Mid-Sem Answers and Solutions
Mid-Sem Answers and Solutions
1
. You have determined the profitability of a planned project by finding
the present value of all the cash flows from that project. Which of
the following would cause the project to look more appealing in terms
of the present value of those cash flows?
2
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. A 5-year $100 annuity due will have a higher present value than a 5-
year $100 ordinary annuity.
b. A 15-year mortgage will have larger monthly payments than a 30-year
mortgage of the same amount and same interest rate.
c. If an investment pays 10 percent interest compounded annually, its
effective rate will also be 10 percent.
d. Statements a and c are correct.
e. All of the statements above are correct.
4
. The future value of a lump sum at the end of five years is $1,000. The
nominal interest rate is 10 percent and interest is compounded
semiannually. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The annual payments would be larger if the interest rate were lower.
b. If the loan were amortized over 10 years rather than 5 years, and if
the interest rate were the same in either case, the first payment
would include more dollars of interest under the 5-year amortization
plan.
c. The last payment would have a higher proportion of interest than the
first payment.
d. The proportion of interest versus principal repayment would be the
same for each of the 5 payments.
e. The proportion of each payment that represents interest as opposed
to repayment of principal would be higher if the interest rate were
higher.
6
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The first payment under a 3-year, annual payment, amortized loan for
$1,000 will include a smaller percentage (or fraction) of interest
if the interest rate is 5 percent than if it is 10 percent.
b. If you are lending money, then, based on effective interest rates,
you should prefer to lend at a 10 percent nominal, or quoted, rate
but with semiannual payments, rather than at a 10.1 percent nominal
rate with annual payments. However, as a borrower you should prefer
the annual payment loan.
c. The value of a perpetuity (say for $100 per year) will approach
infinity as the interest rate used to evaluate the perpetuity
approaches zero.
d. Statements a, b, and c are all true.
e. Statements b and c are true.
7
. Find the present value of an income stream which has a negative flow of
$100 per year for 3 years, a positive flow of $200 in the 4th year, and
a positive flow of $300 per year in Years 5 through 8. The appropriate
discount rate is 4 percent for each of the first 3 years and 5 percent
for each of the later years. Thus, a cash flow accruing in Year 8
should be discounted at 5 percent for some years and 4 percent in other
years. All payments occur at year-end.
a. $ 528.21
b. $1,329.00
c. $ 792.49
d. $1,046.41
e. $ 875.18
8
. You are saving for the college education of your two children. One
child will enter college in 5 years, while the other child will enter
college in 7 years. College costs are currently $10,000 per year and
are expected to grow at a rate of 5 percent per year. All college
costs are paid at the beginning of the year. You assume that each
child will be in college for four years.
Chapter 2 - Page 2
You currently have $50,000 in your educational fund. Your plan is to
contribute a fixed amount to the fund over each of the next 5 years.
Your first contribution will come at the end of this year, and your
final contribution will come at the date at which you make the first
tuition payment for your oldest child. You expect to invest your
contributions into various investments which are expected to earn 8
percent per year. How much should you contribute each year in order to
meet the expected cost of your children's education?
a. $2,894
b. $3,712
c. $4,125
d. $5,343
e. none of the above
9
. A young couple is planning for the education of their two children.
They plan to invest the same amount of money at the end of each of the
next 16 years, i.e., the first contribution will be made at the end of
the year and the final contribution will be made at the time the oldest
child enters college.
a. $ 9,612.10
b. $ 5,071.63
c. $12,507.29
d. $ 5,329.45
e. none of the above
10
. Your subscription to Her World Monthly is about to run out and you have
the choice of renewing it by sending in the $10 a year regular rate or
of getting a lifetime subscription to the magazine by paying $100. Your
cost of capital is 7 percent. How many years would you have to live to
make the lifetime subscription the better buy? Payments for the
regular subscription are made at the beginning of each year. (Round up
if necessary to obtain a whole number of years.)
a. 15 years
b. 10 years
c. 18 years
d. 7 years
e. none of the above
11
. Suppose you put $100 into a savings account today, the account pays a
nominal annual interest rate of 6 percent, but compounded semiannually,
and you withdraw $100 after 6 months. What would your ending balance
be 20 years after the initial $100 deposit was made?
a. $226.20
b. $115.35
c. $ 62.91
d. $ 9.50
e. none of the above
12
. You are contributing money to an investment account so that you can
purchase a house in five years. You plan to contribute six payments of
$3,000 a year--the first payment will be made today (t = 0), and the
final payment will be made five years from now (t = 5). If you earn 11
percent in your investment account, how much money will you have in the
account five years from now (at t = 5)?
