Exam 1 Section 2
Exam 1 Section 2
Jimmy Deininger, CAIA, manages several client portfolios in his position with Mountain Investments,
LLC. One of Deininger's clients offers him use of a cabin in a vacation spot in Colorado because the
client's investment results under Deininger's management have exceeded the client's goals. Deininger
discloses the gift to his employer. With reference to the Standards of Practice, Deininger:
A. has complied with the Standards and may accept the gift.
B. is not permitted to accept the gift because he does not have permission from his employer.
C. has appropriately disclosed the gift to his supervisor but must also disclose it to his other
clients.
D. is not permitted to accept the gift because the value of the gift likely exceeds the maximum
allowable amount.
Question #2 of 100
Judy Harter works for a large brokerage firm managing portfolios for individuals. In a meeting with
Patty Owen, an elderly client, Harter suggests moving a portion of Owen's portfolio to U.S. bank
certificates of deposit (CDs) to reduce the downside risk of the portfolio. Harter states that the
principal is guaranteed up to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation limits. Harter has:
Question #3 of 100
The recommended procedures for the CFA Institute Standards on material nonpublic information
state that a firm's internal information firewall should include:
A. the distribution of a restricted list to all employees in the relevant departments of the firm.
B. a third-party monitoring system to ensure that company employees are not bypassing the
firewall.
C. a prohibition against buying and selling when the firm possesses material nonpublic
information.
D. a reporting system in which authorized personnel review and approve interdepartmental
communications.
Question #4 of 100
Which of the following actions most likely violates Standard II(B) Market Manipulation?
A. Entering an order to buy a large block of a thinly traded stock whenever its price falls below
$10.
B. Selling a security and repurchasing it immediately to change its cost basis for taxation
purposes.
C. Waiting for a down day in the market to release a ratings downgrade to maximize its impact
on a stock's price.
Exam 1 Section 2 1
D. Posting a company's unexpectedly weak earnings report and negative comments to a popular
Internet forum for investors.
Question #5 of 100
Jerry Brock, CAIA, is a partner at a fund of hedge funds that caters to ultra high net worth individuals.
He has experienced a number of personal and financial setbacks over the past two years and has filed
for bankruptcy protection. Has Brock violated the CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct?
Question #6 of 100
For a portfolio manager to accept a bonus from a client, such as a free vacation, based on excellent
performance in a future period is:
A. a violation of the Standards if the bonus is from a client and not a third-party vendor.
B. a violation of the Standards unless the manager gets written consent from her employer.
C. not a violation of the Standards as long as the manager informs her employer that she intends
to accept the bonus.
D. not a violation of the Standards as long as client confidentiality is maintained.
Question #7 of 100
Victor Baltz manages the investment account of Martha Stallings, a widow who lives off her
investment accounts and is relatively risk averse. One of the securities in Stallings's account has a beta
of 1.5, and Baltz has also sold call options on these shares. With respect to these actions, Baltz has:
A. violated the Standards, both by buying the high-beta stock and by selling the calls.
B. violated the Standards by selling the options but not by purchasing the high-beta stock.
C. violated the Standards by purchasing the high-beta stock but not by selling the call options.
D. not necessarily violated the Standards because it is the risk of the entire portfolio that is
relevant in judging suitability.
Question #8 of 100
According to the CFA Institute Standard concerning fair dealing, new or changed investment
recommendations should be made available to:
A. only clients who have indicated a prior interest in that type of security.
B. all clients.
C. only clients who have selected a level of service that includes such notification.
D. only clients whose investment portfolios are of sufficient size.
Question #9 of 100
The CFA Institute Standard on performance presentation least likely recommends that investment
professionals:
Exam 1 Section 2 2
A. include terminated accounts in performance history.
B. disclose whether performance is gross or net of fees.
C. support any forecast of future performance with actual data on past performance.
D. present performance of a weighted composite of similar portfolios rather than a single
account.
A. do nothing; it's her own time and won't interfere with her work.
B. inform her employer of all the details of this arrangement and receive written permission
before beginning.
