Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
PRACTICE QUESTIONS
Note – in some of these questions it may be possible to use tables instead of calculating the values
directly.
1. What is the corporate objective?
a. To maximise capital
b. To maximise shareholder wealth
c. To minimise capital
d. To minimise shareholder wealth
e. To minimise shareholder risk
4. Which of the following investments will have the highest future value at the end of 5 years?
Assume that the effective annual rate for all investments is the same.
a. A pays $50 at the end of every 6-month period for the next 5 years (a total of 10
payments).
b. B pays $50 at the beginning of every 6-month period for the next 5 years (a total of 10
payments).
c. C pays $500 at the end of 5 years (a total of one payment).
5. Your bank account pays an 8 percent nominal rate of interest. The interest is compounded
quarterly. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The periodic rate of interest is 2 percent and the effective rate of interest is 4 percent.
b. The periodic rate of interest is 8 percent and the effective rate of interest is greater than 8
percent.
c. The periodic rate of interest is 4 percent and the effective rate of interest is 8 percent.
d. The periodic rate of interest is 8 percent and the effective rate of interest is 8 percent.
e. The periodic rate of interest is 2 percent and the effective rate of interest is greater than 8
percent.
6. Suppose someone offered you the choice of two equally risky annuities, each paying $10,000 per
year for five years. One is an ordinary (or deferred) annuity, the other is an annuity due. Which of
the following statements is most correct?
a. The present value of the ordinary annuity must exceed the present value of the annuity
due, but the future value of an ordinary annuity may be less than the future value of the
annuity due.
b. The present value of the annuity due exceeds the present value of the ordinary annuity,
while the future value of the annuity due is less than the future value of the ordinary annuity.
c. The present value of the annuity due exceeds the present value of the ordinary annuity,
and the future value of the annuity due also exceeds the future value of the ordinary annuity.
d. If interest rates increase, the difference between the present value of the ordinary annuity
and the present value of the annuity due remains the same.
e. Statements a and d are correct.
7. You deposited $1,000 in a savings account that pays 8 percent interest, compounded quarterly,
planning to use it to finish your last year in college. Eighteen months later, you decide to go to the
Rocky Mountains to become a ski instructor rather than continue in school, so you close out your
account. How much money will you receive?
a. $1,171
b. $1,126
c. $1,082
d. $1,163
e. $1,008
8. You have the opportunity to buy a perpetuity that pays $1,000 annually. Your required rate of
return on this investment is 15 percent. You should be essentially indifferent to buying or not
buying the investment if it were offered at a price of
a. $5,000.00
b. $6,000.00
c. $6,666.67
d. $7,500.00
e. $8,728.50
9. Assume that you will receive $2,000 a year in Years 1 through 5, $3,000 a year in Years 6
through 8, and $4,000 in Year 9, with all cash flows to be received at the end of the year. If you
require a 14 percent rate of return, what is the present value of these cash flows?
a. $ 9,851
10. If a 5-year ordinary annuity has a present value of $1,000, and if the interest rate is 10 percent,
what is the amount of each annuity payment?
a. $240.42
b. $263.80
c. $300.20
d. $315.38
e. $346.87
11. Gomez Electronics needs to arrange financing for its expansion program. Bank A offers to lend
Gomez the required funds on a loan in which interest must be paid monthly, and the annual rate is 8
percent. Bank B will charge 9 percent, with interest due at the end of the year. What is the
difference in the effective annual rates charged by the two banks?
a. 0.25%
b. 0.50%
c. 0.70%
d. 1.00%
e. 1.25%
12. Bill plans to deposit $200 into a bank account at the end of every month. The bank account has
a nominal interest rate of 8 percent and interest is compounded monthly. How much will Bill have
in the account at the end of 2 and a half years (30 months)?
a. $ 6,617.77
b. $ 502.50
c. $ 6,594.88
d. $22,656.74
e. $ 5,232.43
13. You have been offered an investment that pays $500 at the end of every 6 months for the next 3
years. The nominal interest rate is 12 percent; however, interest is compounded quarterly. What is
the present value of the investment?
a. $2,458.66
b. $2,444.67
c. $2,451.73
d. $2,463.33
e. $2,437.56
14. You just put $1,000 in a bank account that pays 6 percent nominal annual interest, compounded
monthly. How much will you have in your account after 3 years?
a. $1,006.00
b. $1,056.45
c. $1,180.32
d. $1,191.00
e. $1,196.68
16. Assume that a 10-year bond has a 12 percent annual coupon, while a 15-year bond has an 8
percent annual coupon. The yield curve is flat; all bonds have a 10 percent yield to maturity.
Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The 10-year bond is selling at a discount, while the 15-year bond is selling at a premium.
b. The 10-year bond is selling at a premium, while the 15-year bond is selling at par.
c. If interest rates decline, the price of both bonds will increase, but the 15-year bond will
have a larger percentage increase in price.
d. If the yield to maturity on both bonds remains at 10 percent over the next year, the price
of the 10-year bond will increase, but the price of the 15-year bond will fall.
e. Statements c and d are correct.
17. A 12-year bond has an annual coupon rate of 9 percent. The coupon rate will remain fixed until
the bond matures. The bond has a yield to maturity of 7 percent. Which of the following
statements is most correct?
a. The bond is currently selling at a price below its par value.
b. If market interest rates decline today, the price of the bond will also decline today.
c. If market interest rates remain unchanged, the bond's price one year from now will be
lower than it is today.
d. All of the statements above are correct.
e. None of the statements above is correct.