a. $19,412
b. $20,856
c. $21,683
d. $23,739
e. none of the above
13
. Jamilah is 30 years old and is saving for her retirement. She is
planning on making 36 contributions to her retirement account at the
beginning of each of the next 36 years. The first contribution will be
made today (t = 0) and the final contribution will be made 35 years
from today (t = 35). The retirement account will earn a return of 10
percent a year. If each contribution she makes is $3,000, how much
will be in the retirement account 35 years from now (t = 35)?
a. $894,380
b. $813,073
c. $897,380
d. $987,118
e. none of the above
14
. You have just borrowed $20,000 to buy a new car. The loan agreement
calls for 60 monthly payments of $444.89 each to begin one month from
today. If the interest is compounded monthly, then what is the
effective annual rate on this loan?
a. 12.68%
b. 14.12%
c. 12.00%
d. 13.25%
e. none of the above
15
. You have just taken out a 10-year, $12,000 loan to purchase a new car.
This loan is to be repaid in 120 equal end-of-month installments. If
each of the monthly installments is $150, what is the effective annual
interest rate on this car loan?
a. 6.5431%
b. 7.8942%
c. 8.6892%
d. 9.0438%
Chapter 2 - Page 4
e. none of the above
16
. A soccer player with Kelab MPPJ is offered a 5-year contract which pays
him the following amounts:
Under the terms of the agreement all payments are made at the end of
each year.
Instead of accepting the contract, the baseball player asks his agent
to negotiate a contract which has a present value of $1 million more
than that which has been offered. Moreover, the player wants to
receive his payments in the form of a 5-year annuity due. All cash
flows are discounted at 10 percent. If the team were to agree to the
player's terms, what would be the player's annual salary (in millions
of ringgit)?
a. $1.500
b. $1.659
c. $1.989
d. $2.343
e. none of the above
17
. Ali and Abu (2 brothers) are each trying to save enough money to buy
their own cars. Ali is planning to save $100 from every paycheck (he
is paid every 2 weeks.) Abu plans to put aside $150 each month but has
already saved $1,500. Interest rates are currently quoted at 10
percent. Ali's bank compounds interest every two weeks while Abu's bank
compounds interest monthly. At the end of 2 years they will each spend
all their savings on a car (each brother buys a car). What is the price
of the most expensive car purchased?
a. $5,744.29
b. $5,807.48
c. $5,703.02
d. $5,797.63
e. None of the above
18
. An investment pays $100 every six months (semiannually) over the next
2.5 years. Interest, however, is compounded quarterly, at a nominal
rate of 8 percent. What is the future value of the investment after
2.5 years?
a. $520.61
b. $541.63
c. $542.07
d. $543.98
e. none of the above
19
. You have just bought a security which pays $500 every six months. The
security lasts for ten years. Another security of equal risk also has
a maturity of ten years, and pays 10 percent compounded monthly (that
is, the nominal rate is 10 percent). What should be the price of the
security that you just purchased?
a. $6,108.46
b. $6,175.82
c. $6,231.11
d. $6,566.21
e. none of the above
20
. 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. none of the above
21
. You recently purchased a 20-year investment which pays you $100 at
t = 1, $500 at t = 2, $750 at t = 3, and some fixed cash flow, X, at
the end of each of the remaining 17 years. The investment cost you
$5,544.87. Alternative investments of equal risk have a required return
of 9 percent. What is the annual cash flow received at the end of each
of the final 17 years, that is, what is X?
a. $600
b. $625
c. $650
d. $675
e. none of the above
22
. Which of the following is not considered a capital component for the
purpose of calculating the weighted average cost of capital as it
applies to capital budgeting?
a. Long-term debt.
b. Common stock.
c. Accounts payable.
d. Preferred stock.
e. All of the above are considered capital components for WACC and
capital budgeting purposes.
Chapter 2 - Page 6
23
. You observe the following information regarding Company X and Company Y:
24
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
Asset X Asset Y
P r P r
0.10 -3% 0.05 -3%
0.10 2 0.10 2
0.25 5 0.30 5
0.25 8 0.30 8
0.30 10 0.25 10
State Pi rJ
_____ ____ ____
1 0.2 10%
2 0.6 15
3 0.2 20
a. 15%; 6.50%
b. 12%; 5.18%
c. 15%; 3.16%
d. 15%; 10.00%
e. none of the above
27
. One of the basic relationships in interest rate theory is that, other
things held constant, for a given change in the required rate of
return, the the time to maturity, the the change in
price.
a. longer; smaller.
b. shorter; larger.
c. longer; greater.
d. shorter; smaller.
e. Answers c and d are correct.