C. inform her employer of the arrangement but need not get permission before beginning as the
work is on her own time.
D. inform her employer of all the details of this arrangement and receive written or verbal
permission before beginning.
Exam 1 Section 2 3
her that he is certain the tariff increase does not have enough support to become law. Worth
distributes a report that says, "OT's earnings next year will be within management guidance because
the tariff increase will not be enacted." Worth has most likely:
A. may not purchase Maxima for his personal account due to the inherent conflict of interest.
B. may purchase Maxima for his personal account, but the transactions for his clients must take
priority.
C. may purchase Maxima for his personal account, so long as this is fully disclosed, in writing and
in advance, to his clients and employer.
D. may purchase Maxima for his personal account at any time, as long as the execution price is
not more favorable than the execution price given to the clients.
A. Lumpy assets.
B. Inefficient assets.
C. Structured assets.
D. Non-normal assets.
Exam 1 Section 2 4
B. Active relative return strategy.
C. Active absolute return strategy.
A. Constrained clones.
B. Unconstrained clones.
C. Liquidity-based replication products.
D. Diversified/absolute return products.
A. 0%
B. 25%
C. 50%
D. 100%
Exam 1 Section 2 5
A. 1%.
B. 2%.
C. 10%.
D. 14%.
A. Jarque-Bera.
B. Durbin-Watson.
C. Kullback-Leibler.
D. Quintile-Quintile plot.
A. -3.25%.
B. -2.00%.
C. 2.00%.
D. 3.25%.
A. Mean returns.
B. Variance of returns.
C. Skewness of returns.
D. Standard deviation of returns.
Exam 1 Section 2 6
well over the last year against those that performed poorly. Which of the following factor models
ismost appropriate for the fund?
A. Fama-French-Carhart model.
B. Ex post capital asset pricing model.
C. Fama-French model.
D. Ex ante capital asset pricing model.
A. Bull spread.
B. Covered call.
C. Long straddle.
D. Short strangle.
A. Peer group.
B. Proxy group.
C. Empirical group.
D. Benchmark group.
Exam 1 Section 2 7
Question #32 of 100
The specific issue associated with using the CAPM to evaluate alternative investments across multiple
periods centers around:
A. Fraud.
B. Chumming.
C. Cherry picking.
D. Data dredging.
A. Causality.
B. Type I error.
C. Nonlinearity.
D. Cross correlation.
Exam 1 Section 2 8
Question #36 of 100
Which of the following terms refers to a condition in which independent variables are highly correlated
with each other?
A. Multicollinearity.
B. Autocorrelation.
C. Serial correlation.
D. Heteroskedasticity.
Exam 1 Section 2 9
B. $50,000.
C. $200,000.
D. $600,000.
A. $1,250.
B. $2,250.
C. $2,750.
D. $3,500.
A. $929.02.
B. $940.23.
C. $947.78.
D. $958.27.
A. In a contango market, the futures price is below the current spot price.
B. In normal backwardation, the futures price is below the current spot price.
C. In a contango market, the expected future spot price is above the futures price.
D. In normal backwardation, the futures price is below the expected future spot price.
Exam 1 Section 2 10
A. Stock, bond, and commodity prices are based on expected future economic conditions.
B. Stock and bond prices are based on current economic conditions, while commodity prices are
based on past economic conditions.
C. Stock and bond prices are based on current economic conditions, while commodity prices are
based on expected future economic conditions.
D. Stock and bond prices are based on expected future economic conditions, while commodity
prices are based on current economic conditions.
A. Commodity futures do not require physical delivery of the commodity to close a trading
position.
B. Commodity firm investments may fail to be an adequate proxy for commodities due to
systematic, unsystematic, and hedging risks.
C. Similar to forward contracts, commodity swaps are not traded on an exchange resulting in
lower liquidity, but increased transaction privacy.
D. A commodity-linked investment note typically has a higher coupon payment than regular debt
notes due to the presence of commodity market risks.
