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Business
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Corporate Finance
Quiz 5: Bonds, bond valuation, and interest rates
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Question 1
True/False
A bond that had a 20-year original maturity with 1 year left to maturity has more interest rate price risk than a 10-year original maturity bond with 1 year left to maturity.(Assume that the bonds have equal default risk and equal coupon rates, and they cannot be called.)
Question 2
True/False
A call provision gives bondholders the right to demand, or "call for, " repayment of a bond.Typically, calls are exercised if interest rates rise, because when rates rise the bondholder can get the principal amount back and reinvest it elsewhere at higher rates.
Question 3
True/False
There is an inverse relationship between bonds' quality ratings and their required rates of return.Thus, the required return is lowest for AAA-rated bonds, and required returns increase as the ratings get lower.
Question 4
True/False
You are considering 2 bonds that will be issued tomorrow.Both are rated triple B (BBB, the lowest investment-grade rating), both mature in 20 years, both have a 10% coupon, neither can be called except for sinking fund purposes, and both are offered to you at their $1, 000 par values.However, Bond SF has a sinking fund while Bond NSF does not.Under the sinking fund, the company must call and pay off 5% of the bonds at par each year.The yield curve at the time is upward sloping.The bond's prices, being equal, are probably not in equilibrium, as Bond SF, which has the sinking fund, would generally be expected to have a higher yield than Bond NSF.
Question 5
True/False
Sinking funds are devices used to force companies to retire bonds on a scheduled basis prior to their maturity.Many bond indentures allow the company to acquire bonds for a sinking fund by either purchasing bonds in the market or selecting the bonds to be acquired by a lottery administered by the trustee through a call at face value.
Question 6
True/False
For bonds, price sensitivity to a given change in interest rates is generally greater the longer before the bond matures.
Question 7
True/False
If a firm raises capital by selling new bonds, it is called the "issuing firm, " and the coupon rate is generally set equal to the required rate on bonds of equal risk.
Question 8
True/False
A bond that is callable has a chance of being retired earlier than its stated term to maturity.Therefore, if the yield curve is upward sloping, an outstanding callable bond should have a lower yield to maturity than an otherwise identical noncallable bond.
Question 9
True/False
If the required rate of return on a bond (rd)is greater than its coupon interest rate and will remain above that rate, then the market value of the bond will always be below its par value until the bond matures, at which time its market value will equal its par value.(Accrued interest between interest payment dates should not be considered when answering this question.)
Question 10
True/False
A bond has a $1, 000 par value, makes annual interest payments of $100, has 5 years to maturity, cannot be called, and is not expected to default.The bond should sell at a premium if interest rates are below 10% and at a discount if interest rates are greater than 10%.
Question 11
True/False
The desire for floating-rate bonds, and consequently their increased usage, arose out of the experience of the early 1980s, when inflation pushed interest rates up to very high levels and thus caused sharp declines in the prices of outstanding bonds.
Question 12
True/False
A zero coupon bond is a bond that pays no interest and is offered (and subsequently sells initially)at par.These bonds provide compensation to investors in the form of capital appreciation.
Question 13
True/False
Because short-term interest rates are much more volatile than long-term rates, you would, in the real world, generally be subject to much more interest rate price risk if you purchased a 30-day bond than if you bought a 30-year bond.
Question 14
True/False
Income bonds pay interest only if the issuing company actually earns the indicated interest.Thus, these securities cannot bankrupt a company, and this makes them safer from an investor's perspective than regular bonds.