18. A bond with 6 years to maturity and sells at par has an 8 percent semi-annual coupon (that is,
the bond pays a $40 coupon every six months). Another bond of equal risk and maturity pays 8
percent interest annually. Both bonds are non-callable and have face values of $1,000. What is the
price of the bond that pays annual interest?
a. $689.08
b. $712.05
c. $980.43
d. $986.72
e. $992.64
19. What annually compounded rate is equivalent to an interest rate of 12% compounded monthly?
a. 12.36
b. 12.55
c. 12.68
d. 12.73
e. 12.75
20. A stock's dividend is expected to grow at a constant rate of 5 percent a year. Which of the
following statements is most correct?
a. The expected return on the stock is 5 percent a year.
You are given the following information Bridges & Associates. Use this information for the next
two questions, numbers 21 and 22.
Bridges & Associates' stock is expected to pay a $0.75 per-share dividend at the end of the year.
The dividend is expected to grow 25 percent the next year and 35 percent the following year. After
t = 3, the dividend is expected to grow at a constant rate of 6 percent a year. The company's cost of
common equity is 10 percent and it is expected to remain constant.
21. Refer to Bridges & Associates. What is the expected price of the stock today?
a. $18.75
b. $27.61
c. $30.77
d. $34.50
e. $35.50
22. Refer to Bridges & Associates. What is the expected price of the stock 10 years from today?
a. $47.58
b. $49.45
c. $50.43
d. $53.46
e. $55.10
23. Next year, ABC group will have earnings per share of $4. It expects to plowback 60% of its
earnings to fund new projects which offer a return on equity of 20%. If its required return is 16%,
what should be its current stock price?
a. $10
b. $20
c. $30
d. $40
e. $50
24. Two projects being considered by a firm are mutually exclusive and have the following
projected cash flows:
Year Project A Cash Flow Project B Cash Flow
0 -$100,000 -$100,000
1 39,500 0
2 39,500 0
3 39,500 133,000
Based only on the information given, which of the two projects would be preferred, and why?
a. Project A, because it has a higher IRR.
b. Project B, because it has a higher IRR.
c. Indifferent, because the projects have equal IRRs.
d. Include both in the capital budget, since the sum of the cash inflows exceeds the initial
investment in both cases.
e. Choose neither, since their NPVs are negative.
The project is expected to increase the company's sales by $20 million. Sales will remain at this
higher level for each year of the project (t = 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5). The operating costs, not including
depreciation, equal 60 percent of the increase in annual sales. The project's interest expense is $5
million per year and the company's tax rate is 40 percent. The company is very profitable, so any
accounting losses on this project can be used to reduce the company's overall tax burden. The
project does not require any additions to net operating working capital. The company estimates that
the project's after-tax salvage value at t = 5 will be $1.2 million. The project is of average risk, and,
therefore, the CFO has decided to discount the operating cash flows at the company's overall
weighted average cost of capital of 10 percent. However, the salvage value is more uncertain, so
the CFO has decided to discount it at 12 percent.
25. Refer to Garcia Paper. What is the operating cash flows in year 1?
a. $2.4 million
b. $3.2 million
c. $4.8 million
d. $6.0 million
e. $8.8 million
26. Refer to Garcia Paper. What is the operating cash flows in year 5?
a. $2.4 million
b. $3.2 million
c. $4.8 million
d. $6.0 million
e. $8.8 million
27. Refer to Garcia Paper. What is the present value of the project’s after-tax salvage value?
a. $0.4272 million
b. $0.6809 million
c. $0.7451 million
d. $1.2 million
e. $2.4 million
28. Refer to Garcia Paper. What is the net present value (NPV) of the entire proposed project?
a. $11.86 million
b. $14.39 million
c. -$26.04 million
d. -$12.55 million
e. -$ 1.18 million
You are given the following information Bucholz Brands. Use this information for the next two
questions, numbers 29 and 30.
29. Refer to Bucholz Brands. What is the project's after-tax operating cash flow the first year (t = 1)?
a. $22.5 million
b. $45.0 million
c. $60.0 million
d. $72.5 million
e. $90.0 million
30. Refer to Bucholz Brands. What is the project's estimated net present value (NPV)?
a. -$10.07 million
b. -$25.92 million
c. -$46.41 million
d. -$60.07 million
e. +$ 5.78 million
31. Whalen Maritime Research Inc. regularly takes real options into account when evaluating its
proposed projects. Specifically, Whalen considers the option to abandon a project whenever it turns
out to be unsuccessful (the abandonment option). In addition, it usually evaluates whether it makes
sense to invest in a project today or whether to wait to collect more information (the investment
timing option). Assume the proposed projects can be abandoned at any time without penalty.
Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The abandonment option tends to reduce a project's NPV.
b. The abandonment option tends to reduce a project's risk.
c. If there are important first-mover advantages, this tends to increase the value of waiting a
year to collect more information before proceeding with a proposed project.
d. Statements a and b are correct.
e. All of the statements above are correct.
You are given the following information Diplomat.com. Use this information for the next two
questions, numbers 32 and 33.
32. Refer to Diplomat.com. Based on this information what is the project's net present value?
a. -$ 875,203
b. -$ 506,498
c. $ 54,307
d. -$1,104,600
e. $ 105,999
33. Refer to Diplomat.com. If Diplomat goes ahead with this project today, the project will create
additional opportunities five years from now (t = 5). The company can decide at t = 5 whether or
not it wants to pursue these additional opportunities. Based on the best information that is available
today, the company estimates that there is a 35 percent chance that its technology will be successful,
in which case the future investment opportunities will have a net present value of $6 million at t = 5.