Chapter 2 - Page 8
28
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. All else equal, long-term bonds have more interest rate risk than
short term bonds.
b. All else equal, higher coupon bonds have more reinvestment risk than
low coupon bonds.
c. All else equal, short-term bonds have more reinvestment risk than do
long-term bonds.
d. Statements a and c are correct.
e. All of the statements above are correct.
29
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
32
. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. $905.35
b. $1,102.74
c. $1,103.19
d. $1,106.76
e. none of the above
36
. Tan Ling Ling recently inherited some bonds (face value $100,000) from
her father, and soon thereafter she became engaged to Leo Samuel, a
University of Florida marketing graduate. Leo wants Ling Ling to cash
in the bonds so the two of them can use the money to "live like
royalty" for two years in Monte Carlo. The 2 percent annual coupon
bonds mature on January 1, 2024, and it is now January 1, 2004.
Interest on these bonds is paid annually on December 31 of each year,
and new annual coupon bonds with similar risk and maturity are
currently yielding 12 percent. If Ling Ling sells her bonds now and
puts the proceeds into an account which pays 10 percent compounded
annually, what would be the largest equal annual amounts she could
withdraw for two years, beginning today (i.e., two payments, the first
payment today and the second payment one year from today)?
Chapter 2 - Page 10
a. $13,255
b. $29,708
c. $12,654
d. $25,305
e. none of the above
37
. GMZ Berhad recently issued 10-year bonds at a price of $1,000. These
bonds pay $60 in interest each six months. Their price has remained
stable since they were issued, i.e., they still sell for $1,000. Due
to additional financing needs, the firm wishes to issue new bonds that
would have a maturity of 10 years, a par value of $1,000, and pay $40
in interest every six months. If both bonds have the same yield, how
many new bonds must GMZ issue to raise $2,000,000 cash?
a. 2,400
b. 2,596
c. 3,000
d. 5,000
e. none of the above
38
. Your client has been offered a 5-year, $1,000 par value bond with a 10
percent coupon. Interest on this bond is paid quarterly. If your
client is to earn a nominal rate of return of 12 percent, compounded
quarterly, how much should she pay for the bond?
a. $ 800
b. $ 926
c. $1,025
d. $1,216
e. none of the above
39
. You just purchased a 15-year bond with an 11 percent annual coupon.
The bond has a face value of $1,000 and a current yield of 10 percent.
Assuming that the yield to maturity of 9.7072 percent remains constant,
what will be the price of the bond 1 year from now?
a. $1,000
b. $1,064
c. $1,097
d. $1,100
e. none of the above
40
. A corporate bond with a $1,000 face value pays a $50 coupon every six
months. The bond will mature in ten years, and has a nominal yield to
maturity of 9 percent. What is the price of the bond?
a. $ 634.86
b. $1,064.18
c. $1,065.04
d. $1,078.23
e. none of the above
41
. Ayamperak Berhad recently issued 20-year bonds. The bonds have a coupon
rate of 8 percent and pay interest semiannually. Also, the bonds are
callable in 6 years at a call price equal to 115 percent of par value.
The par value of the bonds is $1,000. If the yield to maturity is 7
percent, what is the yield to call?
a. 8.33%
b. 7.75%
c. 9.89%
d. 10.00%
e. none of the above
42
. Assume that Satay Kajang and Satay Mas have similar $1,000 par value
bond issues outstanding. The bonds are equally risky. The Satay Mas
bond has an annual coupon rate of 8 percent and matures 20 years from
today. The Satay Kajang bond has a coupon rate of 8 percent, with
interest paid semiannually, and it also matures in 20 years. If the
nominal required rate of return, rd, is 12 percent, semiannual basis,
for both bonds, what is the difference in current market prices of the
two bonds?
a. No difference.
b. $ 2.20
c. $ 3.77
d. $17.53
e. none of the above
43
. You are considering investing in a security that matures in 10 years
with a par value of $1,000. During the first five years, the security
has an 8 percent coupon with quarterly payments (i.e., you receive $20
a quarter for the first 20 quarters). During the remaining five years
the security has a 10 percent coupon with quarterly payments (i.e., you
receive $25 a quarter for the second 20 quarters). After 10 years (40
quarters) you receive the par value.
a. $ 898.65
b. $1,060.72
c. $1,037.61
d. $ 943.22
e. none of the above
44
. An increase in a firm's expected growth rate would normally cause the
firm's required rate of return to
Chapter 2 - Page 12
a. Increase.
b. Decrease.
c. Fluctuate.
d. Remain constant.
e. Possibly increase, possibly decrease, or possibly remain unchanged.
