FULL CHAPTERS TESTBANK for Financial Institutions Markets and Money 11th Edition by David S. Kidwell
TESTBANK for Financial Instuons Markets
and Money 11th Edion by David S. Kidwell
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1
CHAPTER 1
TRUE/FALSE QUESTIONS
(T) 1. The purpose of the financial system is to bring savers and borrowers together.
(F) 2. Businesses are never deficit spending units (DSUs).
(T) 3. A financial claim is an “IOU” from a deficit spending unit.
(T) 4. Investment bankers help deficit spending units (DSUs) bring new primary
security issues to market.
(F) 5. Deposits in a credit union by a household are an example of direct finance.
(F) 6. Most banks are considered systemically risky under the 2010 Dodd Frank bill.
(F) 7. Sales finance companies specialize in mortgage lending.
(F) 8. Finance companies take small consumer deposits and make large consumer
loans.
(T) 9. Liabilities of financial intermediaries often include commercial paper.
(T) 10. Direct finance requires a more or less exact match of preferences between DSUs
and SSUs
(F) 11. In the modern financial system, there must be an equal number of DSUs and
surplus spending units (SSUs) in a period.
(T) 12. Every financial claim appears on two balance sheets.
(T) 13. Without a financial sector, real investment must be financed internally by the
deficit spending unit.
(T) 14. Depository intermediaries issue claims that are for the most part highly liquid.
(T) 15. A household is a surplus spending units when income for the period exceeds
spending.
(F) 16. A surplus spending unit (SSU) must hold a claim until its scheduled maturity.
(T) 17. Pension funds transfer spending power from the work period to the retirement
period.
(T) 18. SSUs may prefer intermediated financing to direct financing if they are seeking
liquidity and safety for their investments.
(T) 19. Commercial banks often lend to businesses in direct financial markets.
(F) 20. “Futures contract” and “forward contract” are identical terms.
2
(T) 21. Mortgages are capital market debt securities.
(T) 22. Households are the major source of funds to the financial system.
(F) 23. Secondary markets are important because they provide funds directly to deficit
spending units (DSUs).
(F) 24. Primary markets were created to offer liquidity and ways for investors to alter the
risk of their portfolios.
(T) 25. The New York Stock Exchange is an example of an organized exchange.
(T) 26. The money market provides short-term liquidity; the capital market finances
long-term corporate growth.
(T) 27. Private placements are the simplest form of direct finance.
(T) 28. Competition among financial intermediaries tends to force borrowing rates
downward.
(T) 29. Money markets have a greater variety of investors than borrowers.
(F) 30. Every asset is someone else’s liability, but not every liability is someone else’s asset.
(T) 31. Money market instruments are a form of short-term debt.
(T) 33. The money market is a dealer market, not an exchange, and has no specific
location.
(T) 34. Most Federal agency financial activity is designed to increase funding and reduce
the cost of borrowing for certain targeted sectors of the economy.
(T) 35. The money market is a market where liquidity is bought and sold.
(T) 36. Life insurance liabilities are generally more predictable than property and
casualty insurer claims.
(F) 37. Federal funds are the funds provided by the Federal Government for domestic
corporations for long-term growth.
(F) 38. Dealers bring buyer and seller together; brokers make a market.
(F) 39. OTC markets are not very important any more.
(T) 40. When a stock is listed on an exchange, members may trade it on the floor of the
exchange.
(T) 41. Primary markets are markets where users of funds raise cash by selling securities
to funds suppliers.
(F) 42. Privately placed securities are usually sold to one or more investment bankers
3
and then resold to the general public.
(T) 43. Financial institutions such as commercial banks typically have assets that are riskier than
their liabilities.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS
(b) 1. A surplus spending unit’s
a. income and expenditures for the period are equal.
b. income for the period exceeds expenditures.
c. expenditures for the period exceed receipts.
d. spending is entirely financed by credit cards
(c) 2. Which of the following is an example of indirect financing?
a. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from a deficit
spending unit (DSU)
b. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a preexisting financial claim from a
dealer
c. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from a commercial
bank
d. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from an underwriter
(d) 3. Which of the following does not take deposits?
a. commercial banks.
b. savings and loan associations.
c. credit unions.
d. finance companies.