There is a 65 percent chance that its technology will not succeed, in which case the future
investment opportunities will have a net present value of -$6 million at t = 5. Diplomat.com does
not have to decide today whether it wants to pursue these additional opportunities. Instead, it can
wait until after it finds out if its technology is successful. However, Diplomat.com cannot pursue
these additional opportunities in the future unless it makes the initial investment today. What is the
estimated net present value of the project, after taking into account the future opportunities?
a. $ 199,342
b. $ 561,947
c. $ 898,205
d. -$1,104,600
e. -$2,222,265
34. Dumpty Inc is comparing the operating costs of two types of equipment
• Model A costs $50,000 and will have a useful life of 4 years. Operating costs are expected to
be $4,000 per year.
• Model B costs $90,000 and will have a useful life of 6 years. Its operating costs are expected
to be $2,500 per year.
Both models will be able to operate at the same level and quality of output and generate the same
cash flows. The applicable discount rate is 8 percent.
What annual cost saving will Dumpty achieve if it purchases the cheaper model?
a. $ 38.31
b. $ 410.30
c. $2,872.14
d. $3,665.34
e. $6,127.39
35. Which of the following statements is most correct? (Assume that the risk-free rate remains
constant.)
a. If the market risk premium increases by 1 percentage point, then the required return on all
stocks will rise by 1 percentage point.
b. If the market risk premium increases by 1 percentage point, then the required return will
increase for stocks that have a beta greater than 1.0, but it will decrease for stocks that have
a beta less than 1.0.
36. Stock X has a beta of 0.5 and stock Y has a beta of 1.5. Which of the following statements is
most correct?
a. Stock Y’s return this year will be higher than stock X’s return.
b. Stock Y’s return has a higher standard deviation than stock X.
c. If expected inflation increases (but the market risk premium is unchanged), the required
returns on the two stocks will increase by the same amount.
d. If the market risk premium declines (leaving the risk-free rate 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 portfolio will have a beta
less than 1.0, provided the stock returns on the two stocks are not perfectly correlated.
37. Which of the following is not a difficulty concerning beta and its estimation?
a. Sometimes a security or project does not have a past history that can be used as a basis for
calculating beta.
b. 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 than the
“true” or “expected future” beta.
c. The beta of an “average stock” or “the market” can change over time, sometimes
drastically.
d. Sometimes the past data used to calculate beta do not reflect the likely risk of the firm for
the future because conditions have changed.
38. A money manager is holding a $10 million portfolio that consists of the following five stocks:
The portfolio has a required return of 11 percent, and the market risk premium (k M – k R F ) is 5
percent. What is the required return on Stock C?
a. 7.2%
b. 10.0%
c. 10.9%
d. 11.0%
e. None of these answers
40. An analyst has estimated how a particular stock’s return will vary depending on what will
happen to the economy
State of economy Prob. of occurring E(r) if the state occurs
Recession 0.1 -60%
Below average 0.2 -10%
Average 0.4 15%
Above average 0.2 40%
Boom 0.1 90%
What is the coefficient of variation (defined to be the standard deviation divided by the expected
value) on the company’s stock?
a. 2.121
b. 2.201
c. 2.472
d. 3.334
e. 3.727
43. The Barabas Company has an equal amount of low-risk projects, average-risk projects, and
high-risk projects. Barabas estimates that the overall company’s WACC is 12%. This is also the
correct cost of capital for the company’s average-risk projects. The company’s CFO argues that,
even though the company’s projects have different risks, the cost of capital for each project should
44. Halls Corp. wants to calculate its WACC. The company’s CFO has collected the following
information: The company’s long-term bonds currently offer a yield to maturity of 8%. The
company’s stock price is $32 per share. The company’s recently paid a dividend of $2 per share.
The dividend is expected to grow at a constant rate of 6% per year. The company pays 10%
flotation cost whenever it issues new common stock. The company’s target capital structure is 75%
equity and 25% debt. The company’s tax rate is 40%. The firm will be able to use retained
earnings to fund the equity portion of its capital budget. What is the company’s WACC?
a. 10.67%
b. 11.22%
c. 11.47%
d. 12.02%
e. 12.56%
45. Assume you are the director of capital budgeting for an all-equity firm. The firm’s current cost
of equity is 16%. The risk-free rate and the market risk premium are 10% and 5% respectively.
You are considering a new project that has 50% more beta risk than your firm’s assets currently
have. The expected return on the new project is 18%. Should the project be accepted if beta risk is
the appropriate measure?
a. Yes, its expected return is greater than the firm’s cost of capital.
b. Yes, the project’s risk-adjusted required return is less than its expected return.
c. No, a 50% increase in beta risk gives risk-adjusted required return of 24%.
d. No, the projects risk-adjusted required return is 2% above its expected return.
e. No, the projects risk-adjusted required return is 1% above its expected return.
46. Jones Co. currently is 100 percent equity financed. The company is considering changing its
capital structure. More specifically, Jones' CFO is considering a recapitalization plan in which the
firm would issue long-term debt with a yield of 9 percent and use the proceeds to repurchase
common stock. The recapitalization would not change the company's total assets nor would it affect
the company's basic earning power, which is currently 15 percent. The CFO estimates that the
recapitalization will reduce the company's WACC and increase its stock price. Which of the
following is also likely to occur if the company goes ahead with the planned recapitalization?
a. The company's net income will increase.
b. The company's earnings per share will decrease.
c. The company's cost of equity will increase.
d. The company's ROA will increase.
e. The company's ROE will decrease.
47. A consultant has collected the following information regarding Young Publishing:
The company has no growth opportunities (g = 0), so the company pays out all of its earnings as
dividends (EPS = DPS). Young's stock price can be calculated by simply dividing earnings per
share by the required return on equity capital, which currently equals the WACC because the
company has no debt.
