A) the required return would decrease by the same amount for both stock a and stock b.
B) the required return would increase for stock a but decrease for stock b.
C) the required return on portfolio p would remain unchanged.
D) the required return would increase for stock b but decrease for stock a.
E) the required return would increase for both stocks but the increase would be greater for stock b than for stock a.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 5.80%
B) 5.95%
C) 6.09%
D) 6.25%
E) 6.40%
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) based on the information we are given, and assuming those are the views of the marginal investor, it is apparent that the two stocks are in equilibrium.
B) portfolio p has more market risk than stock a but less market risk than b.
C) stock a should have a higher expected return than stock b as viewed by the marginal investor.
D) portfolio p has a coefficient of variation equal to 2.5.
E) portfolio p has a standard deviation of 25% and a beta of 1.0.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 1.17
B) 1.23
C) 1.29
D) 1.35
E) 1.42
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the stocks are not in equilibrium based on the capm; if a is valued correctly, then b is overvalued.
B) the stocks are not in equilibrium based on the capm; if a is valued correctly, then b is undervalued.
C) portfolio ab's expected return is 11.0%.
D) portfolio ab's beta is less than 1.2.
E) portfolio ab's standard deviation is 17.5%.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) adding more such stocks will increase the portfolio's expected rate of return.
B) adding more such stocks will reduce the portfolio's beta coefficient and thus its systematic risk.
C) adding more such stocks will have no effect on the portfolio's risk.
D) adding more such stocks will reduce the portfolio's market risk but not its unsystematic risk.
E) adding more such stocks will reduce the portfolio's unsystematic, or diversifiable, risk.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) diversifiable risk can be reduced by forming a large portfolio, but normally even highly-diversified portfolios are subject to market (or systematic) risk.
B) a large portfolio of randomly selected stocks will have a standard deviation of returns that is greater than the standard deviation of a 1-stock portfolio if that one stock has a beta less than 1.0.
C) a large portfolio of stocks whose betas are greater than 1.0 will have less market risk than a single stock with a beta = 0.8.
D) if you add enough randomly selected stocks to a portfolio, you can completely eliminate all of the market risk from the portfolio.
E) a large portfolio of randomly selected stocks will always have a standard deviation of returns that is less than the standard deviation of a portfolio with fewer stocks, regardless of how the stocks in the smaller portfolio are selected.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) large-company stocks, small-company stocks, long-term corporate bonds, u.s. treasury bills, long-term government bonds.
B) small-company stocks, large-company stocks, long-term corporate bonds, long-term government bonds, u.s. treasury bills.
C) u.s. treasury bills, long-term government bonds, long-term corporate bonds, small-company stocks, large-company stocks.
D) large-company stocks, small-company stocks, long-term corporate bonds, long-term government bonds, u.s. treasury bills.
E) small-company stocks, long-term corporate bonds, large-company stocks, long-term government bonds, u.s. treasury bills.
Correct Answer
verified