Deck 5: Understanding Risk

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Question
The expected value of an investment:

A)is what the owner will receive when the investment is sold.
B)is the sum of the payoffs.
C)is the probability-weighted sum of the possible outcomes.
D)cannot be determined in advance.
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Question
Another name for the expected value of an investment would be the:

A)mean value.
B)upper-end value.
C)certain value.
D)risk-free value.
Question
If a fair coin is tossed, the probability of coming up with either a head or a tail is:

A)½ or 50 percent.
B)Zero.
C)1 or 100 percent.
D)Unquantifiable.
Question
An investment with a large spread between possible payoffs will generally have:

A)a low expected return.
B)a high standard deviation.
C)a low value at risk.
D)both a low expected return and a low value at risk.
Question
An investor puts $2,000 into an investment that will pay $2,500 one-fourth of the time; $2,000 one-half of the time, and $1,750 the rest of the time.What is the investor's expected return?

A)12.5%
B)$250.00
C)6.25%
D)3.125%
Question
If an investment has a 20%(0.20) probability of returning $1,000; a 30%(0.30) probability of returning $1,500; and a 50%(0.50) probability of returning $1,800; the expected value of the investment is:

A)$1,433.33
B)$1,550.00
C)$2,800.00
D)$1,600.00
Question
Which of the following would not be included in a definition of risk?

A)Risk is a measure of uncertainty.
B)Risk can always be avoided at no cost.
C)Risk has a time horizon.
D)Risk usually involves some future payoff.
Question
When measuring the risk of an asset:

A)one must measure the uncertainty about the size of future payoffs.
B)it is necessary to incorporate uncertainties that are not quantifiable.
C)one must remember that the concept of risk applies only to financial markets, not to financial intermediaries.
D)one cannot use other investments to evaluate the asset's risk.
Question
If the probability of an outcome equals one, the outcome:

A)is more likely to occur than the others listed.
B)is certain to occur.
C)is certain not to occur.
D)has unquantifiable risk.
Question
Inflation presents risk because:

A)inflation is always present.
B)inflation cannot be measured.
C)there are different ways to measure it.
D)there is no certainty regarding what inflation will be in the future.
Question
All other factors held constant, an investment:

A)with more risk should offer a lower return and sell for a higher price.
B)with less risk should sell for a lower price and offer a higher expected return.
C)with more risk should sell for a lower price and offer a higher expected return.
D)with less risk should sell for a lower price and offer a lower return.
Question
Risk-free investments have rates of return:

A)equal to zero.
B)with a standard deviation equal to zero.
C)that are uncertain, but have a certain time horizon.
D)that exhibit a large spread of potential payoffs.
Question
An investment pays $1,200 a quarter of the time; $1,000 half of the time; and $800 a quarter of the time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000; 20,000 dollars2
B)$1,050; 20,000 dollars2
C)$1,000; 40,000 dollars2
D)$1,000; 80,000 dollar2
Question
Suppose that Fly-By-Night Airlines Inc., has a return of 5% twenty percent of the time and 0% the rest of the time.The expected return from Fly-By-Night is:

A)10%.
B)0.1%.
C)0.2%.
D)1.0%.
Question
Which of the following is true?

A)Investments with higher risk generally have a higher expected return than risk-free investments.
B)Investments that pay a return over a longer time horizon generally have less risk.
C)Investments with a greater variance in the size of the future payoff generally pay a lower expected return.
D)Risk-free investments are the best benchmark for measuring the risk of all investment strategies.
Question
If an investment will return $1,500 half of the time and $700 half of the time, the expected value of the investment is:

A)$1,250.
B)$1,050.
C)$1,100.
D)$2,200.
Question
Uncertainties that are not quantifiable:

A)are what we define as risk.
B)are factored into the price of an asset.
C)cannot be priced.
D)are benchmarks against which quantifiable risks can be assessed.
Question
An investor puts $1,000 into an investment that will return $1,250 one-half of the time and $900 the remainder of the time.The expected return for this investor is:

A)$1,075
B)5.0%
C)7.5%
D)15.0%
Question
If the probability of an outcome is zero, you know the outcome is:

A)more likely to occur.
B)certain to occur.
C)less likely to occur.
D)certain not to occur.
Question
An investment pays $1,500 half of the time and $500 half of the time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000; 500,000 dollars
B)$2,000; (250,000 dollars)2
C)$1,000; 250,000 dollars
D)$1,000; 250,000 dollars2
Question
An investment pays $1000 three quarters of the time, and $0 the remaining time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000: 62,500 dollars2
B)$750; 46,875 dollars
C)$750; 62,500 dollars
D)$750; 187,500 dollars2
Question
Given a choice between two investments with the same expected payoff most people will:

A)choose the one with the lower standard deviation.
B)opt for the one with the higher standard deviation.
C)be indifferent since the expected payoffs are the same.
D)calculate the variance to assess the relative risks of the two choices.
Question
Investment A pays $1,200 half of the time and $800 half of the time.Investment B pays $1,400 half of the time and $600 half of the time.Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has greater risk.
B)Investment B has a higher expected value than A, but also greater risk.
C)Investment A has a greater expected value than B, but B has less risk.
D)None of the statements are correct.
Question
An investment will pay $2,000 half of the time and $1,400 half of the time.The standard deviation for this investment is:

A)$90,000.
B)$300.
C)$1,700.
D)$30.
Question
A risk-averse investor will:

A)always accept a greater risk with a greater expected return.
B)only invest in assets providing certain returns.
C)never accept lower risk if it means accepting a lower expected return.
D)sometimes accept a lower expected return if it means less risk.
Question
Leverage:

A)reduces risk.
B)is synonymous with risk-free investment.
C)increases expected rate of return.
D)leads to smaller changes in the investment's price.
Question
A $500 investment has the following payoff frequency: half of the time it will pay $350 and the other half of the time it will pay $900.Its standard deviation and value at risk respectively are:

A)$275; $150
B)$625; $275
C)$275; $350
D)$125; $500
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Leverage increases expected return and increases risk.
B)Leverage increases expected return and reduces risk.
C)Leverage decreases expected return but has no effect on risk.
D)Leverage decreases expected return and increases risk.
Question
A $600 investment has the following payoff frequency: a quarter of the time it will be $0; three quarters of the time it will pay off $1000.Its standard deviation and value at risk respectively are:

A)$750; $600
B)$433; $600
C)$0; $1000
D)$433; $1000
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Leverage increases expected return while lowering risk.
B)Leverage increases risk.
C)Leverage lowers the expected return and lowers risk.
D)Leverage lowers the expected return and increases risk.
Question
The greater the standard deviation of an investment the:

A)lower the return.
B)greater the risk.
C)lower the risk.
D)lower the risk and return.
Question
Which of the following investment strategies involves generating a higher expected rate of return through increasing risk?

A)Diversifying
B)Hedging risk
C)Leverage
D)Value at risk
Question
Comparing a lottery where a $1 ticket purchases a chance to win $1 million with another lottery in which a $5,000 ticket purchases a chance to win $5 billion, we notice many people would participate in the first but not the second, even though the odds of winning both lotteries are the same.We can perhaps best explain this outcome by:

A)higher expected value for the lottery paying $1 million.
B)higher expected value for the lottery paying $5 billion.
C)lower value at risk for the lottery paying $1 million.
D)higher value at risk for the lottery paying $1 million.
Question
The measure of risk that focuses on the worst possible outcome is called:

A)expected rate of return.
B)risk-free rate of return.
C)standard deviation of return.
D)value at risk.
Question
Investment A pays $1,200 half of the time and $800 half of the time.Investment B pays $1,400 half of the time and $600 half of the time.Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has greater risk.
B)
B)Investment B has a higher expected value than A, but also greater risk.
C)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has lower risk than
D)Investment A has a greater expected value than B, but B has less risk.
Question
An investment will pay $2000 a quarter of the time; $1,600 half of the time and $1,400 a quarter of the time.The standard deviation of this asset is:

A)$600
B)$1,650
C)$47,500
D)$217.94
Question
A risk-averse investor versus a risk-neutral investor:

A)will never take a risk, while the risk neutral investor will.
B)needs greater compensation for the same risk versus the risk neutral investor.
C)will take the same risks as the risk neutral investor if the expected returns are equal.
D)needs less compensation for the same risk versus the risk neutral investor.
Question
The standard deviation is generally more useful than the variance because:

A)it is easier to calculate.
B)variance is a measure of risk, where standard deviation is a measure of return.
C)standard deviation is calculated in the same units as payoffs and variance isn't.
D)it can measure unquantifiable risk.
Question
The difference between standard deviation and value at risk is:

A)nothing, they are two names for the same thing.
B)value at risk is a more common measure in financial circles than is standard deviation.
C)standard deviation reflects the spread of possible outcomes where value at risk focuses on the value of the worst outcome.
D)value at risk is expected value times the standard deviation.
Question
Which of the following individuals is least likely to use value at risk as an important factor in his/her investment decision?