The consultant believes that the company would be much better off if it were to change its capital
structure to 40 percent debt and 60 percent equity. After meeting with investment bankers, the
consultant concludes that the company could issue $1,200 million of debt at a before-tax cost of 7
percent, leaving the company with interest expense of $84 million. The $1,200 million raised from
the debt issue would be used to repurchase stock at $32 per share. The repurchase will have no
effect on the firm's EBIT; however, after the repurchase, the cost of equity will increase to 11
percent. If the firm follows the consultant's advice, what will be its estimated stock price after the
capital structure change?
a. $32.00
b. $33.48
c. $31.29
d. $32.59
e. $34.72
49. A decrease in a firm's willingness to pay dividends is likely to result from an increase in its
a. Earnings stability.
b. Access to capital markets.
c. Profitable investment opportunities.
d. Collection of accounts receivable.
e. Stock price.
52. The firm's target capital structure is consistent with which of the following?
a. Maximum earnings per share (EPS).
b. Minimum cost of debt (k d ).
c. Minimum risk.
d. Minimum cost of equity (k S ).
e. Minimum weighted average cost of capital (WACC).
53. Flood Motors is an all-equity firm with 200,000 shares outstanding. The company's EBIT is
$2,000,000, and EBIT is expected to remain constant over time. The company pays out all of its
earnings each year, so its earnings per share equals its dividends per share. The company's tax rate
is 40 percent.
The company is considering issuing $2 million worth of bonds (at par) and using the proceeds for a
stock repurchase. If issued, the bonds would have an estimated yield to maturity of 10 percent. The
risk-free rate in the economy is 6.6 percent, and the market risk premium is 6 percent. The
company's beta is currently 0.9, but its investment bankers estimate that the company's beta would
rise to 1.1 if it proceeds with the recapitalization.
Assume that the shares are repurchased at a price equal to the stock market price prior to the
recapitalization. What would be the company's stock price following the recapitalization?
a. $51.14
b. $53.85
c. $56.02
d. $68.97
e. $76.03
You are given the following information Fotopoulos Corporation. Use this information for the next
three questions, numbers 54, 55 and 56.
The book value of the company (both debt and common equity) equals its market value (both debt
and common equity). Furthermore, the company has determined the following information:
54. Refer to Fotopoulos Corporation. What is Fotopoulos' current WACC (before the proposed
recapitalization)?
a. 5.92%
b. 9.88%
c. 10.18%
d. 10.78%
e. 11.38%
55. Refer to Fotopoulos Corporation. What is Fotopoulos' current unlevered beta (before the
proposed recapitalization)?
a. 0.6213
b. 0.8962
c. 0.9565
d. 1.0041
e. 1.2700
56. Refer to Fotopoulos Corporation. What will be the company's new cost of common equity if it
proceeds with the recapitalization? (Hint: Be sure that the beta you use is carried out to 4 decimal
places.)
a. 10.74%
b. 11.62%
c. 12.27%
d. 12.62%
e. 13.03%
58. Plato Inc. expects to have net income of $5,000,000 during the next year. Plato's target capital
structure is 35 percent debt and 65 percent equity. The company's director of capital budgeting has
determined that the optimal capital budget for the coming year is $6,000,000. If Plato follows a
residual dividend policy to determine the coming year's dividend, then what is Plato's payout ratio?
59. Which of the following statements is likely to encourage a firm to increase its debt ratio in its
capital structure?
a. Its sales become less stable over time.
b. Its corporate tax rate declines.
c. Management believes that the firm's stock is overvalued.
d. Statements a and b are correct.
e. None of the statements above is correct.
60. Zippy Pasta Corporation (ZPC) has a constant growth rate of 7 percent. The company retains
30 percent of its earnings to fund future growth. ZPC's expected EPS (EPS1) and ks for various
capital structures are given below. What is the optimal capital structure for ZPC?
Debt/Total Assets Expected EPS kS
20% $2.50 15.0%
30 3.00 15.5
40 3.25 16.0
50 3.75 17.0
70 4.00 18.0
a. Debt/Total Assets = 20%
b. Debt/Total Assets = 30%
c. Debt/Total Assets = 40%
d. Debt/Total Assets = 50%
e. Debt/Total Assets = 70%
61. Etchabarren Electronics has made the following forecast for the upcoming year based on the
company's current capitalization:
The company has $20 million worth of debt outstanding and all of its debt yields 10 percent. The
company's tax rate is 40 percent. The company's price earnings (P/E) ratio has traditionally been
12´, so the company forecasts that under the current capitalization its stock price will be $43.20 at
year end.
The company's investment bankers have suggested that the company recapitalize. Their suggestion
is to issue enough new bonds at a yield of 10 percent to repurchase 1 million shares of common
stock. Assume that the stock can be repurchased at today's $40 stock price.
Assume that the repurchase will have no effect on the company's operating income; however, the
repurchase will increase the company's dollar interest expense. Also, assume that as a result of the
increased financial risk the company's price earnings (P/E) ratio will be 11.5 after the repurchase.
Given these assumptions, what would be the expected year-end stock price if the company
proceeded with the recapitalization?
a. The cost of retained earnings is the rate of return stockholders require on a firm's common
stock.
b. The component cost of preferred stock is expressed as k P (1 - T)
c. The higher the firm's flotation cost for new common stock, the more likely the firm is to
use preferred stock, which has no flotation cost.
d. All of these answers are correct
e. None of the statements above is correct.
65. A consultant has collected the following information regarding Young Publishing:
The company has no growth opportunities (g = 0), so the company pays out all of its earnings as
dividends (EPS = DPS). Young’s stock price can be calculated by simply dividing earnings per
share by the required return on equity capital, which currently equals the WACC because the
company has no debt.