(c) 4. When the financial system has achieved a high degree of efficiency,
a. Borrowers are able to finance at the highest possible cost.
b. Surplus spending units are able to receive the lowest return on their savings.
c. Transaction and intermediation costs are low.
d. Lenders will have a limited choice of financial investments.
(c) 5. An efficient financial system
a. eliminates search and transactions costs
b. is one that is tightly regulated to eliminate risk
c. promotes economic growth and social progress
d. depends on high volumes of “direct” transactions
(a) 6. Pension funds tend to invest in
a. higher-yielding long-term securities
b. money market securities exclusively
c. government securities exclusively
d. debt securities only
(d) 7. Financial institutions facilitate the flow of investment funds
a. from savers to borrowers
b. from Surplus spending units (SSUs) to deficit spending units (DSUs)
c. from the household sector to the business sector
d. all of the above
(d) 8. Which sector has been most consistently in a surplus budget position?
a. Business
4
b. Federal Government
c. Banks
d. Household
(d) 9. Which of the following are “economic units”?
a. households
b. businesses
c. governments
d. all of the above
(b) 10. Which of the following best describes the "two faces of debt" concept?
a. Deficit spending units (DSUs) are sometimes Surplus spending units (SSUs).
b. Every financial asset is someone else’s liability.
c. Intermediaries may own both direct and indirect financial assets.
d. The government is unable to control its federal spending.
(a) 11. A customer wishes to sell stock they own and comes to a dealer. Which of the
following would a securities dealer engage in?
a. buying the securities and adding them to their own inventory
b. locating a buyer for their client
c. issuing the stock to the public
d. loaning money to the client
(d) 12. Most financial intermediaries:
a. issue direct claims and purchase direct financial assets.
b. issue indirect claims and purchase indirect financial assets.
c. purchase large amounts of real, tangible assets.
d. purchase direct financial claims and issue indirect securities.
(a) 13. Profitability of financial intermediaries derives from all of the following except
a. government regulation
b. economies of scale
c. ability to manage credit risk
d. control of transactions costs
(c) 14. Denomination intermediation is best exemplified by
a. issuing insured deposits and making risky business loans.
b. bringing together investors of different religions
c. issuing five $3,000 CDs and making one $15,000 loan.
d. promising liquidity to surplus spending units (SSUs) while investing the funds
long-term
(a) 15. All but one of the following is a comparative advantage of financial
intermediaries:
a. exploit moral hazard in lending relationships.
b. ability to achieve economies of scale.
c. ability to reduce transaction costs.
d. ability to reduce information asymmetry.
(a) 16. Which of the following would tend to hold the most corporate bonds as a percent of
investments?
a. life insurance company
b. credit union
5
c. mutual savings bank
d. commercial bank
6
(d) 17. All but one of the following is a standard characteristic of financial claims:
a. They are recognized on two balance sheets.
b. They are intangible assets.
c. They are IOU's traded for funds.
d. They represent ownership of real assets.
(a) 18. Money market mutual funds are a strong competitor for
a. depository institutions.
b. the stock market.
c. finance companies.
d. the real estate market.
(d) 19. All of the following are terms for or examples of financial claims except
a. bonds.
b. money.
c. loans.
d. commodities.
(c) 20. Of the following, direct finance is best exemplified by
a. the purchase of mutual fund shares.
b. depositing in a credit union.
c. borrowing from a friend or relative.
d. employee contributions to a pension fund.
(a) 21. Surplus spending units (SSUs) are also called
a. lenders.
b. borrowers.
c. sellers of securities.
d. balanced budget units.
(c) 22. During 2008, Bob and Nancy Gutierrez expect total income of about $225,000 and are
budgeting total expenditures of about $180,000. For this budget period, the Gutierrez
family is most specifically a(n)
a. deficit spending unit (DSU)
b. business entity
c. surplus spending unit (SSU)
d. government entity
(c) 23. The ease with which a financial claim can be resold is its
a. quality.
b. risk.
c. marketability.
d. perpetuity.
