CH 06
CH 06
CH 06
Ans: d
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Return
2. All of the following represent the yield component of total return EXCEPT:
Ans: c
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Return
Ans: c
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Risk
Ans: a
Difficulty: Moderate
Chapter Six 70
The Risks and Returns from Investing
Ref: Risk
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
Ans: b
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
a. exchange-rate risk
b. systematic risk
c. nonsystematic risk
d. country risk
Ans: d
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
8. Liquidity risk:
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
9. The recent housing bubble and resulting credit crisis of 2008 is a perfect example
of:
a. nonsystematic risk
Chapter Six 71
The Risks and Returns from Investing
b. systematic risk
c. inflation risk
d. political risk
Ans: b
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Risk
10. If a U.S. investor buys foreign stock, his dollar-denominated return will
increase if the dollar:
a. appreciates in value.
b. depreciates in value.
c. remains unchanged.
d. moves to a net gain position.
Ans: b
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Risk
11. New financial disclosure regulations affecting the brokerage industry are
a type of:
a. market risk
b. financial risk
c. business risk
d. liquidity risk
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
12. If interest rates rose, you would expect ------------ to also rise.
a. business risk
b. financial risk
c. liquidity risk
d. inflation risk
Ans: d
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
13. The best return measure to use if you are trying to measure the total effect of
returns over time given some stated beginning amount is the:
a. total return
b. return relative
c. cumulative wealth index
Chapter Six 72
The Risks and Returns from Investing
d. total yield
Ans: a
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Returns
a. the difference between the sale price and the purchase price of an investment.
b. measured by dividing the sum of all cash flows received by the amount invested.
c. the reciprocal of a return relative.
d. measured by dividing all cash flows received by its selling price.
Ans: b
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Returns
15. Which of the following is true regarding the cumulative wealth index? It:
a. is measured by adding up the total returns over the holding period and dividing by
the investment
b. uses a beginning index value (often set to $1 but it can be set to any amount)
c. is the present value of the future cash flows expected from the investment
d. uses the arithmetic mean as the rate of growth of one’s wealth
Ans: b
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Measuring Returns
a. arithmetic mean
b. return relative
c. cumulative wealth index
d. geometric mean
Ans: b
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Measuring Returns
a. inflation
b negative returns
c. interest rates
d. tax differences
Ans: b
Difficulty: Moderate
Chapter Six 73
The Risks and Returns from Investing
Ref: Measuring Returns
18. If the Dow Jones Industrials had a price appreciation of 6 percent one year and yet
total return for the year was 9 percent, the difference would be due to:
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Returns
a. arithmetic mean
b. geometric mean
c. calculus mean
d. arithmetic median
Ans: b
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
Ans: a
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
21. When most people refer to mean rate of return, they are referring to the:
Ans: b
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
Chapter Six 74
The Risks and Returns from Investing
22. Which of the following statements regarding the arithmetic mean and the
geometric mean is true?
Ans: c
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Risk
24. Which of the following statements concerning the equity risk premium is
true?
Ans: b
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Measuring Risk
Ans: c
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Risk
Chapter Six 75
The Risks and Returns from Investing
26. Present value is based on the concept of:
a. compounding
b. systematic risk
c. duration
d. discounting
Ans: d
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Compounding and Discounting
27. Over the period 1926-2007, which of the following financial assets showed the
greatest amount of price volatility, as measured by standard deviation?
a. Small-cap stocks
b. Large-cap stocks
c. Treasury bonds
d. Treasury bills
Ans: a
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Realized Returns and Risks from Investing
28. A number of prominent observers expect the equity risk premium in the future to
be:
Ans: a,
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Realized Returns and Risks from Investing
29. If you invest in German bonds and the Euro becomes stronger during your
holding period, then:
a. you will be able to buy back fewer dollars when you redeem your bond or it
matures
b. your dollar-denominated return will increase
c. your-dollar denominated return will decrease
d. your return will be the interest you receive
Ans: b
Difficulty: Difficult
Chapter Six 76
The Risks and Returns from Investing
Response: See p. 6-15
Ref: Taking A Global Perspective
Ans: a
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Taking A Global Perspective
True-False Questions
Ans: F
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Return
Ans: F
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Risk
Ans: F
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Risk
Ans: T
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
Ans: T
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Risk
6. New regulations concerning auto emissions would be a type of market risk for
the auto industry.