66. Trenton Publishing follows a strict residual dividend policy. All else being equal, which of the
following factors are likely to cause an increase in the firm's per-share dividend?
a. An increase in its net income.
b. The company increases the proportion of equity financing in its target capital structure.
c. An increase in the number of profitable projects that it wants to fund this year.
d. Statements a and b are correct.
e. All of the statements above are correct.
67. Brock Brothers wants to maintain its capital structure that consists of 30 percent debt and 70
percent equity. The company forecasts that its net income this year will be $1,000,000. The
company follows a residual dividend policy and anticipates a dividend payout ratio of 40 percent.
What is the size of the company's capital budget?
a. $ 600,000
b. $ 857,143
c. $1,000,000
d. $1,428,571
e. $2,000,000
68. A decrease in a firm's willingness to pay dividends is likely to result from an increase in its
a. Earnings stability.
b. Access to capital markets.
c. Profitable investment opportunities.
d. Collection of accounts receivable.
e. Stock price.
69. Trenton Publishing follows a strict residual dividend policy. All else being equal, which of the
following factors are likely to cause an increase in the firm's per-share dividend?
a. An increase in its net income.
b. The company increases the proportion of equity financing in its target capital structure.
c. An increase in the number of profitable projects that it wants to fund this year.
d. Statements a and b are correct.
e. All of the statements above are correct.
70. Imagine that the government has passed a new tax law that reduces long-term capital gains tax
rates from 28 percent to 20 percent. The maximum tax rate for ordinary personal income is 38.6
72. Grant Grocers is considering the following independent, average-risk investment projects:
Project Size of Project Project IRR
Project V $1.0 million 12.0%
Project W 1.2 million 11.5%
Project X 1.2 million 11.0%
Project Y 1.2 million 10.5%
Project Z 1.0 million 10.0%
The company has a target capital structure that consists of 50 percent debt and 50 percent equity.
Its after-tax cost of debt is 8 percent, its cost of equity is estimated to be 13.5 percent, and its net
income is $2.5 million. If the company follows a residual dividend policy, what will be its payout
ratio?
a. 12%
b. 32%
c. 54%
d. 66%
e. 100%
73. You are an Australian resident taxpayer and you have just received a dividend cheque for
$1,400 from Telstra Corporation. The dividend is fully franked and carries franking credits at the
corporate rate of tax of 30%. If your personal tax rate is 46 percent in your next tax return you will,
as a consequence of this dividend:
a. Receive a tax refund of $600
b. Have to pay additional tax of $320
c. Have to pay additional tax of $224
d. There are no taxes on fully franked dividends.
e. None of the above.
78. If share price moves up 5%, buy and hold shares until the price moves down 3%, and then sell.
The aforementioned strategy is an example of the following market efficiency test:
a. Semi-strong form.
b. Strong form.
c. Weak form - runs test.
d. Weak form - filter rule.
79. Which of the following results may be inconsistent with semi-strong form market efficiency?
a. Share returns follow a predictable trend after a profit announcement.
b. Share prices react instantaneously to profit announcements.
c. Abnormal returns are not detected around profit announcements.
d. None of the above.
80. Company insiders of XYZ consistently purchase shares of their company prior to increases in
the share price and sell shares before decreases in the share price. Which of the following answers is
consistent with the aforementioned observation?
a. The market is not weak-form efficient.
b. The market is semi-strong form efficient.
c. The market is not strong-form efficient.
d. The degree of market efficiency cannot be established.
81. Which of the following statements is the most consistent with evidence provided on the EMH?
Answers
1. Answer is b.
2. Answer is e.
3. Answer is e.
4. Answer is e.
As the effective rate is the same, the correct answer must be the one that has the largest amount of
money compounding for the longest time. This would be statement e. The easiest way to see this is
to assume an effective annual rate and then do the calculations
5. Answer is e.
If the nominal rate is 8 percent and there is quarterly compounding, the periodic rate must be 8%/4
= 2%. The effective rate will be greater than the nominal rate; it will be 8.24 percent.
6. Answer is c.
By definition, an annuity due is received at the beginning of the year while an ordinary annuity is
received at the end of the year. Because the payments are received earlier, both the present and
future values of the annuity due are greater than those of the ordinary annuity.
7. Answer is b.
-1,000 FV=?
8. Answer is c
PMT 1000
Present value of a perpetuity, PV perpetuity = = = $6,666.67
i 0.15
9. Answer is c.
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
14% Years
PV=? 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 3,000 3,000 3,000 3,000
Present value here is the sum of the discounted values of each cash flow:
1 2 n
1 1 1
PV = CF + CF + ...+ CF
1+ i 1+ i 1+ i
10. Answer is b.
Time line:
0 1 2 3 4 5
10% Years
11. Answer is c.
Bank A: 8%, monthly.
12. Answer is a.
Convert the given interest rate to match the payment period:
i 8%
Periodic rate i Per = Nom = = 0.667%
m 12
Now find the future value of the annuity
[1 + i ]n − 1 [1 + 0.00667]30 − 1
FVAn = PMT = 200
= 6617.77
i 0 . 00667
13. Answer is c.
First, find the effective annual rate for a nominal rate of 12% with quarterly compounding
m 4
i Nom 12%
EFF = 1 + − 1 = 1 + − 1 = 12.55%
m 4
In order to discount the cash flows properly, it is now necessary to find the nominal rate with
semiannual compounding that corresponds to the effective rate calculated above
2
i
12.55% = 1 + Nom − 1 ⇒ i Nom = 12.18%
2
Now find the Present value of the investment, adjusting the nominal rate calculated here to semi-
annual compounding
1 1 1 1
PVAn = PMT −
( + ) n
= 500 6.09% 6.09%(1 + 6.09% )6 = $2451.73
−
i i 1 i
14. Answer is e.
36
6%
FVn = PV (1 + i ) = 10001 + = $1196.68
n
12
15. Answer is d.
Step 1: Find the effective annual rate:
m 12
i Nom 9%
EFF = 1 + − 1 = 1 + − 1 = 9.3807%
m 12
Step 2: Calculate the FV of the $5,000 annuity at the end of 10 years:
[1 + i ]n − 1 [1 + 9.3807%]10 − 1
FVAn = PMT = 5000 = 77,358.79
i
9.3807%
16. Answer is c.
17. Answer is c.
If the yield to maturity is 7 percent, but the coupon rate is 9 percent, then investors are getting a
better coupon payment from this bond than they could from a new bond issued in the market today.