A. Stable markets.
B. Volatile markets.
C. Contango markets.
D. Backwardated markets.
A. Events that affect commodities tend to be correlated over time, allowing investors to earn
alpha by predicting event trends.
B. Droughts and floods tend to have similar impacts on commodity prices, ultimately resulting in
positively skewed return distributions.
C. Increases in inflation tend to be positively correlated with increases in commodity prices,
resulting in positively skewed return distributions.
D. Sudden increases in the supply of commodities tend to be uncorrelated with each other,
resulting in positive event exposure and diversification potential.
Exam 1 Section 2 11
A. the sensitivity of the supply of the resource to price changes.
B. the sensitivity of the demand for the resource to price changes.
C. the firm's level of exposure to and dependency on the resource.
D. the correlation between the equity markets and the overall economy.
A. must be constructed.
B. uses only green technologies for construction.
C. must be transferred from public to private ownership.
D. is classified as a social infrastructure project by RREEF Infrastructure.
A. 0.2%.
B. 0.4%.
C. 0.6%.
D. 0.8%.
A. REITs allow investors to adjust their tactical asset allocation to real estate sectors.
B. REITs allow investors to diversify portfolios through lower systematic risk exposure.
C. REITs produce a reliable income stream due to high income distribution requirements.
D. REITs provide exposure to real estate assets while maintaining a high level of liquidity for
investors.
A. A decision tree.
B. Income approach.
C. The appraisal method.
D. Black-Scholes option pricing model.
Exam 1 Section 2 12
A. The index only uses properties that were revalued due to significant events.
B. The index only uses properties that were actually sold in the most recent quarter.
C. The index uses a model that attributes property value changes to property characteristics.
D. The index uses a model that incorporates the current appraised value, last appraised value,
and a decay parameter to unsmooth appraisal values.
A. $1,100,000.
B. $2,400,000.
C. $4,200,000.
D. $6,000,000.
A. Hedge funds are substantially more volatile than most other asset classes.
B. Hedge fund returns are negatively correlated with financial assets, providing excellent
diversification benefits.
C. Hedge funds have experienced consistent, positive performance and have a low correlation
with traditional asset classes.
Exam 1 Section 2 13
Question #59 of 100
Which of the following parties avoid SEC registration requirements by selling to institutional investors
and high net worth individuals?
A. Momentum.
B. Random walk.
C. Mean-reverting.
D. Comparisons of moving averages.
A. Countertrend strategy.
B. Price-trending strategy.
C. Moving average strategy.
D. Pattern recognition strategy.
A. speculators create a short position in the target firm and a long position in the acquiring firm.
B. speculators create a long position in the target firm and a short position in the acquiring firm.
C. existing target shareholders may not be willing to assume the event risk associated with a
merger announcement.
D. existing acquiring shareholders may not be willing to assume the event risk associated with a
merger announcement.
Exam 1 Section 2 14
Question #64 of 100
A hedge fund just established a long position in the senior bonds of BNR Corporation, which recently
suffered a large ratings downgrade after a failed merger attempt and a substantial earnings decline.
The hedge fund also established a short position in the common stock of BNR. Which of the
followingbest describes the hedge fund's strategy?
A. Merger arbitrage.
B. Convertible arbitrage.
C. Fixed-income arbitrage.
D. Capital structure arbitrage.
A. A tail risk strategy is long vega and benefits most during periods of rising volatility.
B. A tail risk strategy is market-neutral and is attractive to volatility arbitrage managers.
C. A tail risk strategy is long vega and short gamma, benefitting most from low volatility.
D. A tail risk strategy is short vega and short gamma, benefitting most from market drops.
A. 0.75.
B. 2.60.
C. 28.46.
D. 45.00.
Exam 1 Section 2 15
D. similar standard deviations and analyzing historical spreads.
A. -2.4%.
B. -1.0%.
C. 1.4%.
D. 2.4%.
Exam 1 Section 2 16
C. Erosion of earnings or cash flow does not trigger a maintenance covenant unless a payment
is missed.
D. A maintenance covenant prohibits a debtor from taking a specific action once a pre-specified
event occurs.