A)An individual considering a mortgage to buy his first home.
B)A family considering purchasing health insurance.
C)A policy maker considering regulation of depository institutions.
D)A mutual fund manager choosing the allocation of investments in the fund's portfolio.
Question
When considering different investments, a risk-averse investor is most likely to focus on purchasing:

A)investments with the greatest spread in the expected rate of return.
B)investments that offer the lowest standard deviation in the investments' expected rates of return for any given expected rate of return.
C)only risk-free investments.
D)investments with the lowest risk premium, regardless of the expected rate of return.
Question
Diversification is the principle of:

A)eliminating risk.
B)reducing the risk we carry to just two.
C)holding more than one asset to reduce risk.
D)eliminating investments from our portfolio that have idiosyncratic risk.
Question
Which of the following statements is false?

A)Diversification can reduce risk.
B)Diversification can reduce risk but only by reducing the expected return.
C)Diversification reduces idiosyncratic risk.
D)Diversification allocates savings across more than one asset.
Question
Diversification can eliminate:

A)all risk in a portfolio.
B)risk only if the investor is risk averse.
C)the systematic risk in a portfolio.
D)the idiosyncratic risk in a portfolio.
Question
Professional gamblers know that the odds are always in favor of the house (casinos).The fact that they gamble says they are:

A)irrational.
B)risk-neutral.
C)risk-averse.
D)risk seekers.
Question
High oil prices tend to harm the auto industry and benefit oil companies; therefore, high oil prices are an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)neither systematic nor idiosyncratic risk.
D)both systematic and idiosyncratic risk.
Question
The fact that over the long run the return on common stocks has been higher than that on long-term U.S.Treasury bonds is partially explained by the fact that:

A)A lot more money is invested in common stocks than U.S.Treasury bonds.
B)There are regulations on the interest rates U.S.Treasury bonds can offer.
C)The risk premium is higher on common stocks.
D)Risk-averse investors buy more common stock.
Question
The risk premium for an investment:

A)is negative for U.S.treasury securities.
B)is a fixed amount added to the risk-free return, regardless of the level of risk.
C)increases with risk.
D)is zero (0) for risk-averse investors.
Question
Which of the following statements is most correct?

A)Usually higher expected returns are associated with higher risk premiums.
B)Usually higher risk premiums are associated with lower expected returns.
C)Usually lower expected returns are associated with higher risk premiums.
D)Usually expected returns are not associated with risk premiums.
Question
An investor who diversifies by purchasing a 50-50 mix of two stocks that are not perfectly positively correlated will find that the standard deviation of the portfolio is:

A)the sum of the standard deviations of the two individual stocks.
B)greater than the sum of the standard deviations of the individual stocks.
C)greater than the standard deviation from holding the same balance in only one of these stocks.
D)less than the standard deviation from holding the same balance in only one of these stocks.
Question
An investor practicing hedging would be most likely to:

A)avoid the stock market and focus on bonds.
B)purchase shares in general motors and buy U.S.treasury bonds.
C)purchase shares in general motors and Amoco oil.
D)put his/her invested funds in CDs.
Question
Up to what amount would a risk-neutral gambler pay to enter a game where on the flip of a fair coin, if you call the correct outcome the payoff is $2,000?

A)More than $1000 but less than $2000.
B)Up to $2,000.
C)Up to $1,000.
D)More than $1,500.
Question
Unexpected inflation can benefit some people/firms and harm others.This is an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)unmeasured risk.
C)idiosyncratic risk.
D)zero risk since the effects balance.
Question
Hedging is possible only when investments have:

A)opposite payoff patterns.
B)the same payoff patterns.
C)payoffs that are independent of each other.
D)the same risk premiums.
Question
A risk-averse investor will:

A)never prefer an investment with a lower expected return.
B)always prefer an investment with a certain return to one with the same expected return but that has any amount of uncertainty.
C)always require a certain return.
D)always focus exclusively on the expected return.
Question
Changes in general economic conditions usually produce:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)risk reduction.
D)lower risk premiums.
Question
Unique risk is another name for:

A)market risk.
B)systematic risk.
C)the risk premium.
D)idiosyncratic risk.
Question
When the home construction industry does poorly due to a recession, this is an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)risk premium.
D)unique risk.
Question
Systematic risk:

A)is the risk eliminated through diversification.
B)represents the risk affecting a specific company.
C)cannot be eliminated through diversification.
D)is another name for risk unique to an individual asset.
Question
A risk-averse investor compared to a risk-neutral investor would:

A)offer the same price for an investment as the risk-neutral investor.
B)require a higher risk premium for the same investment as a risk-neutral investor.
C)place more focus on expected return and less on return than the risk-neutral investor.
D)place less focus on expected return than the risk-neutral investor.
Question
The main reason for diversification for an investor is to:

A)take advantage of the fact that returns of assets are perfectly positively correlated.
B)take advantage of the fact that returns on assets are not perfectly correlated.
C)lower transaction costs.
D)gain from the greater returns that come from greater risk.
Question
The expected return from a portfolio made up equally of two assets that move perfectly opposite of each other would have a standard deviation equal to:

A)1.0
B)-1.0
C)0.0
D)0.5
Question
The variance of a portfolio of assets:

A)decreases as the number of assets increases.
B)increases as the number of assets increase.
C)approaches 0 as the number of assets decreases.
D)approaches 1 as the number of assets increases.
Question
A portfolio of assets has lower risk than holding one asset, but the same expected return and higher transaction costs.Which of the following statements is most correct?

A)The portfolio is attractive to people who are risk-averse and risk-neutral, but not to risk seekers.
B)The portfolio is attractive to investors who are risk-neutral.
C)The portfolio is not attractive to investors who are risk-neutral.
D)The portfolio is attractive to investors who are risk seekers.
Question
An automobile insurance company that writes millions of policies is practicing a form of:

A)mutual fund.
B)hedging risk.
C)spreading risk.
D)eliminating systematic risk.
Question
If an investment offered an expected payoff of $100 with $0 variance, you would know that:

A)half of the time the payoff is $100 and the other half it is $0.
B)the payoff is always $100.
C)half of the time the payoff is $200 and the other half it is $0.
D)half of the time the payoff is $200 and the other half it is $50.
Question
An individual who is risk-averse:

A)never takes risks.
B)accepts risk but only when the expected return is very small.
C)requires larger compensation when the risk increases.
D)will accept a lower return as risk rises.
Question
In order to benefit from diversification, the returns on assets in a portfolio must:

A)be perfectly positively correlated.
B)be perfectly negatively correlated.
C)positively correlated but not perfectly.
D)have the same idiosyncratic risks.
Question
The variance of a portfolio containing n assets with independent returns:

A)increases as n increases.
B)decreases as n increases.
C)is constant for any n greater than two.
D)does not change in a predictable way when n increases.
Question
The Russian wheat crop fails, driving up wheat prices in the U.S.This is an example of:

A)idiosyncratic risk.
B)diversification.
C)systematic risk.
D)quantifiable risk.
Question
An automobile insurance company on average charges a premium that:

A)equals the expected loss from each driver.
B)is less than the expected loss from each driver.
C)is greater than the expected loss from each driver.
D)equals 1/(expected loss) of each driver.
Question
If the returns of two assets are perfectly positively correlated, an investor who puts half of his/her savings into each will:

A)reduce risk.
B)have a higher expected return.
C)not gain from diversification.
D)reduce risk but lower the expected return.
Question
Sometimes spreading has an advantage over hedging to lower risk because:

A)it can be difficult to find assets that move predictably in opposite directions.
B)it is cheaper to spread than hedge.
C)spreading increases expected returns, hedging does not.
D)spreading does not affect expected returns.
Question
Hedging risk and spreading risk are two ways to:

A)increase expected returns from a portfolio.
B)diversify a portfolio.
C)lower transaction costs.
D)match up perfectly positively correlated assets.
Question
The fact that not everyone places all of his/her savings in U.S.Treasury bonds indicates that:

A)most investors are not risk averse.
B)many investors are actually risk seekers.
C)even risk-averse people will take risk if they are compensated for it.
D)most people are risk-neutral.
Question
An individual faces two alternatives for an investment: Asset A has the following probability return schedule:
Question
In investment matters, generally young workers compared to older workers will:

A)minimize expected return and focus more on variability.
B)be less risk-averse.
C)have equal concern for expected return and variability.
D)be more risk-averse.
Question
If ABC Inc.and XYZ Inc.have returns that are perfectly positively correlated:

A)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will reduce risk.
B)adding ABC Inc.to a portfolio that includes only XYZ Inc.will increase risk.
C)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will neither increase nor decrease the risk of the portfolio.
D)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will neither increase nor decrease idiosyncratic risk but will lower systematic risk.
Question
Spreading risk involves:

A)finding assets whose returns are perfectly negatively correlated.
B)adding assets to a portfolio that move independently.
C)investing in bonds and avoiding stocks during bad times.
D)building a portfolio of assets whose returns move together.
Question
Investing in a mutual fund made up of hundreds of stocks of different companies is an example of all of the following except:

A)spreading risk.
B)diversifying.
C)risk reduction.
D)increasing the variance of a portfolio.
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Deck 5: Understanding Risk
1
The expected value of an investment:

A)is what the owner will receive when the investment is sold.
B)is the sum of the payoffs.
C)is the probability-weighted sum of the possible outcomes.
D)cannot be determined in advance.
C
2
Another name for the expected value of an investment would be the:

A)mean value.
B)upper-end value.
C)certain value.
D)risk-free value.
A
3
If a fair coin is tossed, the probability of coming up with either a head or a tail is:

A)½ or 50 percent.
B)Zero.
C)1 or 100 percent.
D)Unquantifiable.
C
4
An investment with a large spread between possible payoffs will generally have:

A)a low expected return.
B)a high standard deviation.
C)a low value at risk.
D)both a low expected return and a low value at risk.
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5
An investor puts $2,000 into an investment that will pay $2,500 one-fourth of the time; $2,000 one-half of the time, and $1,750 the rest of the time.What is the investor's expected return?

A)12.5%
B)$250.00
C)6.25%
D)3.125%
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6
If an investment has a 20%(0.20) probability of returning $1,000; a 30%(0.30) probability of returning $1,500; and a 50%(0.50) probability of returning $1,800; the expected value of the investment is:

A)$1,433.33
B)$1,550.00
C)$2,800.00
D)$1,600.00
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7
Which of the following would not be included in a definition of risk?

A)Risk is a measure of uncertainty.
B)Risk can always be avoided at no cost.
C)Risk has a time horizon.
D)Risk usually involves some future payoff.
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8
When measuring the risk of an asset:

A)one must measure the uncertainty about the size of future payoffs.
B)it is necessary to incorporate uncertainties that are not quantifiable.
C)one must remember that the concept of risk applies only to financial markets, not to financial intermediaries.
D)one cannot use other investments to evaluate the asset's risk.
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9
If the probability of an outcome equals one, the outcome:

A)is more likely to occur than the others listed.
B)is certain to occur.
C)is certain not to occur.
D)has unquantifiable risk.
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10
Inflation presents risk because:

A)inflation is always present.
B)inflation cannot be measured.
C)there are different ways to measure it.
D)there is no certainty regarding what inflation will be in the future.
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11
All other factors held constant, an investment:

A)with more risk should offer a lower return and sell for a higher price.
B)with less risk should sell for a lower price and offer a higher expected return.
C)with more risk should sell for a lower price and offer a higher expected return.
D)with less risk should sell for a lower price and offer a lower return.
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12
Risk-free investments have rates of return:

A)equal to zero.
B)with a standard deviation equal to zero.
C)that are uncertain, but have a certain time horizon.
D)that exhibit a large spread of potential payoffs.
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13
An investment pays $1,200 a quarter of the time; $1,000 half of the time; and $800 a quarter of the time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000; 20,000 dollars2
B)$1,050; 20,000 dollars2
C)$1,000; 40,000 dollars2
D)$1,000; 80,000 dollar2
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14
Suppose that Fly-By-Night Airlines Inc., has a return of 5% twenty percent of the time and 0% the rest of the time.The expected return from Fly-By-Night is:

A)10%.
B)0.1%.
C)0.2%.
D)1.0%.
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15
Which of the following is true?

A)Investments with higher risk generally have a higher expected return than risk-free investments.
B)Investments that pay a return over a longer time horizon generally have less risk.
C)Investments with a greater variance in the size of the future payoff generally pay a lower expected return.
D)Risk-free investments are the best benchmark for measuring the risk of all investment strategies.
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16
If an investment will return $1,500 half of the time and $700 half of the time, the expected value of the investment is:

A)$1,250.
B)$1,050.
C)$1,100.
D)$2,200.
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17
Uncertainties that are not quantifiable:

A)are what we define as risk.
B)are factored into the price of an asset.
C)cannot be priced.
D)are benchmarks against which quantifiable risks can be assessed.
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18
An investor puts $1,000 into an investment that will return $1,250 one-half of the time and $900 the remainder of the time.The expected return for this investor is:

A)$1,075
B)5.0%
C)7.5%
D)15.0%
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19
If the probability of an outcome is zero, you know the outcome is:

A)more likely to occur.
B)certain to occur.
C)less likely to occur.
D)certain not to occur.
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20
An investment pays $1,500 half of the time and $500 half of the time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000; 500,000 dollars
B)$2,000; (250,000 dollars)2
C)$1,000; 250,000 dollars
D)$1,000; 250,000 dollars2
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21
An investment pays $1000 three quarters of the time, and $0 the remaining time.Its expected value and variance respectively are:

A)$1,000: 62,500 dollars2
B)$750; 46,875 dollars
C)$750; 62,500 dollars
D)$750; 187,500 dollars2
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22
Given a choice between two investments with the same expected payoff most people will:

A)choose the one with the lower standard deviation.
B)opt for the one with the higher standard deviation.
C)be indifferent since the expected payoffs are the same.
D)calculate the variance to assess the relative risks of the two choices.
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23
Investment A pays $1,200 half of the time and $800 half of the time.Investment B pays $1,400 half of the time and $600 half of the time.Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has greater risk.
B)Investment B has a higher expected value than A, but also greater risk.
C)Investment A has a greater expected value than B, but B has less risk.
D)None of the statements are correct.
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24
An investment will pay $2,000 half of the time and $1,400 half of the time.The standard deviation for this investment is:

A)$90,000.
B)$300.
C)$1,700.
D)$30.
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25
A risk-averse investor will:

A)always accept a greater risk with a greater expected return.
B)only invest in assets providing certain returns.
C)never accept lower risk if it means accepting a lower expected return.
D)sometimes accept a lower expected return if it means less risk.
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26
Leverage:

A)reduces risk.
B)is synonymous with risk-free investment.
C)increases expected rate of return.
D)leads to smaller changes in the investment's price.
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27
A $500 investment has the following payoff frequency: half of the time it will pay $350 and the other half of the time it will pay $900.Its standard deviation and value at risk respectively are:

A)$275; $150
B)$625; $275
C)$275; $350
D)$125; $500
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28
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Leverage increases expected return and increases risk.
B)Leverage increases expected return and reduces risk.
C)Leverage decreases expected return but has no effect on risk.
D)Leverage decreases expected return and increases risk.
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29
A $600 investment has the following payoff frequency: a quarter of the time it will be $0; three quarters of the time it will pay off $1000.Its standard deviation and value at risk respectively are:

A)$750; $600
B)$433; $600
C)$0; $1000
D)$433; $1000
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30
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Leverage increases expected return while lowering risk.
B)Leverage increases risk.
C)Leverage lowers the expected return and lowers risk.
D)Leverage lowers the expected return and increases risk.
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31
The greater the standard deviation of an investment the:

A)lower the return.
B)greater the risk.
C)lower the risk.
D)lower the risk and return.
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32
Which of the following investment strategies involves generating a higher expected rate of return through increasing risk?

A)Diversifying
B)Hedging risk
C)Leverage
D)Value at risk
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33
Comparing a lottery where a $1 ticket purchases a chance to win $1 million with another lottery in which a $5,000 ticket purchases a chance to win $5 billion, we notice many people would participate in the first but not the second, even though the odds of winning both lotteries are the same.We can perhaps best explain this outcome by:

A)higher expected value for the lottery paying $1 million.
B)higher expected value for the lottery paying $5 billion.
C)lower value at risk for the lottery paying $1 million.
D)higher value at risk for the lottery paying $1 million.
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34
The measure of risk that focuses on the worst possible outcome is called:

A)expected rate of return.
B)risk-free rate of return.
C)standard deviation of return.
D)value at risk.
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35
Investment A pays $1,200 half of the time and $800 half of the time.Investment B pays $1,400 half of the time and $600 half of the time.Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has greater risk.
B)
B)Investment B has a higher expected value than A, but also greater risk.
C)Investment A and B have the same expected value, but A has lower risk than
D)Investment A has a greater expected value than B, but B has less risk.
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36
An investment will pay $2000 a quarter of the time; $1,600 half of the time and $1,400 a quarter of the time.The standard deviation of this asset is:

A)$600
B)$1,650
C)$47,500
D)$217.94
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37
A risk-averse investor versus a risk-neutral investor:

A)will never take a risk, while the risk neutral investor will.
B)needs greater compensation for the same risk versus the risk neutral investor.
C)will take the same risks as the risk neutral investor if the expected returns are equal.
D)needs less compensation for the same risk versus the risk neutral investor.
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38
The standard deviation is generally more useful than the variance because:

A)it is easier to calculate.
B)variance is a measure of risk, where standard deviation is a measure of return.
C)standard deviation is calculated in the same units as payoffs and variance isn't.
D)it can measure unquantifiable risk.
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39
The difference between standard deviation and value at risk is:

A)nothing, they are two names for the same thing.
B)value at risk is a more common measure in financial circles than is standard deviation.
C)standard deviation reflects the spread of possible outcomes where value at risk focuses on the value of the worst outcome.
D)value at risk is expected value times the standard deviation.
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40
Which of the following individuals is least likely to use value at risk as an important factor in his/her investment decision?