45
. 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?
47
. An ordinary share has just paid a dividend of $3.00. If the expected
long-run growth rate for this stock is 5 percent, and if investors
require an 11 percent rate of return, what is the price of the share?
a. $50.00
b. $50.50
c. $52.50
d. $53.00
e. $63.00
48
. You are given the following data:
a. +$12.11
b. -$ 4.87
c. +$ 6.28
d. -$16.97
e. +$ 2.78
49
. A share of stock has a dividend of D0 = $5. The dividend is expected to
grow at a 20 percent annual rate for the next 10 years, then at a 15
percent rate for 10 more years, and then at a long-run normal growth
rate of 10 percent forever. If investors require a 10 percent return
on this stock, what is its current price?
a. $100.00
b. $ 82.35
c. $195.50
d. $212.62
e. The data given in the problem are internally inconsistent, i.e., the
situation described is impossible in that no equilibrium price can
be produced.
50
. Over the past few years, Ghazal Berhad has retained, on the average, 70
percent of its earnings in the business. The future retention rate is
expected to remain at 70 percent of earnings, and long-run earnings
growth is expected to be 10 percent. If the risk-free rate, rRF, is 8
percent, the expected return on the market, rM, is 12 percent, Ghazal's
beta is 2.0, and the most recent dividend, D0, was $1.50, what is the
most likely market price and P/E ratio (P0/E1) for Ghazal's stock today?
a. $27.50; 5.0×
b. $33.00; 6.0×
c. $25.00; 5.0×
d. $22.50; 4.5×
e. $45.00; 4.5×
Chapter 2 - Page 14
SOLUTIONS
1. PV and discount rate Answer: a Diff: E
If the interest rate were higher, the payments would all be higher, and all
of the increase would be attributable to interest. So, the proportion of
each payment that represents interest would be higher. Note that statement b
is false because interest during Year 1 would be the interest rate times the
beginning balance, which is $10,000. With the same interest rate and the
same beginning balance, the Year 1 interest charge will be the same,
regardless of whether the loan is amortized over 5 or 10 years.
6
. Time value concepts Answer: d Diff: T
-277.51
169.33 190.48
900.67 -1,013.13
792.49
Numerical solution:
PV = -$100(PVIFA4%,3) + $200(PVIF5%,1)(PVIF4%,3)
+ $300(PVIFA5%,4)(PVIF5%,1)(PVIF4%,3)
= -$100[(1-(1/1.043)/.04] + $200(1/1.05)(1/1.043)
+ $300[(1-(1/1.054)/.05](1/1.05)( 1/1.043)
= -$100(2.7751) + $200(0.9524)(0.8890) + $300(3.5460)(0.9524)(0.8890)
= -$277.51 + $169.34 + $900.70 = $792.53.
Financial calculator solution:
Inputs: CF0 = 0; CF1 = -100; Nj = 3; I = 4. Output: NPV = -277.51.
Calculate the PV of CFs 4-8 as of time = 3 at i = 5%
Inputs: CF0 = 0; CF1 = 200; CF2 = 300; Nj = 4; I = 5.
Output: NPV3 = $1,203.60.
Calculate PV of the FV of the positive CFs at Time = 3
Inputs: N = 3; I = 4; PMT = 0; FV = -1,203.60. Output: PV = $1,070.
Total PV = $1,070 - $277.51 = $792.49.
Note: Numerical solution differs from calculator solution due to interest
factor rounding.
Numerical solution:
Find PV of college costs in Year 5:
PV = $12,762.82 + $13,400.96(0.9259) + $28,142(0.8573) +
$29,549.10(0.7938) + $15,513.28(0.7350) + $16,288.95(0.6806)
= $95,241.50.
Find FV of educational fund in 5 years:
$50,000(1.08)5 = $73,466.40.
Now, find net amount needed in Year 5:
$95,241.50 – $73,466.40 = $21,775.10.
