lOMoARcPSD|7924206 Chapter 25 Test Bank - TEST BANKER Investments and Portfolio Selection (University of New South Wales) StuDocu is not sponsored or endorsed by any college or university Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 Chapter 25 Test Bank - Static Student: ___________________________________________________________________________ Multiple Choice Questions 1. Shares of several foreign firms are traded in the U.S. markets in the form of A. ADRs. B. ECUs. C. single-country funds. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 2. __________ refers to the possibility of expropriation of assets, changes in tax policy, and the possibility of restrictions on foreign exchange transactions. A. Default risk B. Foreign exchange risk C. Market risk D. Political risk E. None of the options are correct. 3. __________ are mutual funds that invest in one country only. A. ADRs B. ECUs C. Single-country funds D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 4. The performance of an internationally-diversified portfolio may be affected by A. country selection. B. currency selection. C. stock selection. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 5. Over the period 2011-2016, most correlations between the U.S. stock index and stock-index portfolios of other countries were A. negative. B. positive but less than .9. C. approximately zero. D. .9 or above. E. None of the options are correct. 6. The __________ index is a widely used index of non-U.S. stocks. A. CBOE B. Dow Jones C. EAFE D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 7. According to PRS, in 2015, which country had the highest composite risk rating on a scale of 0 (most risky) to 100 (least risky)? A. Switzerland B. Canada C. Germany D. U.S. 8. Which country has the highest in GDP per capita? 25-1 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 A. Luxembourg B. Canada C. Germany D. U.S. 9. Which country has the largest stock market compared to GDP? A. Japan B. Germany C. Hong Kong D. U.S. 10. Using local currency returns, the S&P 500 has the highest correlation with A. Euronext. B. FTSE. C. Nikkei. D. Toronto. 11. In 2015, the U.S. equity market represented __________ of the world equity market. A. 19% B. 60% C. 43% D. 41% 12. The straightforward generalization of the simple CAPM to international stocks is problematic because A. inflation-risk perceptions by different investors in different countries will differ as consumption baskets differ. B. investors in different countries view exchange-rate risk from the perspective of different domestic currencies. C. taxes, transaction costs, and capital barriers across countries make it difficult for investors to hold a world-index portfolio. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 13. The yield on a 1-year bill in the U.K. is 8%, and the present exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. If you expect the exchange rate to be 1 pound = U.S. $1.50 a year from now, the return a U.S. investor can expect to earn by investing in U.K. bills is A. 6.7%. B. 0%. C. 8%. D. 1.25%. E. None of the options are correct. 14. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 5%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. The 1-year forward rate is 1 pound = $1.57. What is the minimum yield on a 1-year risk-free security in Britain that would induce a U.S. investor to invest in the British security? A. 2.44% B. 2.50% C. 7.00% D. 7.62% E. None of the options are correct. 15. The interest rate on a 1-year Canadian security is 8%. The current exchange rate is C$ = US $0.78. The 1-year forward rate is C$ = US $0.76. The return (denominated in U.S. $) that a U.S. investor can earn by investing in the Canadian security is A. 3.59%. B. 4.00%. C. 5.23%. D. 8.46%. E. None of the options are correct. 16. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4%, and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 7%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.65. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor 25-2 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.6037 B. 2.0411 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 17. The present exchange rate is C$ = U.S. $0.78. The 1-year future rate is C$ = U.S. $0.76. The yield on a 1-year U.S. bill is 4%. A yield of __________ on a 1-year Canadian bill will make an investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. bill and the Canadian bill. A. 2.4% B. 1.3% C. 6.4% D. 6.7% E. None of the options are correct. 18. Assume there is a fixed exchange rate between the Canadian and U.S. dollar. The expected return and standard deviation of return on the U.S. stock market are 18% and 15%, respectively. The expected return and standard deviation on the Canadian stock market are 13% and 20%, respectively. The covariance of returns between the U.S. and Canadian stock markets is 1.5%. If you invested 50% of your money in the Canadian stock market and 50% in the U.S. stock market, the expected return on your portfolio would be A. 12.0%. B. 12.5%. C. 13.0%. D. 15.5%. 19. Assume there is a fixed exchange rate between the Canadian and U.S. dollar. The expected return and standard deviation of return on the U.S. stock market are 18% and 15%, respectively. The expected return and standard deviation on the Canadian stock market are 13% and 20%, respectively. The covariance of returns between the U.S. and Canadian stock markets is 1.5%. If you invested 50% of your money in the Canadian stock market and 50% in the U.S. stock market, the standard deviation of return of your portfolio would be A. 12.53%. B. 15.21%. C. 17.50%. D. 18.75%. 