Therefore, this bond is more valuable and must be selling at a premium. Therefore, statement a is
false. Whenever interest rates fall, the price of a bond increases. Therefore, statement b is false. If
interest rates remain un-changed, as the bond gets closer to its maturity, its price will approach par
value. Since the bond is selling at a premium, its price must decline to its par value as it gets closer
to maturity. Therefore, statement c is true.
18. Answer is e.
EffectiveR = (1 + 4%) 2 − 1 = 8.16%
N 6
INT M 80 1000
VB= ∑ (1 + kd )
t 1=
N
+
(1 + kd ) N
= ∑
t 1 (1 + 8.16%)
t
+
(1 + 8.16%)6
1 1 M
=
INT [ − ]+
kd kd (1 + kd ) N
(1 + kd ) N
1 1 1000
= 80[ − ]+
8.16% 8.16%(1 + 8.16%) 6
(1 + 8.16%)6
= 368.042 + 624.597 = $992.64
19. Answer is c.
12% 12
(1 + ) −1 =12.68%
12
20. Answer is c.
Statement c is true; the others are false. Statement a would be true only if the dividend yield were
zero. Statement b is false; we've been given no information about the dividend yield. Statement c
is true; the constant rate at which dividends are expected to grow is also the expected growth rate of
the stock's price.
22. Answer is c.
Take the terminal value P3 calculated in the previous question and use the constant growth rate to
find P10 :
=
P10 P3 (1 + g )7
= $33.5391× (1 + 6%)7
= $50.43
23. Answer is d.
Dividend growth = plowback x ROE = 0.6 x 20% = 12%
Dividend paid out = 40% x $4 = $1.60
Price = 1.60/(0.16-0.12) = $40.
24. Answer is b.
Project A: NPV = 0 = -100,000+39500(PVIFA ?, 3)
IRR = 9%
Project B: NPV = 0 = -100,000+ 0 + 0 + 133,000 (PVIF ?, 3)
IRR = 10%
The firm's cost of capital is not given in the problem; so use the IRR decision rule. Since IRRB >
IRRA ; Project B is preferred.
Garcia Paper
0 1 2 3 4 5
Initial invest. outlay -$30.0
Sales $20.0 $20.0 $20.0 $20.0 $20.0
Oper. Cost $12.0 $12.0 $12.0 $12.0 $12.0
Depreciation $10.0 $10.0 $10.0 $0.0 $0.0
Oper. Inc. before taxes -$2.0 -$2.0 -$2.0 $8.0 $8.0
Taxes (40%) -$0.8 -$0.8 -$0.8 $3.2 $3.2
Oper. Inc. after taxes -$1.2 -$1.2 -$1.2 $4.8 $4.8
Add Depreciation $10.0 $10.0 $10.0 $0.0 $0.0
Net oper. cash flows -$30.0 $8.8 $8.8 $8.8 $4.8 $4.8
27. Answer is b.
28. Answer is e.
Step 1: Determine the NPV of net operating cash flows:
NPV = −$30 + $8.8 /1.10 + $8.8(1.10)2 + $8.8 /(1.10)3 + $4.8 /(1.10)4 + $4.8 /(1.10)5
= -30 + 8 + 7.2727 + 6.6116 + 3.2785 + 2.9804
= −$1.8568 million
Bucholz Brands
0 1 2 3 4
Up-front costs -300
Increase in NOWC -50
30. Answer is a.
-350M + 90/(1.1)1+ 90/(1.1)2+ 90/(1.1)3+170/(1.1)4 = -$10.07M
31. Answer is b.
The correct answer is statement b. Statement a is incorrect; the abandonment option will tend to
increase a project's NPV. Statement b is correct; the abandonment option will tend to reduce a
project's risk. Statement c is incorrect; if there are first-mover advantages, it may be harmful
(lowers value) to wait a year to collect information.
Diplomat.com
33. Answer is a.
Step 1: Find the NPV at t = 0 of the first project:
NPV =
−3, 000, 000 + 500, 000( PVIFA10%,5 )
= −3, 000, 000 + 500, 000(3.7908)
= −$1,104, 600
Step 2: Find the NPV at t = 0 of the new projects:
If at t = 5 the firm's technology is not successful, the firm will choose to not do the additional
projects (since their NPV is -$6,000,000).
Therefore, the NPV at t = 5 is calculated as 0.35($6,000,000) + 0.65($0) = $2,100,000.