A)An individual considering a mortgage to buy his first home.
B)A family considering purchasing health insurance.
C)A policy maker considering regulation of depository institutions.
D)A mutual fund manager choosing the allocation of investments in the fund's portfolio.
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41
When considering different investments, a risk-averse investor is most likely to focus on purchasing:

A)investments with the greatest spread in the expected rate of return.
B)investments that offer the lowest standard deviation in the investments' expected rates of return for any given expected rate of return.
C)only risk-free investments.
D)investments with the lowest risk premium, regardless of the expected rate of return.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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42
Diversification is the principle of:

A)eliminating risk.
B)reducing the risk we carry to just two.
C)holding more than one asset to reduce risk.
D)eliminating investments from our portfolio that have idiosyncratic risk.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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43
Which of the following statements is false?

A)Diversification can reduce risk.
B)Diversification can reduce risk but only by reducing the expected return.
C)Diversification reduces idiosyncratic risk.
D)Diversification allocates savings across more than one asset.
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44
Diversification can eliminate:

A)all risk in a portfolio.
B)risk only if the investor is risk averse.
C)the systematic risk in a portfolio.
D)the idiosyncratic risk in a portfolio.
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45
Professional gamblers know that the odds are always in favor of the house (casinos).The fact that they gamble says they are:

A)irrational.
B)risk-neutral.
C)risk-averse.
D)risk seekers.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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46
High oil prices tend to harm the auto industry and benefit oil companies; therefore, high oil prices are an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)neither systematic nor idiosyncratic risk.
D)both systematic and idiosyncratic risk.
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47
The fact that over the long run the return on common stocks has been higher than that on long-term U.S.Treasury bonds is partially explained by the fact that:

A)A lot more money is invested in common stocks than U.S.Treasury bonds.
B)There are regulations on the interest rates U.S.Treasury bonds can offer.
C)The risk premium is higher on common stocks.
D)Risk-averse investors buy more common stock.
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48
The risk premium for an investment:

A)is negative for U.S.treasury securities.
B)is a fixed amount added to the risk-free return, regardless of the level of risk.
C)increases with risk.
D)is zero (0) for risk-averse investors.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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49
Which of the following statements is most correct?

A)Usually higher expected returns are associated with higher risk premiums.
B)Usually higher risk premiums are associated with lower expected returns.
C)Usually lower expected returns are associated with higher risk premiums.
D)Usually expected returns are not associated with risk premiums.
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50
An investor who diversifies by purchasing a 50-50 mix of two stocks that are not perfectly positively correlated will find that the standard deviation of the portfolio is:

A)the sum of the standard deviations of the two individual stocks.
B)greater than the sum of the standard deviations of the individual stocks.
C)greater than the standard deviation from holding the same balance in only one of these stocks.
D)less than the standard deviation from holding the same balance in only one of these stocks.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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51
An investor practicing hedging would be most likely to:

A)avoid the stock market and focus on bonds.
B)purchase shares in general motors and buy U.S.treasury bonds.
C)purchase shares in general motors and Amoco oil.
D)put his/her invested funds in CDs.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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52
Up to what amount would a risk-neutral gambler pay to enter a game where on the flip of a fair coin, if you call the correct outcome the payoff is $2,000?

A)More than $1000 but less than $2000.
B)Up to $2,000.
C)Up to $1,000.
D)More than $1,500.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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53
Unexpected inflation can benefit some people/firms and harm others.This is an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)unmeasured risk.
C)idiosyncratic risk.
D)zero risk since the effects balance.
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54
Hedging is possible only when investments have:

A)opposite payoff patterns.
B)the same payoff patterns.
C)payoffs that are independent of each other.
D)the same risk premiums.
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55
A risk-averse investor will:

A)never prefer an investment with a lower expected return.
B)always prefer an investment with a certain return to one with the same expected return but that has any amount of uncertainty.
C)always require a certain return.
D)always focus exclusively on the expected return.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Changes in general economic conditions usually produce:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)risk reduction.
D)lower risk premiums.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Unique risk is another name for:

A)market risk.
B)systematic risk.
C)the risk premium.
D)idiosyncratic risk.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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58
When the home construction industry does poorly due to a recession, this is an example of:

A)systematic risk.
B)idiosyncratic risk.
C)risk premium.
D)unique risk.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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59
Systematic risk:

A)is the risk eliminated through diversification.
B)represents the risk affecting a specific company.
C)cannot be eliminated through diversification.
D)is another name for risk unique to an individual asset.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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60
A risk-averse investor compared to a risk-neutral investor would:

A)offer the same price for an investment as the risk-neutral investor.
B)require a higher risk premium for the same investment as a risk-neutral investor.
C)place more focus on expected return and less on return than the risk-neutral investor.
D)place less focus on expected return than the risk-neutral investor.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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61
The main reason for diversification for an investor is to:

A)take advantage of the fact that returns of assets are perfectly positively correlated.
B)take advantage of the fact that returns on assets are not perfectly correlated.
C)lower transaction costs.
D)gain from the greater returns that come from greater risk.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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62
The expected return from a portfolio made up equally of two assets that move perfectly opposite of each other would have a standard deviation equal to:

A)1.0
B)-1.0
C)0.0
D)0.5
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63
The variance of a portfolio of assets:

A)decreases as the number of assets increases.
B)increases as the number of assets increase.
C)approaches 0 as the number of assets decreases.
D)approaches 1 as the number of assets increases.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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64
A portfolio of assets has lower risk than holding one asset, but the same expected return and higher transaction costs.Which of the following statements is most correct?

A)The portfolio is attractive to people who are risk-averse and risk-neutral, but not to risk seekers.
B)The portfolio is attractive to investors who are risk-neutral.
C)The portfolio is not attractive to investors who are risk-neutral.
D)The portfolio is attractive to investors who are risk seekers.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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65
An automobile insurance company that writes millions of policies is practicing a form of:

A)mutual fund.
B)hedging risk.
C)spreading risk.
D)eliminating systematic risk.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
If an investment offered an expected payoff of $100 with $0 variance, you would know that:

A)half of the time the payoff is $100 and the other half it is $0.
B)the payoff is always $100.
C)half of the time the payoff is $200 and the other half it is $0.
D)half of the time the payoff is $200 and the other half it is $50.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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67
An individual who is risk-averse:

A)never takes risks.
B)accepts risk but only when the expected return is very small.
C)requires larger compensation when the risk increases.
D)will accept a lower return as risk rises.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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68
In order to benefit from diversification, the returns on assets in a portfolio must:

A)be perfectly positively correlated.
B)be perfectly negatively correlated.
C)positively correlated but not perfectly.
D)have the same idiosyncratic risks.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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69
The variance of a portfolio containing n assets with independent returns:

A)increases as n increases.
B)decreases as n increases.
C)is constant for any n greater than two.
D)does not change in a predictable way when n increases.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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70
The Russian wheat crop fails, driving up wheat prices in the U.S.This is an example of:

A)idiosyncratic risk.
B)diversification.
C)systematic risk.
D)quantifiable risk.
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71
An automobile insurance company on average charges a premium that:

A)equals the expected loss from each driver.
B)is less than the expected loss from each driver.
C)is greater than the expected loss from each driver.
D)equals 1/(expected loss) of each driver.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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72
If the returns of two assets are perfectly positively correlated, an investor who puts half of his/her savings into each will:

A)reduce risk.
B)have a higher expected return.
C)not gain from diversification.
D)reduce risk but lower the expected return.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
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73
Sometimes spreading has an advantage over hedging to lower risk because:

A)it can be difficult to find assets that move predictably in opposite directions.
B)it is cheaper to spread than hedge.
C)spreading increases expected returns, hedging does not.
D)spreading does not affect expected returns.
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74
Hedging risk and spreading risk are two ways to:

A)increase expected returns from a portfolio.
B)diversify a portfolio.
C)lower transaction costs.
D)match up perfectly positively correlated assets.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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75
The fact that not everyone places all of his/her savings in U.S.Treasury bonds indicates that:

A)most investors are not risk averse.
B)many investors are actually risk seekers.
C)even risk-averse people will take risk if they are compensated for it.
D)most people are risk-neutral.
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76
An individual faces two alternatives for an investment: Asset A has the following probability return schedule:
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77
In investment matters, generally young workers compared to older workers will:

A)minimize expected return and focus more on variability.
B)be less risk-averse.
C)have equal concern for expected return and variability.
D)be more risk-averse.
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78
If ABC Inc.and XYZ Inc.have returns that are perfectly positively correlated:

A)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will reduce risk.
B)adding ABC Inc.to a portfolio that includes only XYZ Inc.will increase risk.
C)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will neither increase nor decrease the risk of the portfolio.
D)adding XYZ Inc.to a portfolio that consists of only ABC Inc.will neither increase nor decrease idiosyncratic risk but will lower systematic risk.
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79
Spreading risk involves:

A)finding assets whose returns are perfectly negatively correlated.
B)adding assets to a portfolio that move independently.
C)investing in bonds and avoiding stocks during bad times.
D)building a portfolio of assets whose returns move together.
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80
Investing in a mutual fund made up of hundreds of stocks of different companies is an example of all of the following except:

A)spreading risk.
B)diversifying.
C)risk reduction.
D)increasing the variance of a portfolio.
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Unlock Deck
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