
D. trade debt
E. marketable securities
44. In terms of total value, the most significant liability(ies) of U.S. nonfinancial businesses in
2012 was(were)
A. bank loans.
B. bonds and mortgages.
C. trade debt.
D. other loans.
E. marketable securities.
1-16
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McGraw-Hill Education.
45. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the least significant financial asset(s) of U.S. nonfinancial
businesses in terms of total value.
A. cash and deposits
B. trade credit
C. trade debt
D. inventory
E. marketable securities
46. New issues of securities are sold in the ________ market(s).
A. primary
B. secondary
C. over-the-counter
D. primary and secondary
47. Investors trade previously issued securities in the ________ market(s).
A. primary
B. secondary
C. primary and secondary
D. derivatives
1-17
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McGraw-Hill Education.
48. Investment bankers perform which of the following role(s)?
A. Market new stock and bond issues for firms
B. Provide advice to the firms as to market conditions, price, etc.
C. Design securities with desirable properties
D. All of the options
E. None of the options
49. Until 1999, the ________ Act(s) prohibited banks in the United States from both accepting
deposits and underwriting securities.
A. Sarbanes-Oxley
B. Glass-Steagall
C. SEC
D. Sarbanes-Oxley and SEC
E. None of the options
50. The spread between the LIBOR and the Treasury-bill rate is called the
A. term spread.
B. T-bill spread.
C. LIBOR spread.
D. TED spread.
1-18
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51. Mortgage-backed securities were created when ________ began buying mortgage loans from
originators and bundling them into large pools that could be traded like any other financial asset.
A. GNMA
B. FNMA
C. FHLMC
D. FNMA and FHLMC
E. GNMA and FNMA
52. The sale of a mortgage portfolio by setting up mortgage pass-through securities is an
example of
A. credit enhancement.
B. securitization.
C. unbundling.
D. derivatives.
1-19
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53. Which of the following is true about mortgage-backed securities?
I) They aggregate individual home mortgages into homogeneous pools.
II) The purchaser receives monthly interest and principal payments received from payments made on the pool.
III) The banks that originated the mortgages maintain ownership of them. IV) The banks that originated the mortgages continue to service them.
A. II, III, and IV
B. I, II, and IV
C. II and IV
D. I, III, and IV
E. I, II, III, and IV
54. ________ were designed to concentrate the credit risk of a bundle of loans on one class of
investor, leaving the other investors in the pool relatively protected from that risk.
A. Stocks
B. Bonds
C. Derivatives
D. Collateralized debt obligations
E. All of the options
1-20
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55. ________ are in essence an insurance contract against the default of one or more borrowers.
A. Credit default swaps
B. CMOs
C. ETFs
D. Collateralized debt obligations
E. All of the options
Short Answer Questions
56. Discuss the agency problem in detail.
1-21
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McGraw-Hill Education.
57. Discuss the similarities and differences between real and financial assets.
58. Discuss securitization as it relates to the field of investments.
1-22
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 The Investment Environment Answer Key
Multiple Choice Questions
1.
The material wealth of a society is a function of
A. all financial assets.
B. all real assets.
C. all financial and real assets.
D. all physical assets.
The material wealth of a society is a function of all real assets.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Assets
1-23
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McGraw-Hill Education.
2. _______ are real assets.
A. Land
B. Machines
C. Stocks and bonds
D. Knowledge
E. Land, machines, and knowledge
Land, machines and knowledge are real assets; stocks and bonds are financial assets.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Assets
3. The means by which individuals hold their claims on real assets in a well-developed economy are
A. investment assets.
B. depository assets.
C. derivative assets.
D. financial assets.
E. exchange-driven assets.
Financial assets allocate the wealth of the economy. Example: it is easier for an individual to own shares of an auto company than to own an auto company directly.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Assets
1-24
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McGraw-Hill Education.
4. _______ are financial assets.
A. Bonds
B. Machines
C. Stocks
D. Bonds and stocks
E. Bonds, machines, and stocks
Machines are real assets; stocks and bonds are financial assets.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Assets
5. _________ financial asset(s).
A. Buildings are
B. Land is a
C. Derivatives are
D. U.S. agency bonds are
E. Derivatives and U.S. agency bonds are Buildings and land are real assets.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Assets
1-25
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McGraw-Hill Education.