(c) 24. The flow of funds from saving to investment through direct financing involves
a. the saver holding the lender's IOU.
b. two separate contracts.
c. the lender holding the borrower's IOU.
d. several different financial institutions.
7
(a) 25. Intermediation, or ____ financing, involves ___ financial claim(s) linking surplus
spending unit (SSU) and deficit spending unit (DSU) .
a. indirect; two
b. direct; two
c. indirect; one
d. direct; one
(d) 26. A market failure in banking occurs if
a. information asymmetry exists between the borrower and the lender.
b. there is the possibility of moral hazard once the loan is made..
c. there is there is the possibility of adverse selection .
d. one of the above problems prevents the bank from making loans in a given
market.
(b) 27. The adverse selection problem in lending occurs
a. when information costs are low.
b. when more risky borrowers than safe borrowers seek a loan.
c. when a borrower engages in riskier activity after a loan is made.
d. bankers refuse to make a loan to a lender.
(b) 28. A sale of an entire security issue to one investor or a small group of investors is
a. a dealer arrangement.
b. a private placement.
c. an underwriting.
d. intermediation financing.
(c) 29. The moral hazard problem in lending occurs
a. when information costs are low.
b. when more risky borrowers than safe borrowers seek a loan.
c. when a borrower engages in riskier activity after a loan is made.
d. bankers refuse to make a loan to a lender.
.
(d) 30. ______ execute buy or sell orders for their clients by matching orders with other
investors; _______ “make markets”.
a. dealers; brokers
b. brokers; mutual funds
c. dealers; financial institutions
d. brokers; dealers
(b) 31. Second Security Bank accepts ten 6 month deposits of $5,000 each and uses the
money to make a 6 month $50,000 loan to a business. This is an example of
a. maturity intermediation
b. denomination intermediation
c. currency transformation
d. credit risk diversification
(a) 32. Third National Bank accepts a 1 month deposits of $5,000 and uses the money to
make a 6 month $5,000 loan to a business. This is an example of
a. maturity intermediation
b. denomination intermediation
c. currency transformation
d. credit risk diversification
(c) 33. Acting as matchmaker and earning a commission, the ______ is an important
8
component in supporting direct financial markets.
a. dealer
b. investment banker
c. broker
d. seller
(d) 34. All but one describes a dealer involved in direct financial market:
a. provides liquidity to sellers
b. buys and sells from inventory
c. earns return from securities holdings
d. transforms claims
(a) 35. All but one of the following is associated with investment banking:
a. Taking deposits.
b. Marketing new issues of securities.
c. Underwriting securities.
d. Completing regulatory paperwork and providing consulting services.
(d) 36. Which of the following are typical transaction costs in making a loan?
a. Credit evaluation of the lender
b. Cost of monitoring the loan
c. Cost of creating the loan document
d. All of the above
(a) 37. Most of the financial claims issued by U.S. financial intermediaries are
purchased by
a. the household sector.
b. the business sector.
c. the government sector.
d. the foreign sector
(d) 38. The best synonym for “financial intermediation” is
a. direct finance
b. investment banking
c. market making
d. transformation of claims
(b) 39. An S&L taking short-term deposits and financing local land development is
engaging in
a. speculation.
b. maturity intermediation.
c. securities trading
d. currency transformation
(c) 40. Bank credit risk diversification occurs when
a. adding loans to the portfolio increases the liquidity of the loan portfolio.
b. loans are sold to other banks
c. adding loans to the portfolio decreases the variability of the loan portfolio.
d. bank loans are repaid by the borrowers.
9
(c) 41. Currency transformation is an important service because
a. most surplus spending units (SSUs) want to invest in more than one currency
b. all financial institutions operate internationally
c. few ordinary investors care to hold claims denominated in foreign currency, but
many DSUs need foreign currency claims
d. Deficit spending units (DSUs) can’t export unless they borrow in the currency of
the importing country
(d) 42. A commercial bank provides liquidity when it
a. pays the check written by a deposit customer.
b. redeems a savings deposit upon demand.
c. makes a loan fulfilling a loan commitment.
d. All of the above.
(c) 43. Disintermediation is best exemplified by
a. purchase of securities.
b. sale of securities.
c. taking funds from a bank and buying stock through your broker.
d. depositing an insurance settlement with a credit union.