Chapter Six 77
The Risks and Returns from Investing
Ans: F
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Risk
Ans: F
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Risk
Ans: T
Difficulty: Difficult
Ref: Taking A Global Perspective
9. Holding interest rates constant, a narrowing of the equity risk premium implies a
decline in the rate of return on stocks because the amount earned beyond the risk-free rate
is reduced.
Ans: T
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
10. The most common measure of inflation is the Producer Price Index.
Ans: F
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Summary Statistics for Returns
11. The standard deviation of returns, calculated as the square root of the variance of
returns, is a measure of total risk of an asset or portfolio.
Ans: T
Difficulty: Moderate
Ref: Measuring Risk
12. Both present value and future value are based upon the concept of the time value
of money.
Ans: T
Difficulty: Easy
Ref: Compounding and Discounting
Short-Answer Questions
Chapter Six 78
The Risks and Returns from Investing
1. Assume you are a U. S. citizen who purchases $20,000 worth of bonds of the
Deep Shaft Mining Company in Kenya. What sources of risk can you identify
with this investment?
2. What common variable is used in the calculation of both the cumulative wealth
index and the geometric mean return? How is the common variable calculated?
How is it used in each?
3. When should an investor use the arithmetic mean return? The geometric mean
return?
Answer: The arithmetic mean is better for single period returns, whereas, the
geometric mean is better for multiple periods.
Difficulty: Moderate
Answer: The best measure of risk for a sole proprietorship (a single asset) is
standard deviation of returns to capture total risk, since there is no
diversification.
Difficulty: Moderate
5. What was the effect on foreign investors owning U.S. stocks when the dollar fell
in 2002?
Answer: Foreign investors owning U.S. stocks suffered from the unfavorable
currency movement as well as decline in the U.S. stock markets.
Difficulty: Moderate
Fill-in-the-blank Questions
where
Chapter Six 79
The Risks and Returns from Investing
CFt = ______________________________________________
PE = ______________________________________________
PB = ______________________________________________
PC = ______________________________________________
Answer: cash flows during measurement period t, price at the end of period t (or
sale price), purchase of asset or price at the beginning of the period,
change in price during the period
Difficulty: Moderate
1. The returns and risk measures on this chapter are calculated from historical data.
Are such measures good predictors of the future? What are some circumstances
that could change to change future return and risk? How can an investor use these
return and risk measures to help construct a portfolio?
Answer: Historical risk and returns are a starting point for the analyst to assess
future prospects. The return and risk parameters for individual companies
can change due to changes in management, product decisions,
competition, regulation, changes in financial structure, etc. An analyst can
use historical data and temper it with judgment about the future for
constructing a portfolio.
Difficulty: Moderate
2. What is the major drawback of the total return measure? Why is it the most
common return calculation used by investors?
Answer: The total return measure does not account for the time value of money.
The cash flows received are not discounted using present value
techniques. This is a serious flaw in the measure. However, since many
investors do not consider inflation in their calculations and the total return
measure is a quick way to measure return, it is widely used by investors.
Difficulty: Moderate
Problems
1. A stock is purchased for $50 on January 1 and sold on December 31 for $72. A
$5.00 per share dividend is paid during the year.
Chapter Six 80
The Risks and Returns from Investing
(b) RR = TR + 1.0 = 0.54 + 1.0 = 1.54
OR
2. The S&P 500 showed the following TRs for a 6 year period: 11.1 percent, -5.2
percent, 20.3 percent, 26.7 percent, -12.4 percent, and 2.2 percent.
(a) Calculate the arithmetic mean return for the 6 year period.
(b) Calculate the geometric mean return for the 6 year period.
(b) To calculate the geometric mean, convert to RRs and obtain the product of the six
RRs.
Difficulty: difficult
3. Calculate the future value of $100,000 at the end of 64 years given an interest rate
of 10.38 percent.
4. John Crossborder buys 1 share of Telmex at 140 pesos when the value of the peso
is stated in dollars at $0.35. One year later, Telmex is selling for 155 pesos and
paid a dividend of 5 pesos during the year. If after 1 year the value of the pesos is
$0.29, what will John's rate of return be in U. S. dollars?
5. If you deposit $1,000 today at 12 percent, how much will you have in 10 years?
Chapter Six 81
The Risks and Returns from Investing
solve for FV = $3,105.85
Difficulty: Easy
6. What is the present value of $20,000 to be received in 40 years if the interest rate
is 9 percent?
Chapter Six 82
The Risks and Returns from Investing