15. The smallest component of domestic net worth in 2012 was
A. nonresidential real estate.
B. residential real estate.
C. inventories.
D. consumer durables.
E. equipment and software. See Table 1.2.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Assets
16. The national net worth of the U.S. in 2012 was
A. $15.411 trillion.
B. $26.431 trillion.
C. $42.669 trillion.
D. $48.616 trillion.
E. $70.983 trillion. See Table 1.2.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Assets
1-31
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McGraw-Hill Education.
17. A fixed-income security pays
A. a fixed level of income for the life of the owner.
B. a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a
specified formula for the life of the security.
C. a variable level of income for owners on a fixed income.
D. a fixed or variable income stream at the option of the owner.
A fixed-income security pays a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a specified formula for the life of the security.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Asset Types
18. A debt security pays
A. a fixed level of income for the life of the owner.
B. a variable level of income for owners on a fixed income.
C. a fixed or variable income stream at the option of the owner.
D. a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a
specified formula for the life of the security.
A debt security pays a fixed stream of income or a stream of income that is determined according to a specified formula for the life of the security.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Asset Types
1-32
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McGraw-Hill Education.
19. Money market securities
A. are short term.
B. are highly marketable.
C. are generally very low risk.
D. are highly marketable and are generally very low risk.
E. All of the options All answers are correct.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Asset Types
20. An example of a derivative security is
A. a common share of Microsoft.
B. a call option on Intel stock.
C. a commodity futures contract.
D. a call option on Intel stock and a commodity futures contract.
E. a common share of Microsoft and a call option on Intel stock.
The values of a call option on Intel stock and a commodity futures contract are derived from that of an underlying asset; the value of a common share of Microsoft is based on the value of the firm only.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
1-33
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Topic: Asset Types
21. The value of a derivative security
A. depends on the value of the related security.
B. is unable to be calculated.
C. is unrelated to the value of the related security.
D. has been enhanced due to the recent misuse and negative publicity regarding these
instruments.
E. is worthless today.
Of the factors cited above, only the value of the related security affects the value of the derivative and/or is a true statement.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Asset Types
1-34
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McGraw-Hill Education.
22. Although derivatives can be used as speculative instruments, businesses most often use them to
A. attract customers.
B. appease stockholders.
C. offset debt.
D. hedge risks.
E. enhance their balance sheets.
Firms may use forward contracts and futures to protect against currency fluctuations or changes in commodity prices. Interest-rate options help companies control financing costs.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic Topic: Asset Types
23. Financial assets permit all of the following except
A. consumption timing.
B. allocation of risk.
C. separation of ownership and control.
D. elimination of risk.
Financial assets do not allow risk to be eliminated. However, they do permit allocation of risk, consumption timing, and separation of ownership and control.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Assets
1-35
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McGraw-Hill Education.
24. The ____________ refers to the potential conflict between management and shareholders.
A. agency problem
B. diversification problem
C. liquidity problem
D. solvency problem
E. regulatory problem
The agency problem describes potential conflict between management and shareholders. The other problems are those of firm management only.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Management
1-36
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McGraw-Hill Education.
25. A disadvantage of using stock options to compensate managers is that
A. it encourages managers to undertake projects that will increase stock price.
B. it encourages managers to engage in empire building.
C. it can create an incentive for managers to manipulate information to prop up a stock
price temporarily, giving them a chance to cash out before the price returns to a level reflective of the firm's true prospects.
D. All of the options
Encouraging managers to undertake projects that will increase stock price is a desired characteristic. Encouraging managers to engage in empire building is not necessarily a good or bad thing in and of itself. Creating an incentive for managers to manipulate information to prop up a stock price temporarily creates an agency problem.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Management
1-37
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McGraw-Hill Education.
26. Which of the following are mechanisms that have evolved to mitigate potential agency problems?
I) Using the firm's stock options for compensation II) Hiring bickering family members as corporate spies
III) Boards of directors forcing out underperforming management IV) Security analysts monitoring the firm closely V) Takeover threats
A. II and V
B. I, III, and IV
C. I, III, IV, and V
D. III, IV, and V
E. I, III, and V
All the options except hiring bickering family members as corporate spies have been used to try to limit agency problems.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Financial Management
1-38
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McGraw-Hill Education.