(b) 44. The only “deposit-type” institutions that do not operate for profit are
a. thrift institutions
b. credit unions
c. pension funds
d. commercial banks
(a) 45. Credit unions are _____ institutions; pension funds are _______ institutions.
a. depository; contractual
b. contractual; depository
c. federal ; money market
d. depository; depository
(b) 46. The financial institution that is the largest issuer of commercial paper is
a. commercial banks.
b. finance companies.
c. property-casualty insurance companies.
d. pension funds.
(d) 47. Which of the following is not a debt security?
a. corporate bonds.
b. U.S. Government securities.
c. federal agency securities.
d. common stock.
(c) 48. Federal agencies issue high quality securities and invest primarily in claims issued by
a. businesses that are “too big to fail”.
b. the U.S. Treasury to finance government deficits.
c. agricultural or housing-related sectors which have limited access to private
credit.
d. foreign governments
10
(a) 49. Money market instruments and capital market instruments differ appreciably in
a. maturity
b. liquidity
c. safety of principal
d. all of the above
(d) 50. Potential effects of yield fluctuations on security prices and reinvestment income
represent
a. credit risk.
b. liquidity risk.
c. foreign exchange risk.
d. interest rate risk.
(c) 51. Which of the following is NOT an example of capital market securities?
a. common stocks
b. convertible bonds
c. commercial paper
d. mortgages
(d) 52. Secondary capital markets have promoted economic growth in the U.S. because
a. they have increased marketability of stocks and bonds.
b. they have increased the public's access to investment.
c. they have helped investors diversify.
d. all of the above
(b) 53. Security exchanges provide a valuable function in that they
a. help banks raise funds
b. increase the marketability of securities.
c. provide a legal way to gamble.
d. supply money to deficit spending units.
(c) 54. Elm Street Bank accepts US dollar deposits and uses the money to make loan in
euros to one of its corporate customers. This is an example of
a. maturity intermediation
b. denomination intermediation
c. currency transformation
d. credit risk diversification
(a) 55. Primary capital markets are most likely to finance
a. plant and equipment
b. inventory
c. operating expenses
d. none of the above
(d) 56. The household sector is the largest surplus sector and invests in the capital
market
a. directly by purchasing stocks and bonds.
b. indirectly through mutual funds.
c. indirectly through pension funds
d. all of the above

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FULL CHAPTERS TESTBANK for Financial Institutions Markets and Money 11th Edition by David S. Kidwell

  • 2. TESTBANK for Financial Instuons Markets and Money 11th Edion by David S. Kidwell Hello all , We have all what you need with best price Our email : [email protected] Our website : testbanks-store.com
  • 3. 1 CHAPTER 1 TRUE/FALSE QUESTIONS (T) 1. The purpose of the financial system is to bring savers and borrowers together. (F) 2. Businesses are never deficit spending units (DSUs). (T) 3. A financial claim is an “IOU” from a deficit spending unit. (T) 4. Investment bankers help deficit spending units (DSUs) bring new primary security issues to market. (F) 5. Deposits in a credit union by a household are an example of direct finance. (F) 6. Most banks are considered systemically risky under the 2010 Dodd Frank bill. (F) 7. Sales finance companies specialize in mortgage lending. (F) 8. Finance companies take small consumer deposits and make large consumer loans. (T) 9. Liabilities of financial intermediaries often include commercial paper. (T) 10. Direct finance requires a more or less exact match of preferences between DSUs and SSUs (F) 11. In the modern financial system, there must be an equal number of DSUs and surplus spending units (SSUs) in a period. (T) 12. Every financial claim appears on two balance sheets. (T) 13. Without a financial sector, real investment must be financed internally by the deficit spending unit. (T) 14. Depository intermediaries issue claims that are for the most part highly liquid. (T) 15. A household is a surplus spending units when income for the period exceeds spending. (F) 16. A surplus spending unit (SSU) must hold a claim until its scheduled maturity. (T) 17. Pension funds transfer spending power from the work period to the retirement period. (T) 18. SSUs may prefer intermediated financing to direct financing if they are seeking liquidity and safety for their investments. (T) 19. Commercial banks often lend to businesses in direct financial markets. (F) 20. “Futures contract” and “forward contract” are identical terms.