Finally, find PMT needed to accumulate $21,775.10 in Year 5:
FVA5 = PMT(FVIFA8%,5)
$21,775.10 = PMT[(1.085-1)/0.08]
$21,775.10 = PMT(5.8666)
PMT = $3,711.71.
Note: Numerical solution differs from calculator solution due to interest
factor rounding.
Numerical solution:
Calculate the present value of college costs at t = 16:
PV = $25,000(0.9259) + $25,000(0.8573) + $50,000(0.7938) +
$50,000(0.7350) + $25,000(0.6806) + $25,000(0.6302)
PV = $153,790.
Calculate the annual required deposit:
FVA16 = PMT(FVIFA8%,16)
$153,790 = PMT[(1.0816-1)/0.08] (30.324)
$153,790 = PMT(30.324)
PMT = $5,071.56.
Note: Numerical solution differs from calculator solution due to interest
factor rounding.
Time Line:
0 7% 1 2 3 n = ? Years
├───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┼────────────┤
CFLifetime = 100 0 0 0 0
CFAnnual= 10 10 10 10 10
Tabular solution:
Set PVLifetime = PVAnnual, solve for n.
$100 = $10 + $10(PVIFA7%,n)
$90 = $10(PVIFA7%,n)
9 = PVIFA7%,n
n ≈ 15 years.
Financial calculator solution:
Inputs: I = 7; PV = -90; PMT = 10; FV = 0. Output: N = 14.695 ≈ 15 years.
11
Time Line:
0 3% 1 2 3 4 40 6-months
| | | | | ... | Periods
100 -100 FV = ?
Tabular/Numerical solution:
Solve for amount on deposit at the end of 6 months.
Step 1 FV = $100(FVIF3%,1) - $100 = $3.00.
FV = $100(1 + 0.06/2) - $100 = $3.00.
Step 2 Compound the $3.00 for 39 periods at 3%
FV = $3.00(FVIF3%,39) = $9.50.
Since table does not show 39 periods, use numerical/calculator
exponent method.
FV = $3.00(1.03)39 = $9.50.
Time Line:
EAR = ?
0 i = ? 1 2 60 Months
| | | ... |
PV = -20,000 444.89 444.89 444.89
Tabular solution:
$20,000 = $444.89(PVIFAi,60)
PVIFAi,60 = 44.9549
i = 1%.
EAR = (1.01)12 - 1.0 = 1.12681 - 1.0 = 0.1268 = 12.68%.
N = 120
PV = -12,000
PMT = 150
FV = 0
Solve for I/YR = 0.7241 × 12 = 8.6892%. However, this is a nominal rate.
To find the effective rate, enter the following:
NOM% = 8.6892
P/YR = 12
Solve for EFF% = 9.0438%.
16
Enter CFs:
CF0 = 0
CF1 = 1.2
CF2 = 1.6
CF3 = 2.0
CF4 = 2.4
CF5 = 2.8
I = 10%; NPV = $7.2937 million.
$1 + $7.2937 = $8.2937 million.
First, find the effective annual rate for a nominal rate of 12% with
quarterly compounding: P/YR = 4, NOM% = 12, and EFF% = ? = 12.55%. In order
to discount the cash flows properly, it is necessary to find the nominal rate
with semiannual compounding that corresponds to the effective rate calculated
above. Convert the effective rate to a semiannual nominal rate as P/YR = 2,
EFF% = 12.55, and NOM% = ? = 12.18%. Finally, find the PV as N = 2 × 3 = 6,
I = 12.18/2 = 6.09, PMT = 500, FV = 0, and PV = ? = -$2,451.73.
21
. Value of missing payments Answer: d Diff: M
Find the FV of the price and the first three cash flows at t = 3.
To do this first find the present value of them.
CF0 = -5,544.87
CF1 = 100
CF2 = 500
CF3 = 750
I = 9; solve for NPV = -$4,453.15.
N = 3
I = 9
PV = -4,453.15
PMT = 0
FV = $5,766.96.
25
. Expected return Answer: e Diff: M
Statement c is correct; the other statements are false. If a bond’s YTM >
annual coupon, then it will trade at a discount. If interest rates increase,
the 10-year zero coupon bond’s price change is greater than the 10-year
coupon bond’s.
All the statements are true; therefore, the correct statement is e. Since the
bond is selling at par, its YTM = coupon rate. The current yield is
calculated as $90/$1,000 = 9%. If YTM = coupon rate, the bond will sell at
par. So, if the bond’s YTM remains constant the bond’s price will remain at
par.