27. Corporate shareholders are best protected from incompetent management decisions by
A. the ability to engage in proxy fights.
B. management's control of pecuniary rewards.
C. the ability to call shareholder meetings.
D. the threat of takeover by other firms.
E. one-share/one-vote election rules.
Proxy fights are expensive and seldom successful, and management may often control the board or own significant shares. It is the threat of takeover of underperforming firms that has the strongest ability to keep management on their toes.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Financial Management
28. Theoretically, takeovers should result in
A. improved management.
B. increased stock price.
C. increased benefits to existing management of taken-over firm.
D. improved management and increased stock price.
E. All of the options
Theoretically, when firms are taken over, better managers come in and thus increase the price of the stock; existing management often must either leave the firm, be demoted, or suffer a loss of existing benefits.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
1-39
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Management
29. During the period between 2000 and 2002, a large number of scandals were uncovered. Most of these scandals were related to
I) manipulation of financial data to misrepresent the actual condition of the firm. II) misleading and overly optimistic research reports produced by analysts. III) allocating IPOs to executives as a quid pro quo for personal favors. IV) greenmail.
A. II, III, and IV
B. I, II, and IV
C. II and IV
D. I, III, and IV
E. I, II, and III
I, II, and III are all mentioned as causes of recent scandals.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Financial Management
1-40
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McGraw-Hill Education.
30. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
A. requires corporations to have more independent directors.
B. requires the firm's CFO to personally vouch for the firm's accounting statements.
C. prohibits auditing firms from providing other services to clients.
D. requires corporations to have more independent directors and requires the firm's CFO
to personally vouch for the firm's accounting statements.
E. All of the options
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act does all of the above.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Regulation
31. Asset allocation refers to
A. choosing which securities to hold based on their valuation.
B. investing only in \
C. the allocation of assets into broad asset classes.
D. bottom-up analysis.
Asset allocation refers to the allocation of assets into broad asset classes.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Financial Management
1-41
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McGraw-Hill Education.
32. Security selection refers to
A. choosing which securities to hold based on their valuation.
B. investing only in \
C. the allocation of assets into broad asset classes.
D. top-down analysis.
Security selection refers to choosing which securities to hold based on their valuation.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Financial Management
33. Which of the following portfolio construction methods starts with security analysis?
A. Top-down
B. Bottom-up
C. Middle-out
D. Buy and hold
E. Asset allocation
Bottom-up refers to using security analysis to find securities that are attractively priced. Top-down refers to using asset allocation as a starting point.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Portfolios
1-42
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McGraw-Hill Education.
34. Which of the following portfolio construction methods starts with asset allocation?
A. Top-down
B. Bottom-up
C. Middle-out
D. Buy and hold
E. Asset allocation
Bottom-up refers to using security analysis to find securities that are attractively priced.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember Difficulty: Intermediate
Topic: Portfolios
35. _______ are examples of financial intermediaries.
A. Commercial banks
B. Insurance companies
C. Investment companies
D. Credit unions
E. All of the options
All are institutions that bring borrowers and lenders together.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Institutions
1-43
Copyright ? 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
36. Financial intermediaries exist because small investors cannot efficiently
A. diversify their portfolios.
B. assess credit risk of borrowers.
C. advertise for needed investments.
D. diversify their portfolios and assess credit risk of borrowers.
E. All of the options
The individual investor cannot efficiently and effectively perform any of the tasks above without more time and knowledge than that available to most individual investors.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Institutions
37. ________ specialize in helping companies raise capital by selling securities.
A. Commercial bankers
B. Investment bankers
C. Investment issuers
D. Credit raters
An important role of investment banking is to act as middlemen in helping firms place new issues in the market.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Institutions
1-44
Copyright ? 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
38. Commercial banks differ from other businesses in that both their assets and their liabilities are mostly
A. illiquid.
B. financial.
C. real.
D. owned by the government.
E. regulated. See Table 1.3.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Institutions
39. In 2012, ____________ was(were) the most significant financial asset(s) of U.S. commercial banks in terms of total value.
A. loans and leases
B. cash
C. real estate
D. deposits
E. investment securities See Table 1.3.
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Basic
Topic: Financial Institutions
1-45
Copyright ? 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
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