  • 4. 2 (T) 21. Mortgages are capital market debt securities. (T) 22. Households are the major source of funds to the financial system. (F) 23. Secondary markets are important because they provide funds directly to deficit spending units (DSUs). (F) 24. Primary markets were created to offer liquidity and ways for investors to alter the risk of their portfolios. (T) 25. The New York Stock Exchange is an example of an organized exchange. (T) 26. The money market provides short-term liquidity; the capital market finances long-term corporate growth. (T) 27. Private placements are the simplest form of direct finance. (T) 28. Competition among financial intermediaries tends to force borrowing rates downward. (T) 29. Money markets have a greater variety of investors than borrowers. (F) 30. Every asset is someone else’s liability, but not every liability is someone else’s asset. (T) 31. Money market instruments are a form of short-term debt. (T) 33. The money market is a dealer market, not an exchange, and has no specific location. (T) 34. Most Federal agency financial activity is designed to increase funding and reduce the cost of borrowing for certain targeted sectors of the economy. (T) 35. The money market is a market where liquidity is bought and sold. (T) 36. Life insurance liabilities are generally more predictable than property and casualty insurer claims. (F) 37. Federal funds are the funds provided by the Federal Government for domestic corporations for long-term growth. (F) 38. Dealers bring buyer and seller together; brokers make a market. (F) 39. OTC markets are not very important any more. (T) 40. When a stock is listed on an exchange, members may trade it on the floor of the exchange. (T) 41. Primary markets are markets where users of funds raise cash by selling securities to funds suppliers. (F) 42. Privately placed securities are usually sold to one or more investment bankers
  • 5. 3 and then resold to the general public. (T) 43. Financial institutions such as commercial banks typically have assets that are riskier than their liabilities. MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS (b) 1. A surplus spending unit’s a. income and expenditures for the period are equal. b. income for the period exceeds expenditures. c. expenditures for the period exceed receipts. d. spending is entirely financed by credit cards (c) 2. Which of the following is an example of indirect financing? a. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from a deficit spending unit (DSU) b. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a preexisting financial claim from a dealer c. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from a commercial bank d. a surplus spending unit (SSU) purchasing a financial claim from an underwriter (d) 3. Which of the following does not take deposits? a. commercial banks. b. savings and loan associations. c. credit unions. d. finance companies. (c) 4. When the financial system has achieved a high degree of efficiency, a. Borrowers are able to finance at the highest possible cost. b. Surplus spending units are able to receive the lowest return on their savings. c. Transaction and intermediation costs are low. d. Lenders will have a limited choice of financial investments. (c) 5. An efficient financial system a. eliminates search and transactions costs b. is one that is tightly regulated to eliminate risk c. promotes economic growth and social progress d. depends on high volumes of “direct” transactions (a) 6. Pension funds tend to invest in a. higher-yielding long-term securities b. money market securities exclusively c. government securities exclusively d. debt securities only (d) 7. Financial institutions facilitate the flow of investment funds a. from savers to borrowers b. from Surplus spending units (SSUs) to deficit spending units (DSUs) c. from the household sector to the business sector d. all of the above (d) 8. Which sector has been most consistently in a surplus budget position? a. Business
  • 6. 4 b. Federal Government c. Banks d. Household (d) 9. Which of the following are “economic units”? a. households b. businesses c. governments d. all of the above (b) 10. Which of the following best describes the "two faces of debt" concept? a. Deficit spending units (DSUs) are sometimes Surplus spending units (SSUs). b. Every financial asset is someone else’s liability. c. Intermediaries may own both direct and indirect financial assets. d. The government is unable to control its federal spending. (a) 11. A customer wishes to sell stock they own and comes to a dealer. Which of the following would a securities dealer engage in? a. buying the securities and adding them to their own inventory b. locating a buyer for their client c. issuing the stock to the public d. loaning money to the client (d) 12. Most financial intermediaries: a. issue direct claims and purchase direct financial assets. b. issue indirect