The correct answer is c; the other statements are false. Zero coupon bonds
have greater price risk than either of the coupon bonds or the annuity.
Numerical solution:
VB = $50((1- 1/1.04560)/0.045) + $1,000(1/1.04560)
= $50(20.6380) + $1,000(0.071289) = $1,103.19≈ $1,103.
36
Time Line:
1/1/02 1/1/2022
0 12% 1 2 20 Years
. . .
| | | |
2,000 2,000 2,000
VB = ? FV = 100,000
Numerical solution:
Step 1 Calculate PV of the bonds
VB = $2,000(PVIFA12%,20) + $100,000(PVIF12%,20)
= $2,000((1- 1/1.1220)/0.12) + $100,000(1/1.1220)
= $2,000(7.4694) + $100,000(0.1037) = $25,308.80.
Step 2 Calculate the equal payments of the annuity due.
$25,308.80 $25,308.80
PMT = = 2
( PVIFA 10%,2 )(1.10) ((1 - 1/1.10 )/0.10) (1.10)
$25,308.80
= = $13,257.27.
(1.7355)(1 .10)
Numerical solution:
Since the old bond issue sold at its maturity (or par) value, and still sells
at par, its yield (and the yield on the new issue) must be 6 percent
semiannually. The new bonds will be offered at a discount:
VB = $40(PVIFA6%,20) + $1,000(PVIF6%,20)
= $40((1- 1/1.0620)/0.06) + $1,000(1/1.0620)
= $40(11.4699) + $1,000(0.3118) = $770.60.
Number of bonds = $2,000,000/$770.60 = 2,595.38 ≈ 2,596.
Financial calculator solution:
Inputs: N = 20; I = 6; PMT = 40; FV = 1,000.
Output: PV = -$770.60; VB = $770.60.
Number of bonds: $2,000,000/$770.60 ≈ 2,596 bonds.*
*Rounded up to next whole bond.
38. Bond value - quarterly payment Answer: b Diff: M
Time Line:
0 3% 1 2 3 4 20 Quarters
. . .
| | | | | |
PMT = 25 25 25 25 25
VB = ? FV = 1,000
Numerical solution:
VB = $25(PVIFA3%,20) + $1,000(PVIF3%,20)
= $25((1- 1/1.0320)/0.03) + $1,000(1/1.0320)
= $25(14.8775) + $1,000(0.5537) = $925.64 ≈ $926.
Time Line:
0 12.36% 1 2 3 20 Years
TLBK | | | | . . . |
PMT = 80 80 80 80
VBK = ? FV = 1,000
0 6% 1 2 3 4 38 39 40 6-month
TLMcD | | | | | . . . | | | Periods
PMT = 40 40 40 40 40 40 40
VMcD = ? FV = 1,000
Since the securities are of equal risk, they must have the same effective
rate. Since the comparable 10-year bond is selling at par, its nominal yield
is 8 percent, the same as its coupon rate. Because it is a semiannual coupon
bond, its effective rate is 8.16 percent. Using your calculator, enter NOM%
= 8; P/YR = 2; and solve for EFF%. (Don't forget to change back to P/YR =
1.) So, since the bond you are considering purchasing has quarterly
payments, its nominal rate is calculated as follows: EFF% = 8.16; P/YR = 4;
and solve for NOM%. NOM% = 7.9216%. To determine the bond's price you must
use the cash flow register because the payment amount changes. CF 0 = 0, CF1
= 20; Nj = 20; CF2 = 25; Nj = 19; CF3 = 1025; I = 7.9216/4 = 1.9804; solve for
NPV. NPV = $1,060.72.
$3.00(1. 05)
P0 = = $52.50.
0.1 1 - 0. 05
48
. Equilibrium stock price Answer: b Diff: M
Numerical solution:
Before: r = 5% + (8% - 5%)1.3 = 8.9%.
$0.80(1.04)
P̂0 = = $16.98.
0.089 - 0.04
After: rs = 4% + (10% - 4%)1.5 = 13%.
$0.80(1.06)
P̂0 = = $12.11.
0.130 - 0.06
Hence, we have $12.11 - $16.98 = -$4.87.
49
. Supernormal growth stock Answer: e Diff: M
The data in the problem are unrealistic and inconsistent with the
requirements of the growth model; r less than g implies a negative stock
price. If r equals g, the denominator is zero, and the numerical result is
undefined. r must be greater than g for a reasonable application of the
model.
50. Stock price and P/E ratios Answer: a Diff: M