A. have a fixed spread over LIBOR that is less than or equal to 100 basis points.
B. do not carry an investment-grade credit rating because the borrower has a large amount of
debt on its balance sheet.
C. are floating rate loans and have been packaged into a portfolio that is leveraged using an
interest rate swap.
D. carry an investment grade credit rating and can easily be leveraged by the investor who can
sell short Treasuries and buy additional investment-grade debt.
A. Having a lower hurdle rate allows private equity funds to be more aggressive in the bidding
process than hedge funds.
B. Hedge funds can receive incentive fees at any time, while private equity funds may receive
incentive fees only after returning capital to investors.
C. Hedge fund incentive fees are based on changes in NAV, while private equity fund incentive
fees are based on realized profits.
D. Hedge funds typically do not have provisions for the clawback of management or incentive
fees, while private equity funds do.
A. 20%.
B. 30%.
C. 40%.
D. 50%.
A. strong corporate governance principles often remain in place after a firm taken private by an
LBO firm becomes public again.
Exam 1 Section 2 17
B. the incentive and monitoring programs created by LBO firms can provide a road map for
management and shareholders after the firm becomes public again.
C. the threat of an LBO takeover serves as a warning to public companies and provides current
management an incentive to enact better corporate governance principles.
D. that LBO profitability measures are more important than current cash flows.
A. Equity-linked note.
B. Credit default swap.
C. Collateralized debt obligation.
D. A tailored structured product that can shift long-term capital gains tax.
Exam 1 Section 2 18
Question #82 of 100
Which of the following statements regarding interest-only (IO) and principal-only (PO) tranches is
CORRECT?
A. zero.
B. the face value of the bond.
C. the value of the assets at bond maturity.
D. the difference in the face value of the bond and the value of the assets.
• The CDO utilizes credit derivatives to transfer the risk exposure of the collateral pool.
Exam 1 Section 2 19
Question #86 of 100
Collateral assets are sold to generate cash flows to meet collateralized debt obligation (CDO) tranche
payments in a:
A. functions like a balance sheet CDO by using a CDS to transfer risk exposure.
B. has higher model risk than a CDO squared due to the concentration of pool assets.
C. bundles the entire underlying collateral pool into one tranche and then sells this tranche to a
single investor.
D. is more customizable for investors than other CDOs and does not use a waterfall approach to
distribute cash flows.
A. minimize liquidity risk so that the bank can exit the position if necessary.
B. maximize regulatory capital so that risk to the underlying investors is minimized.
C. structure the CDSs to minimize correlation risk so that multiple loans are not likely to default
at once.
D. ensure the insurance premiums on the CDSs are as low as possible since loan defaults will
rarely trigger the terms of the CDS.
A. Basis risk.
B. Collateral default risk.
C. Credit spread expansion.
D. Financial engineering risk.
A. 4.50%.
B. 5%.
Exam 1 Section 2 20
C. 5.64%.
D. 6.37%.
A. Up-and-in call.
B. Down-and-in call.
C. Up-and-out call.
D. Down-and-out call.
A. Stub-trading strategy.
B. Concentrated strategy.
C. Volatility arbitrage strategy.
D. Quantitative equity long/short strategy.
Exam 1 Section 2 21
Question #96 of 100
Hanover Fund maintains long equity positions designed to mimic the risk exposure of the MSCI
Emerging Market Index (MXEF). The current price of the MXEF is $1,120. Hanover has just sold a put
option on the index at $1,105 and a call option at $1,130. Which of the following best describes the
strategy Hanover is using?
A. Event driven.
B. Global macro.
C. Short volatility.
D. Relative value arbitrage.
A. Active risk.
B. Leverage risk.
C. Counterparty risk.
D. Short volatility risk.
A. port beta.
B. transfer alpha from beta.
C. separate alpha from beta.
D. distinguish alpha from beta.
Exam 1 Section 2 22
and control beta risk. Which of the following steps would NOT be part of Stewart's portable alpha
strategy?
Exam 1 Section 2 23