Title: Test
1Test 1-A, Fall 2002
- Explanations and Answers
- FINC434 - Financial Markets
- Prof David Eagle
2Questions 1-4 WSJ articles
- 1. IPOs, especially good IPOs are often
rationed by investment banks, with greater
allocations being given as favors to good
clients. The article something Ventured and
Something Gained? discussed how investment banks
were giving greater allocations to the venture
capitalists who helped bring the companies to the
investment banks. - 2. B, survivorship bias has to do with the fact
that mutual funds that do not survive do not have
their performances reported, which creates an
overstatement of the long-term performance
averages for active funds. - 3. A.
- 4. D. Goodyear made a contribution this year
even though they were not required to do so by
law.
3Problem 5
The equilibrium call premium is 11.42
4Problem 6
(a) buy futures, sell the underlying stock short
Futures
Overall
Stocks
5Problem 7 (Futures Arbitrage)
Note An area of confusion that many students had
concerned how the futures were used one year from
now. You buy the futures contract now (although
no money is exchanged now). A year from now, you
buy the stock via the futures contract and use
those stocks to return the stocks you owe the
broker.
6Problem 8
Jennifers broker must sell 284 shares on her
behalf.
7Problem 9
Justin can buy 202 more shares
8Problem 10
They can borrow 2562 more.
911 Essay
(a) Selling short is selling securities you do
not own by borrowing those securities, for
example from ones broker. For example, suppose
Joe sold stock short to Jill by borrowing the
stock from his broker who in turn borrows the
stock from Bill. (b) the stock comes from Bills
street name. (c) the stock goes to Jill who
bought it (d) the proceeds for the sale are put
in a collateral account. Joe must also put
additional funds in the collateral account. He
will be able to put those funds in a Treasury
Bill and thus still earn interest on them and
still have them meet his collateral
requirements. (e) When Kmart pays a dividend, it
pays it to Jill who now owns the stock. (f) Joe
must pay the amount of the dividends to Bill to
make up for the dividend. (g) Joe must pay
interest to the broker. (h) To reverse the short
sale, Joe must buy the stock on the open market
and returns it to the broker to back up Bills
account. Joe is then free to take any left over
money in the collateral account.
10Problem 12
- Note All future contracts are marketed to market
- (a) No money exchanges hands between Chad and
Angela on Oct. 24th. However, both of them must
put funds into a margin account - (b) Angela must pay 300 to Chad as a result of
marking to market. - (c) Chad must pay 200 to Angela as a result of
marking to market.
1113 Risk Arbitrage vs. Riskless Arbitrage
- Riskless arbitrage involves buying and selling at
the same time to take into account price
disparities between two markets or involves
engaging in derivatives hedging that should make
the arbitrage riskless. - Risk Arbitrage is really a form of speculation.
The term risk arbitrage was coined by
practitioners not academics. It means buying or
selling a security before bankruptcy, a merger,
or an acquisition, to profit from the price
disparity that exists now versus what should
exist after the bankruptcy, merger, or
acquisition.
1214 Closed-End Fund vs. Unit Trust
- In a closed-end fund, the number of shares in the
fund is fixed after the fund is closed. However,
the closed-end fund can be actively managed.
With a unit trust, the fund is passively managed,
not in the sense of an index fund, but in the
sense that it is mostly a buy and hold fund.
1315. D.
- Collision coverage is an example of property and
casualty insurance.
1416. Passive vs. active stock funds
- An actively managed stock fund is a fund where
stocks are continually being monitored and
analyzed and the money manager is continually
making decisions about which stocks to hold, buy,
and sell. In a passive stock fund, the manager
does not make such decisions. Instead, the fund
either continues holding stocks, like in a unit
trust, or in the case of an index fund merely
tries to replicate an index and buys and sells
securities only to the extent necessary to handle
new funds, redemptions, or changes in the
composition of the index.
1517. ETFs and ECNs
- ETFs are open-ended mutual funds that are traded
like stocks on a stock exchange (originally on
the Amex exchange). When the book was written
only stock index funds were allowed to be so
traded. ETFs are similar to closed-end funds in
that small discounts or premiums can exist but
arbitrageurs can actually create the ETFs or
redeem the ETFs, which keeps these discounts or
premiums small. ETFs have a tax advantage to new
investors -- old investors redeaming ETFs do not
result in the new investor being taxed. - ECNs, see pp. 237-238.
1618. SEC rule 144A
- This rule relates to the allowance of privately
placed securities to institutional investors,
which the SEC allows to take place with less
registration requirements than a public offering.
Before this rule was past, the SEC required
these privately placed securities to be held for
two years before the institutional investor can
sell the securities. However, rule 144A now
allows these institutional investors to trade the
securities among themselves.
1719. Basis risk
- Basis equals the futures price less the spot
price. Basis risk is that the basis will move in
ways other than predicated which could cause a
less than perfect hedge or a loss even though the
spot price changed as predicted. (Note the
basis usually is predicted to disappear by the
expiration of the futures contract.
1820. B.
- the accumulated investment value of the life
insurance is tax exempt, which is one of the tax
advantages of life insurance as an investment
vehicle.
1921. C
- Underwriters make decisions about whether or not
insure particular applicants and to some extent
what premiums to change the insured.