claims and purchase indirect financial assets. c. purchase large amounts of real, tangible assets. d. purchase direct financial claims and issue indirect securities. (a) 13. Profitability of financial intermediaries derives from all of the following except a. government regulation b. economies of scale c. ability to manage credit risk d. control of transactions costs (c) 14. Denomination intermediation is best exemplified by a. issuing insured deposits and making risky business loans. b. bringing together investors of different religions c. issuing five $3,000 CDs and making one $15,000 loan. d. promising liquidity to surplus spending units (SSUs) while investing the funds long-term (a) 15. All but one of the following is a comparative advantage of financial intermediaries: a. exploit moral hazard in lending relationships. b. ability to achieve economies of scale. c. ability to reduce transaction costs. d. ability to reduce information asymmetry. (a) 16. Which of the following would tend to hold the most corporate bonds as a percent of investments? a. life insurance company b. credit union
  • 7. 5 c. mutual savings bank d. commercial bank
  • 8. 6 (d) 17. All but one of the following is a standard characteristic of financial claims: a. They are recognized on two balance sheets. b. They are intangible assets. c. They are IOU's traded for funds. d. They represent ownership of real assets. (a) 18. Money market mutual funds are a strong competitor for a. depository institutions. b. the stock market. c. finance companies. d. the real estate market. (d) 19. All of the following are terms for or examples of financial claims except a. bonds. b. money. c. loans. d. commodities. (c) 20. Of the following, direct finance is best exemplified by a. the purchase of mutual fund shares. b. depositing in a credit union. c. borrowing from a friend or relative. d. employee contributions to a pension fund. (a) 21. Surplus spending units (SSUs) are also called a. lenders. b. borrowers. c. sellers of securities. d. balanced budget units. (c) 22. During 2008, Bob and Nancy Gutierrez expect total income of about $225,000 and are budgeting total expenditures of about $180,000. For this budget period, the Gutierrez family is most specifically a(n) a. deficit spending unit (DSU) b. business entity c. surplus spending unit (SSU) d. government entity (c) 23. The ease with which a financial claim can be resold is its a. quality. b. risk. c. marketability. d. perpetuity. (c) 24. The flow of funds from saving to investment through direct financing involves a. the saver holding the lender's IOU. b. two separate contracts. c. the lender holding the borrower's IOU. d. several different financial institutions.
  • 9. 7 (a) 25. Intermediation, or ____ financing, involves ___ financial claim(s) linking surplus spending unit (SSU) and deficit spending unit (DSU) . a. indirect; two b. direct; two c. indirect; one d. direct; one (d) 26. A market failure in banking occurs if a. information asymmetry exists between the borrower and the lender. b. there is the possibility of moral hazard once the loan is made.. c. there is there is the possibility of adverse selection . d. one of the above problems prevents the bank from making loans in a given market. (b) 27. The adverse selection problem in lending occurs a. when information costs are low. b. when more risky borrowers than safe borrowers seek a loan. c. when a borrower engages in riskier activity after a loan is made. d. bankers refuse to make a loan to a lender. (b) 28. A sale of an entire security issue to one investor or a small group of investors is a. a dealer arrangement. b. a private placement. c. an underwriting. d. intermediation financing. (c) 29. The moral hazard problem in lending occurs a. when information costs are low. b. when more risky borrowers than safe borrowers seek a loan. c. when a borrower engages in riskier activity after a loan is made. d. bankers refuse to make a loan to a lender. . (d) 30. ______ execute buy or sell orders for their clients by matching orders with other investors; _______ “make markets”. a. dealers; brokers b. brokers; mutual funds c. dealers; financial institutions d. brokers; dealers (b) 31. Second Security Bank accepts ten 6 month deposits of $5,000 each and uses the money to make a 6 month $50,000 loan to a business. This is an example of a. maturity intermediation b. denomination intermediation c. currency transformation d. credit risk diversification (a) 32. Third National Bank accepts a 1 month deposits of $5,000 and uses the money to make a 6 month $5,000 loan to a business. This is an example of a. maturity intermediation b. denomination intermediation c. currency transformation d. credit risk diversification (c) 33. Acting as matchmaker and earning a commission, the ______ is an important