However, this is the NPV at t = 5, so we need to discount this NPV to find the NPV of the
additional projects= =
today. PV 2,100, 000 /(1.1)5 1,303,942.87
Step 3: Find the NPV of the entire project considering its future opportunities: -
1,104,600+1,303,942=$199,342
34. Answer is c.
PV ( A) = 50, 000 + 4, 000 PVIFA8%,4 = 50, 000 + 4, 000 × 3.3121
= 63, 248.4
PV ( A) 63,248.4
EAC of A = = =19,096.16
PVIFA8%,4 3.3121
PV ( B) = 90, 000 + 2,500 PVIFA8%,6 = 90, 000 + 2,500 × 4.6229
= 101,557.25
PV ( B ) 202,557.25
EAC of B = = =21,968.30
PVIFA8%,6 4.6229
∆EAC =
21,968.30-19,096.16=2,872.14
35. Answer is c.
36. Answer is c.
37. Answer is c.
38. Answer is c.
You are given the required return on the portfolio, the RPM, and enough information to calculate
the beta of the original portfolio. With this information you can find kRF. Once you have kRF, you
can find the required return on Stock C.
Step 1: Find the portfolio beta:
Take a weighted average of the individual stocks' betas to find the portfolio beta. The total
amount invested in the portfolio is:
$4 million + $2 million + $2 million + $1 million + $1 million = $10 million.
The weighted average portfolio beta is:
1
=β (4 ×1.2 + 2 × 1.1 + 2 × 1.0 + 1× 0.7 + 1× 0.5)
= 1.02
10
39. Answer is a.
Portfolio required return
Step 1: Find the beta of the original portfolio by taking a weighted average of the individual stocks’ betas.
We calculate a beta of 1.3.
$300,000 $300,000 $500,000 $500,000
(0.6) + (1) + (1.4) + (1.8)
$1,600,000 $1,600,000 $1,600,000 $1,600,000
Step 2: Find the market risk premium using the original portfolio.
ks = 0.125 = 0.06 + (kM - kRF)1.3. If you substitute for all the values you know, you calculate a market
risk premium of 0.05.
40. Answer is c.
The Coefficient of Variation is the standard deviation divided by the expected return. Therefore:
n
kˆ= Pk
1 1 + P2 k 2 + ... + Pn k n= ∑ Pk
i =1
i i
= ( 0.1× −0.60 ) + ( 0.2 × −0.10 ) + ( 0.4 × 0.15 ) + ( 0.2 × 0.40 ) + ( 0.1× 0.90 )
= 15%
∑ ( k − kˆ )
n 2
S tan dard Deviation= σ= i Pi
i =1
= 37.08%
+ ( 0.40 − 0.15 ) 0.2 + ( 0.90 − 0.15 ) 0.1
2 2
σ 37.081
Coefficient of Variation= CV= = = 2.472
kˆ 15
42. Answer is e.
43. Answer is b.
44. Answer is a.
Flotation cost is irrelevant as it can fund its capital budget from retained earnings.
The cost of existing equity:
D0 (1 + g ) 2 × (1 + 6%)
=ke = +g =+ 6% 12.625%
P0 32
Thus WACC: WACC = wdkd(1 - T) + wcke = (0.25)(0.08)(0.6) + (0.75)(0.12625) = 10.67%.
45. Answer is e.
Beta risk of the firm is 1.2, so the beta risk of the new project is 1.8. Therefore, the required rate of
return of the new project is 19%.
46. Answer is c.
The correct answer is statement c. The company will have higher debt interest payments, so net
income will decline. Thus, statement a is false. The effect on EPS is ambiguous. Earnings decline
(NI), but so will the number of shares. Therefore, statement b is false. The firm's recapitalization
will not change total assets. However, since net income declines, ROA will decrease; so statement
d is false. As long as the BEP ratio is greater than the cost of debt, ROE will increase. However,
you don't have enough information to determine the cost of debt, so you can make no determination
about ROE. Thus, statement e is false. The increase in debt will increase the risk to shareholders,
so the cost of equity will increase. Therefore, statement c is correct.
47. Answer is e.
Step 1: Find the current number of shares outstanding:
Shares = NI/EPS = $480 million/$3.20 = 150 million shares.
Step 2: Find the number of shares after the repurchase:
New shares = 150 - $1,200/$32 = 150 - 37.5 = 112.5 million shares.
Step 3: Find the new EPS after the repurchase:
EPS = [(EBIT - INT)(1 - T)]/New shares
= [($800 - $84) × 0.6]/112.5 = $3.818667
Step 4:Find the new stock price:
Stock price = EPS/New cost of equity = $3.818667/0.11 = $34.72
48. Answer is e.
Statement a is false; the theory states that investors prefer dividends because they are more certain
about receiving dividends than they are about capital gains. In addition, the statement is false
because capital gains are taxed more favorably than dividends. Statement b is false because stock
repurchases decrease the number of outstanding shares. Statement c is false. If a company attracts
a particular clientele, it would want to keep that clientele. Changing its dividends frequently would
make it impossible for any one clientele to be happy. Therefore, the correct choice is statement e.
49. Answer is c.
50. Answer is a.
51. Answer is d.
52. Answer is e.
53. Answer is a.
First, find the company's current cost of capital, dividends per share, and stock price:
ks = 0.066 + (0.06)0.9 = 12%. To find the stock price, you still need the dividends per share or
DPS = ($2,000,000(1 - 0.4))/200,000 = $6.00. Thus, the stock price is P0 = $6.00/0.12 = $50.00.
Thus, by issuing $2,000,000 in new debt the company can repurchase $2,000,000/$50.00 = 40,000
shares.
Now after recapitalization, the new cost of capital, DPS, and stock price can be found:
ks = 0.066 + (0.06)1.1 = 13.20%. DPS for the remaining (200,000 - 40,000) = 160,000 shares are
thus [($2,000,000 - ($2,000,000 × 0.10))(1 - 0.4)]/ 160,000 = $6.75. And, finally, P0 = $6.75/0.132
= $51.14.