20. The major concern that has been raised with respect to the weighting of countries within the EAFE index is A. currency volatilities are not considered in the weighting. B. cross-correlations are not considered in the weighting. C. inflation is not represented in the weighting. D. the weights are not proportional to the asset bases of the respective countries. E. None of the options are correct. 21. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 2,000 pounds, one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 2,400 pounds and the pound is worth $1.60. A. 16.7% B. 20.0% C. 28.0% D. 40.0% E. None of the options are correct. 22. U.S. investors A. can trade derivative securities based on prices in foreign security markets. B. cannot trade foreign derivative securities. Ccan trade options and futures on the Nikkei stock index of 225 stocks traded on the Tokyo stock exchange and on . FTSE (Financial Times Share Exchange) indexes of U.K. and European stocks. Dcan trade derivative securities based on prices in foreign security markets and can trade options and futures on 25-3 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 . the Nikkei stock index of 225 stocks traded on the Tokyo stock exchange and on FTSE (Financial Times Share Exchange) indexes of U.K. and European stocks. E. None of the options are correct. 23. Exchange-rate risk A. results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made. B. can be hedged by using a forward or futures contract in foreign exchange. C. cannot be eliminated. D results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made and cannot be eliminated. E. results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made and can be hedged by using a forward or futures contract in foreign exchange. 24. International investing A. cannot be measured against a passive benchmark, such as the S&P 500. B. can be measured against a widely-used index of non-U.S. stocks, the EAFE Index (Europe, Australia, Far East). C. can be measured against international indexes. D can be measured against a widely-used index of non-U.S. stocks, the EAFE Index (Europe, Australia, Far East), . and against international indexes. E. None of the options are correct. 25. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: Calculate Quantitative's currency selection return contribution. A. +20% B. 5% C. +15% D. +5% E. 10% 26. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: Calculate Quantitative's country selection return contribution. A. 12.5% B. 12.5% C. 11.25% D. 1.25% E. 1.25% 27. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: 25-4 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 Calculate Quantitative's stock selection return contribution. A. 1.0% B. 1.0% C. 3.0% D. 0.25% 28. Using the S&P 500 portfolio as a proxy of the market portfolio A. is appropriate because U.S. securities represent more than 60% of world equities. B. is appropriate because most U.S. investors are primarily interested in U.S. securities. C. is appropriate because most U.S. and non-U.S. investors are primarily interested in U.S. securities. D. is inappropriate because U.S. securities make up less than 41% of world equities. E. is inappropriate because the average U.S. investor has less than 20% of his or her portfolio in non-U.S. equities. 29. When an investor adds international stocks to his or her U.S. stock portfolio, A. it will raise his or her risk relative to the risk he or she would face just holding U.S. stocks. B. he or she can reduce the risk of his or her portfolio. C. he or she will increase his or her expected return but must also take on more risk. D. it will have no impact on either the risk or the return of his or her portfolio. E.he or she needs to seek professional management because he or she doesn't have access to international investments on his or her own. 30. "ADRs" stands for ___________, and "WEBS" stands for ____________. A. additional dollar returns; weekly equity and bond survey B. additional daily returns; world equity and bond survey C. American dollar returns; world equity and bond statistics D. American depository receipts; world equity benchmark shares E. adjusted dollar returns; weighted equity benchmark shares 31. WEBS portfolios A. are passively managed. B. are shares that can be sold by investors. C. are free from brokerage commissions. D. are passively managed and are shares that can be sold by investors. E. All of the options are correct. 32. The EAFE is A. the East Asia Foreign Equity index. B. the Economic Advisor's Foreign Estimator index. C. the European and Asian Foreign Equity index. D. the European, Asian, French Equity index. E. the European, Australian, Far East index. 33. Home bias refers to A. the tendency to vacation in your home country instead of traveling abroad. B. the tendency to believe that your home country is better than other countries. C. the tendency to give preferential treatment to people from your home country. D. the tendency to overweight investments in your home country. 25-5 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 E. None of the options are correct. 34. The possibility of experiencing a drop in revenue or an increase in cost in an international transaction due to a change in foreign exchange rates is called A. foreign exchange risk. B. political risk. C. translation exposure. D. hedging risk. 35. As exchange rates change, they A. change the relative purchasing power between countries. B. can affect imports and exports between countries. C. will affect the flow of funds between countries. D. All of the options are true. 36. When Country A's currency strengthens against Country B's, citizens of Country A will A. pay less to buy Country B's products. B. pay more to buy Country B's products. C. pay more to buy domestically-produced products. D. not be affected by the change in their currency's value. 