  • 10. 8 component in supporting direct financial markets. a. dealer b. investment banker c. broker d. seller (d) 34. All but one describes a dealer involved in direct financial market: a. provides liquidity to sellers b. buys and sells from inventory c. earns return from securities holdings d. transforms claims (a) 35. All but one of the following is associated with investment banking: a. Taking deposits. b. Marketing new issues of securities. c. Underwriting securities. d. Completing regulatory paperwork and providing consulting services. (d) 36. Which of the following are typical transaction costs in making a loan? a. Credit evaluation of the lender b. Cost of monitoring the loan c. Cost of creating the loan document d. All of the above (a) 37. Most of the financial claims issued by U.S. financial intermediaries are purchased by a. the household sector. b. the business sector. c. the government sector. d. the foreign sector (d) 38. The best synonym for “financial intermediation” is a. direct finance b. investment banking c. market making d. transformation of claims (b) 39. An S&L taking short-term deposits and financing local land development is engaging in a. speculation. b. maturity intermediation. c. securities trading d. currency transformation (c) 40. Bank credit risk diversification occurs when a. adding loans to the portfolio increases the liquidity of the loan portfolio. b. loans are sold to other banks c. adding loans to the portfolio decreases the variability of the loan portfolio. d. bank loans are repaid by the borrowers.
  • 11. 9 (c) 41. Currency transformation is an important service because a. most surplus spending units (SSUs) want to invest in more than one currency b. all financial institutions operate internationally c. few ordinary investors care to hold claims denominated in foreign currency, but many DSUs need foreign currency claims d. Deficit spending units (DSUs) can’t export unless they borrow in the currency of the importing country (d) 42. A commercial bank provides liquidity when it a. pays the check written by a deposit customer. b. redeems a savings deposit upon demand. c. makes a loan fulfilling a loan commitment. d. All of the above. (c) 43. Disintermediation is best exemplified by a. purchase of securities. b. sale of securities. c. taking funds from a bank and buying stock through your broker. d. depositing an insurance settlement with a credit union. (b) 44. The only “deposit-type” institutions that do not operate for profit are a. thrift institutions b. credit unions c. pension funds d. commercial banks (a) 45. Credit unions are _____ institutions; pension funds are _______ institutions. a. depository; contractual b. contractual; depository c. federal ; money market d. depository; depository (b) 46. The financial institution that is the largest issuer of commercial paper is a. commercial banks. b. finance companies. c. property-casualty insurance companies. d. pension funds. (d) 47. Which of the following is not a debt security? a. corporate bonds. b. U.S. Government securities. c. federal agency securities. d. common stock. (c) 48. Federal agencies issue high quality securities and invest primarily in claims issued by a. businesses that are “too big to fail”. b. the U.S. Treasury to finance government deficits. c. agricultural or housing-related sectors which have limited access to private credit. d. foreign governments
  • 12. 10 (a) 49. Money market instruments and capital market instruments differ appreciably in a. maturity b. liquidity c. safety of principal d. all of the above (d) 50. Potential effects of yield fluctuations on security prices and reinvestment income represent a. credit risk. b. liquidity risk. c. foreign exchange risk. d. interest rate risk. (c) 51. Which of the following is NOT an example of capital market securities? a. common stocks b. convertible bonds c. commercial paper d. mortgages (d) 52. Secondary capital markets have promoted economic growth in the U.S. because a. they have increased marketability of stocks and bonds. b. they have increased the public's access to investment. c. they have helped investors diversify. d. all of the above (b) 53. Security exchanges provide a valuable function in that they a. help banks raise funds b. increase the marketability of securities. c. provide a legal way to gamble. d. supply money to deficit spending units. (c) 54. Elm Street Bank accepts US dollar deposits and uses the money to make loan in euros to one of its corporate customers. This is an example of a. maturity intermediation b. denomination intermediation c. currency transformation d. credit risk diversification (a) 55. Primary capital markets are most likely to finance a. plant and equipment b. inventory c. operating expenses d. none of the above (d) 56. The household sector is the largest surplus sector and invests in the capital market a. directly by purchasing stocks and bonds. b. indirectly through mutual funds. c. indirectly through pension funds d. all of the above