54. Answer is c.
ke = k RF + β (kM − k RF ) = 5% + 1.1 × 6% = 11.6%
D E
=
WACC kd (1 − T ) + ke
D+E D+E
1 4
= × 7.5% × (1 − 40%) + × 11.6% = 10.18
5 5
55. Answer is c.
βUL
= β L /[1 + (1 − T ) D / E ]
1
= 1.1/[1 + (1 − 40%) = ] 0.9565
4
56. Answer is e.
β=
L βUL [1 + (1 − T ) D / E ]
2
= 0.9565 × [1 + (1 − 40%)= ] 1.3391
3
ke = k RF + β (kM − k RF ) = 5% + 1.3391 × 6% = 13.03%
57. Answer is d.
Statements b and c are true; therefore, statement d is the correct choice. A dividend increase
leading to an increase in stock price is consistent with signaling also.
58. Answer is e.
59. Answer is e.
Less stable sales would lead a firm to reduce its debt ratio. A lower corporate tax rate reduces the
tax advantage of the deductibility of interest expense. This reduction in the tax shield provided by
debt would encourage less use of debt. If management believes the firm's stock is overvalued, then
it would want to issue equity rather than debt, thereby increasing the firm's equity ratio.
60. Answer is d.
The optimal capital structure maximizes the firm's stock price. When the debt ratio is 20%,
expected EPS is $2.50. Given the firm's policy of retaining 30% of earnings, the expected dividend
per share D1 is $2.50 × 0.70 = $1.75. The stock price P0 is $1.75/(15% - 7%) or $21.88. When the
debt ratio is 30%, expected EPS is $3.00 and expected D1 is $3.00 × 0.70 = $2.10. The stock price
P0 is $2.10/(15.5% - 7%) = $24.71. Similarly, when the debt ratio is 40%, D1 = $2.275 and P0 =
$25.28. When the debt ratio is 50%, D1 = $2.625 and P0 = $26.25. When the debt ratio is 70%, D1
= $2.80 and P0 = $25.45. The stock price is highest when the debt ratio is 50%.
61. Answer is a.
To answer this we need to determine the following:
1. How many shares are currently outstanding?
2. What are the interest expense and net income, before and after the change?
Before recapitalization:
EBIT $20,000,000
Interest 2,000,000
EBT $18,000,000
Taxes (40%) 7,200,000
NI $10,800,000
EPS = $3.60.
Shares outstanding = $10,800,000/$3.60 = 3,000,000 shares.
After recapitalization:
New shares = 3 million - 1 million = 2 million shares.
Total debt = $20,000,000 + ($1,000,000)($40) = $60,000,000.
Interest payment = ($60,000,000)(0.1) = $6,000,000.
Net income:
EBIT $20,000,000
Interest 6,000,000
EBT $14,000,000
Taxes (40%) 5,600,000
NI $ 8,400,000
63. Answer is e.
64. Answer is a.
65. Answer is e.
Net income:
EBIT $800,000,000
Interest 84,000,000
EBT $716,000,000
Taxes (40%) 286,400,000
NI $429,600,000
Number of shares outstanding after the repurchase = 480 / 3.2 – 1200 / 32 = 112.5 million shares
EPS = DPS = 3.819
P = EPS / k = 3.819 / 11% = $34.72
66. Answer is a.
If net income increases, and all else are equal (that is, the same number of projects are available to
invest in as before, etc.), the company will have more money left over after making its investments
to pay out as dividends. Statement b is false. If the company increases the proportion of equity
financing in its target capital structure, it will need to either increase the proportion of equity (by
increasing retained earnings, therefore, leaving less money for dividends) or reduce the proportion
of debt it uses (meaning it will have less debt to finance new projects and will need more of its
retained earnings to make investments). Statement c is false. If the company has more profitable
projects, this will leave less money for dividends.
67. Answer is b.
The company expects to pay out 40% of net income or $400,000, it must expect to have $600,000
of retained earnings available for capital investment. Given that the firm will finance new
investment with 70% equity and 30% debt, $600,000 must represent 70 percent of the firm's capital
budget, that is, $600,000 = (0.7)CB or CB = $857,143.
68. Answer is c.
69. Answer is a.
Statement a is true. If net income increases, and all else is equal (that is, the same number of
projects are available to invest in as before, etc.), the company will have more money left over after
making its investments to pay out as dividends. Statement b is false. If the company increases the
proportion of equity financing in its target capital structure, it will need to either increase the
proportion of equity (by increasing retained earnings, therefore, leaving less money for dividends)
or reduce the proportion of debt it uses (meaning it will have less debt to finance new projects and
will need more of its retained earnings to make investments). Statement c is false. If the company
has more profitable projects, this will leave less money for dividends.
70. Answer is d.
Statements b and c are true; therefore, d is the correct answer. The dividends in a DRIP are still
taxed at the personal income tax rate; this would be a bad investment for an individual in a high tax
71. Answer is c.
72. Answer is b.
Residual dividend policy
The company’s WACC is 8%(0.5) + 13.5%(0.5) = 10.75%. Comparing the WACC with the project
IRRs reveals that the company will undertake projects V, W, and X. Total financing costs for these
projects is $3,400,000. Of this amount, 0.5($3,400,000) = $1,700,000 will be financed from retained
earnings. Thus, $2,500,000 - $1,700,000 = $800,000 will be available for dividends. The payout
ratio is then $800,000/$2,500,000 = 32%.
73. Answer is b.
Taxable income = 1,400 / 70%
Additional personal income tax = Taxable income * (Personal tax rate – Corporate tax rate)
= 1,400 / 70% * (46% - 30%) = $320
74. Answer is c.
75. Answer is a.
76. Answer is c.
77. Answer is d.
78. Answer is d.
79. Answer is a.
80. Answer is c.
81. Answer is c.