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
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) 10.36%
B) 10.62%
C) 10.88%
D) 11.15%
E) 11.43%
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) company-specific risk factors that can be diversified away.
B) among the factors that are responsible for market risk.
C) risks that are beyond the control of investors and thus should not be considered by security analysts or portfolio managers.
D) irrelevant except to governmental authorities like the Federal Reserve.
E) systematic risk factors that can be diversified away.
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Multiple Choice
A) Based on the information we are given, and assuming those are the views of the marginal investor, it is apparent that the two stocks are in equilibrium.
B) Portfolio P has more market risk than Stock A but less market risk than B.
C) Stock A should have a higher expected return than Stock B as viewed by the marginal investor.
D) Portfolio P has a coefficient of variation equal to 2.5.
E) Portfolio P has a standard deviation of 25% and a beta of 1.0.
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Multiple Choice
A) 9.43%
B) 9.67%
C) 9.92%
D) 10.17%
E) 10.42%
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Sometimes, during a period when the company is undergoing a change such as toward more leverage or riskier assets, the calculated beta will be drastically different from the "true" or "expected future" beta.
B) The beta of an "average stock," or "the market," can change over time, sometimes drastically.
C) Sometimes the past data used to calculate beta do not reflect the likely risk of the firm for the future because conditions have changed.
D) All of the statements above are true.
E) The fact that a security or project may not have a past history that can be used as the basis for calculating beta.
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Multiple Choice
A) Portfolio P has a standard deviation that is greater than 25%.
B) Portfolio P has an expected return that is less than 12%.
C) Portfolio P has a standard deviation that is less than 25%.
D) Portfolio P has a beta that is less than 1.2.
E) Portfolio P has a beta that is greater than 1.2.
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Multiple Choice
A) The required return on Stock A will increase by less than the increase in the market risk premium, while the required return on Stock C will increase by more than the increase in the market risk premium.
B) The required return on the average stock will remain unchanged, but the returns of riskier stocks (such as Stock C) will increase while the returns of safer stocks (such as Stock A) will decrease.
C) The required returns on all three stocks will increase by the amount of the increase in the market risk premium.
D) The required return on the average stock will remain unchanged, but the returns on riskier stocks (such as Stock C) will decrease while the returns on safer stocks (such as Stock A) will increase.
E) The required return of all stocks will remain unchanged since there was no change in their betas.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The required return on a stock with beta > 1.0 will increase.
B) The return on "the market" will remain constant.
C) The return on "the market" will increase.
D) The required return on a stock with beta < 1.0 will decline.
E) The required return on a stock with beta = 1.0 will not change.
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Multiple Choice
A) The required return will decline for stocks that have a beta less than 1.0 but will increase for stocks that have a beta greater than 1.0.
B) Since the overall return on the market stays constant, the required return on each individual stock will also remain constant.
C) The required return will increase for stocks that have a beta less than 1.0 but decline for stocks that have a beta greater than 1.0.
D) The required return of all stocks will fall by the amount of the decline in the market risk premium.
E) The required return of all stocks will increase by the amount of the increase in the risk-free rate.
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Multiple Choice
A) 1.06
B) 1.17
C) 1.29
D) 1.42
E) 1.56
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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.
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Multiple Choice
A) Lower beta stocks have higher required returns.
B) A stock's beta indicates its diversifiable risk.
C) Diversifiable risk cannot be completely diversified away.
D) Two securities with the same stand-alone risk must have the same betas.
E) The slope of the security market line is equal to the market risk premium.
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Multiple Choice
A) If you were restricted to investing in publicly traded common stocks, yet you wanted to minimize the riskiness of your portfolio as measured by its beta, then according to the CAPM theory you should invest an equal amount of money in each stock in the market. That is, if there were 10,000 traded stocks in the world, the least risky possible portfolio would include some shares of each one.
B) If you formed a portfolio that consisted of all stocks with betas less than 1.0, which is about half of all stocks, the portfolio would itself have a beta coefficient that is equal to the weighted average beta of the stocks in the portfolio, and that portfolio would have less risk than a portfolio that consisted of all stocks in the market.
C) Market risk can be eliminated by forming a large portfolio, and if some Treasury bonds are held in the portfolio, the portfolio can be made to be completely riskless.
D) A portfolio that consists of all stocks in the market would have a required return that is equal to the riskless rate.
E) If you add enough randomly selected stocks to a portfolio, you can completely eliminate all of the market risk from the portfolio.
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Multiple Choice
A) 7.72%
B) 8.12%
C) 8.55%
D) 9.00%
E) 9.50%
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Stock Y's realized return during the coming year will be higher than Stock X's return.
B) If the expected rate of inflation increases but the market risk premium is unchanged, the required returns on the two stocks should increase by the same amount.
C) Stock Y's return has a higher standard deviation than Stock X.
D) If the market risk premium declines, but the risk-free rate is unchanged, Stock X will have a larger decline in its required return than will Stock Y.
E) If you invest $50,000 in Stock X and $50,000 in Stock Y, your 2-stock portfolio would have a beta significantly lower than 1.0, provided the returns on the two stocks are not perfectly correlated.
Correct Answer
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