37. The interplay between interest rate differentials and exchange rates, such that each adjusts until the foreign exchange market and the money market reach equilibrium, is called the A. Purchasing Power Parity Theory. B. Balance of Payments. C. Interest Rate Parity Theory. D. None of the options are correct. 38. Which equity index had the highest volatility in terms of U.S. dollar-denominated returns for the period of five years ending in October 2016? A. Shanghai B. India C. Nikkei D. U.S. 39. Which equity index had the lowest volatility in terms of U.S. dollar-denominated returns for the period of five years ending in October 2016? A. Korea B. U.S. C. Toronto D. Nikkei 40. The possibility of experiencing a drop in revenue or an increase in cost in an international transaction due to a change in foreign exchange rates is called A. foreign exchange risk. B. political risk. C. translation exposure. D. hedging risk. 41. The yield on a 1-year bill in the U.K. is 7%, and the present exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.65. If you expect the exchange rate to be 1 pound = U.S. $1.45 a year from now, the return a U.S. investor can expect to earn by investing in U.K. bills is A. 6.7%. B. 3.2%. C. 8%. D. 5.97%. E. None of the options 25-6 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 42. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 6%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.62. The 1-year forward rate is 1 pound = $1.53. What is the minimum yield on a 1-year risk-free security in Britain that would induce a U.S. investor to invest in the British security? A. 15.44% B. 13.50% C. 12.24% D. 7.62% E. None of the options 43. The interest rate on a 1-year Canadian security is 7.8%. The current exchange rate is C$ = US $0.79. The 1-year forward rate is C$ = US $0.77. The return (denominated in U.S. $) that a U.S. investor can earn by investing in the Canadian security is A. 3.59%. B. 4.00%. C. 5.07%. D. 8.46%. E. None of the options 44. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4.5% and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 7.7%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.5525 B. 2.0411 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 45. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 2,200 pounds one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 2,560 pounds and the pound is worth $1.60. A. 16.7% B. 20.3% C. 24.1% D. 41.4% E. None of the options 46. The present exchange rate is C$ = U.S. $0.78. The 1-year future rate is C$ = U.S. $0.75. The yield on a 1-year U.S. bill is 5%. A yield of __________ on a 1-year Canadian bill will make investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. bill and the Canadian bill. A. 9.2% B. 8.3% C. 6.4% D. 11.3% E. None of the options 47. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 4,000 pounds one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 4,400 pounds and the pound is worth $1.62. A. 16.7% B. 18.8% C. 28.0% D. 40.0% E. None of the options 48. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4% and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 6%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.67. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.6385 B. 2.0411 25-7 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 Chapter 25 Test Bank - Static Key Multiple Choice Questions 1. Shares of several foreign firms are traded in the U.S. markets in the form of A. ADRs. B. ECUs. C. single-country funds. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. American Depository Receipts (ADRs) allow U.S. investors to invest in foreign stocks via transactions on the U.S. stock exchanges. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global securities 2. __________ refers to the possibility of expropriation of assets, changes in tax policy, and the possibility of restrictions on foreign exchange transactions. A. Default risk B. Foreign exchange risk C. Market risk D. Political risk E. None of the options are correct. All of the factors are political in nature and thus are examples of political risk. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global risks 3. __________ are mutual funds that invest in one country only. A. ADRs B. ECUs C. Single-country funds D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. Mutual funds that invest in the stocks of one country only are called single-country funds. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 4. The performance of an internationally-diversified portfolio may be affected by A. country selection. B. currency selection. C. stock selection. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. 25-8 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 All of the factors may affect the performance of an international portfolio. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 5. Over the period 2011-2016, most correlations between the U.S. stock index and stock-index portfolios of other countries were A. negative. B. positive but less than .9. C. approximately zero. D. .9 or above. E. None of the options are correct. Correlation coefficients were typically below .9. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Diversification measures 6. The __________ index is a widely used index of non-U.S. stocks. A. CBOE B. Dow Jones C. EAFE D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. The Europe, Australia, Far East (EAFE) index computed by Morgan Stanley is a widely used index of non-U.S. stocks. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 7. According to PRS, in 2015, which country had the highest composite risk rating on a scale of 0 (most risky) to 100 (least risky)? A. Switzerland B. Canada C. Germany D. U.S. See Figure 25.9. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 8. Which country has the highest in GDP per capita? A. Luxembourg B. Canada C. Germany D. U.S. See Table 25.1. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 25-9 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 9. Which country has the largest stock market compared to GDP? A. Japan B. Germany C. Hong Kong D. U.S. See Table 25.1. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 10. Using local currency returns, the S&P 500 has the highest correlation with A. Euronext. B. FTSE. C. Nikkei. D. Toronto. See Table 25.6 AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 11. In 2015, the U.S. equity market represented __________ of the world equity market. A. 19% B. 60% C. 43% D. 41% See Table 25.1. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 12. The straightforward generalization of the simple CAPM to international stocks is problematic because A. inflation-risk perceptions by different investors in different countries will differ as consumption baskets differ. B. investors in different countries view exchange-rate risk from the perspective of different domestic currencies. C. taxes, transaction costs, and capital barriers across countries make it difficult for investors to hold a world-index portfolio. D. All of the options are correct. E. None of the options are correct. All of the factors make a broad generalization of the CAPM to international stocks problematic. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Understand Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global considerations and issues 13. The yield on a 1-year bill in the U.K. is 8%, and the present exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. If you expect the exchange rate to be 1 pound = U.S. $1.50 a year from now, the return a U.S. investor can expect to earn by investing in U.K. bills is A. 6.7%. B. 0%. C. 8%. D. 1.25%. E. None of the options are correct. 25-10 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 r(US) = [1 + r(UK)]F0/E0 1; [1.08][1.50/1.60] 1 = 1.25%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 14. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 5%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. The 1-year forward rate is 1 pound = $1.57. What is the minimum yield on a 1-year risk-free security in Britain that would induce a U.S. investor to invest in the British security? A. 2.44% B. 2.50% C. 7.00% D. 7.62% E. None of the options are correct. 1.05 = (1 + r) × [1.57/1.60] 1; r = 7.0%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 15. The interest rate on a 1-year Canadian security is 8%. The current exchange rate is C$ = US $0.78. The 1-year forward rate is C$ = US $0.76. The return (denominated in U.S. $) that a U.S. investor can earn by investing in the Canadian security is A. 3.59%. B. 4.00%. C. 5.23%. D. 8.46%. E. None of the options are correct. 1.08[0.76/0.78] = x 1; x = 5.23%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 16. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4%, and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 7%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.65. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.6037 B. 2.0411 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 1.04/1.07 = x/1.65; x = 1.6037. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 17. The present exchange rate is C$ = U.S. $0.78. The 1-year future rate is C$ = U.S. $0.76. The yield on a 1-year U.S. bill is 4%. A yield of __________ on a 1-year Canadian bill will make an investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. bill and the Canadian bill. A. 2.4% B. 1.3% C. 6.4% D. 6.7% 25-11 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 E. None of the options are correct. 1.04 = [($0.76/$0.78)(1 + r)] 1; r = 6.7%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 18. Assume there is a fixed exchange rate between the Canadian and U.S. dollar. The expected return and standard deviation of return on the U.S. stock market are 18% and 15%, respectively. The expected return and standard deviation on the Canadian stock market are 13% and 20%, respectively. The covariance of returns between the U.S. and Canadian stock markets is 1.5%. If you invested 50% of your money in the Canadian stock market and 50% in the U.S. stock market, the expected return on your portfolio would be A. 12.0%. B. 12.5%. C. 13.0%. D. 15.5%. 18% (0.5) + 13%(0.5) = 15.5%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 19. Assume there is a fixed exchange rate between the Canadian and U.S. dollar. The expected return and standard deviation of return on the U.S. stock market are 18% and 15%, respectively. The expected return and standard deviation on the Canadian stock market are 13% and 20%, respectively. The covariance of returns between the U.S. and Canadian stock markets is 1.5%. If you invested 50% of your money in the Canadian stock market and 50% in the U.S. stock market, the standard deviation of return of your portfolio would be A. 12.53%. B. 15.21%. C. 17.50%. D. 18.75%. 2 2 2 2 1/2 sP = [(0.5) (15%) + (0.5) (20%) + 2(0.5)(0.5)(1.5)] = 15.21%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Challenge Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 20. The major concern that has been raised with respect to the weighting of countries within the EAFE index is A. currency volatilities are not considered in the weighting. B. cross-correlations are not considered in the weighting. C. inflation is not represented in the weighting. D. the weights are not proportional to the asset bases of the respective countries. E. None of the options are correct. Some argue that countries should be weighted in proportion to their GDP to properly adjust for the true size of their corporate sectors, since many firms are not publicly traded. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 21. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 2,000 pounds, one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 2,400 pounds and the pound is worth $1.60. A. 16.7% 25-12 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 B. 20.0% C. 28.0% D. 40.0% E. None of the options are correct. ($3,840 $3,000)/$3,000 = 0.28, or 28.0%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 22. U.S. investors A. can trade derivative securities based on prices in foreign security markets. B. cannot trade foreign derivative securities. C can trade options and futures on the Nikkei stock index of 225 stocks traded on the Tokyo stock exchange and on FTSE (Financial Times Share Exchange) indexes of U.K. and European stocks. D. can trade derivative securities based on prices in foreign security markets and can trade options and futures on the Nikkei stock index of 225 stocks traded on the Tokyo stock exchange and on FTSE (Financial Times Share Exchange) indexes of U.K. and European stocks. E. None of the options are correct. U.S. investors can trade derivative securities based on prices in foreign security markets and can trade options and futures on the Nikkei stock index of 225 stocks traded on the Tokyo stock exchange and on FTSE (Financial Times Share Exchange) indexes of U.K. and European stocks. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 23. Exchange-rate risk A. results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made. B. can be hedged by using a forward or futures contract in foreign exchange. C. cannot be eliminated. D. results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made and cannot be eliminated. E results from changes in the exchange rates between the currency of the investor and the country in which the investment is made and can be hedged by using a forward or futures contract in foreign exchange. Although international investing involves risk resulting from the changing exchange rates between currencies, this risk can be hedged by using a forward or futures contract in foreign exchange. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 24. International investing A. cannot be measured against a passive benchmark, such as the S&P 500. B. can be measured against a widely-used index of non-U.S. stocks, the EAFE Index (Europe, Australia, Far East). C. can be measured against international indexes. D. can be measured against a widely-used index of non-U.S. stocks, the EAFE Index (Europe, Australia, Far East), and against international indexes. E. None of the options are correct. International investments can be evaluated against an international index, such as EAFE, created by Morgan Stanley, and others that have become available in recent years. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember 25-13 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 25-14 by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. lOMoARcPSD|7924206 25. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: Calculate Quantitative's currency selection return contribution. A. +20% B. 5% C. +15% D. +5% E. 10% EAFE: (.30)(10%) + (.10)( 10%) + (.60)(30%) = 20% appreciation; Diversified: (.25)(10%) + (.25)( 10%) + (.50) (30%) = 15% appreciation; Loss of 5% relative to EAFE. AACSB: Knowledge Application Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Challenge Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 26. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: Calculate Quantitative's country selection return contribution. A. 12.5% B. 12.5% C. 11.25% D. 1.25% E. 1.25% EAFE: (.30)(10%) + (.10)(5%) + (.60)(15%) = 12.5%; Diversified: (.25)(10%) + (.25)(5%) + (.50) (15% = 11.25%; Loss of 1.25% relative to EAFE. AACSB: Knowledge Application Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 3 Challenge Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 27. The manager of Quantitative International Fund uses EAFE as a benchmark. Last year's performance for the fund and the benchmark were as follows: 25-15 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 Calculate Quantitative's stock selection return contribution. A. 1.0% B. 1.0% C. 3.0% D. 0.25% (9% − 10%).25 + (8% − 5%).25 + (16% − 15%).50 = 1.00%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 28. Using the S&P 500 portfolio as a proxy of the market portfolio A. is appropriate because U.S. securities represent more than 60% of world equities. B. is appropriate because most U.S. investors are primarily interested in U.S. securities. C. is appropriate because most U.S. and non-U.S. investors are primarily interested in U.S. securities. D. is inappropriate because U.S. securities make up less than 41% of world equities. E. is inappropriate because the average U.S. investor has less than 20% of his or her portfolio in non-U.S. equities. It is important to take a global perspective when making investment decisions. The S&P 500 is increasingly inappropriate. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 29. When an investor adds international stocks to his or her U.S. stock portfolio, A. it will raise his or her risk relative to the risk he or she would face just holding U.S. stocks. B. he or she can reduce the risk of his or her portfolio. C. he or she will increase his or her expected return but must also take on more risk. D. it will have no impact on either the risk or the return of his or her portfolio. E. he or she needs to seek professional management because he or she doesn't have access to international investments on his or her own. See Figure 25.1. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 30. "ADRs" stands for ___________, and "WEBS" stands for ____________. A. additional dollar returns; weekly equity and bond survey B. additional daily returns; world equity and bond survey C. American dollar returns; world equity and bond statistics D. American depository receipts; world equity benchmark shares 25-16 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 E. adjusted dollar returns; weighted equity benchmark shares The student should be familiar with these basic terms that relate to international investing. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global securities 31. WEBS portfolios A. are passively managed. B. are shares that can be sold by investors. C. are free from brokerage commissions. D. are passively managed and are shares that can be sold by investors. E. All of the options are correct. They are passively managed and when holders want to divest their shares, they sell them rather than redeem them with the company that issued them. There are brokerage commissions, however. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global securities 32. The EAFE is A. the East Asia Foreign Equity index. B. the Economic Advisor's Foreign Estimator index. C. the European and Asian Foreign Equity index. D. the European, Asian, French Equity index. E. the European, Australian, Far East index. The index is one of several world equity indices that exist. It is computed by Morgan Stanley. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 33. Home bias refers to A. the tendency to vacation in your home country instead of traveling abroad. B. the tendency to believe that your home country is better than other countries. C. the tendency to give preferential treatment to people from your home country. D. the tendency to overweight investments in your home country. E. None of the options are correct. Home bias refers to the tendency to overweight investments in your home country. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 34. The possibility of experiencing a drop in revenue or an increase in cost in an international transaction due to a change in foreign exchange rates is called A. foreign exchange risk. B. political risk. C. translation exposure. D. hedging risk. Foreign exchange risk is a financial risk that exists when a financial transaction is denominated in a 25-17 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 currency other than that of the base currency of the company. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 35. As exchange rates change, they A. change the relative purchasing power between countries. B. can affect imports and exports between countries. C. will affect the flow of funds between countries. D. All of the options are true. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 36. When Country A's currency strengthens against Country B's, citizens of Country A will A. pay less to buy Country B's products. B. pay more to buy Country B's products. C. pay more to buy domestically-produced products. D. not be affected by the change in their currency's value. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 37. The interplay between interest rate differentials and exchange rates, such that each adjusts until the foreign exchange market and the money market reach equilibrium, is called the A. Purchasing Power Parity Theory. B. Balance of Payments. C. Interest Rate Parity Theory. D. None of the options are correct. Home bias refers to the tendency to overweight investments in your home country. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 38. Which equity index had the highest volatility in terms of U.S. dollar-denominated returns for the period of five years ending in October 2016? A. Shanghai B. India C. Nikkei D. U.S. See Table 25.4 AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 39. Which equity index had the lowest volatility in terms of U.S. dollar-denominated returns for the period of five years ending in October 2016? 25-18 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 A. Korea B. U.S. C. Toronto D. Nikkei See Table 25.4 AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global markets 40. The possibility of experiencing a drop in revenue or an increase in cost in an international transaction due to a change in foreign exchange rates is called A. foreign exchange risk. B. political risk. C. translation exposure. D. hedging risk. Foreign exchange risk is a financial risk that exists when a financial transaction is denominated in a currency other than that of the base currency of the company. AACSB: Reflective Thinking Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Remember Difficulty: 1 Basic Gradable: automatic Topic: Global analysis 41. The yield on a 1-year bill in the U.K. is 7%, and the present exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.65. If you expect the exchange rate to be 1 pound = U.S. $1.45 a year from now, the return a U.S. investor can expect to earn by investing in U.K. bills is A. 6.7%. B. 3.2%. C. 8%. D. 5.97%. E. None of the options r(US) = [1 + r(UK)]F0/E0 1; [1.07][1.45/1.65] 1 = 5.97%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 42. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 6%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.62. The 1-year forward rate is 1 pound = $1.53. What is the minimum yield on a 1-year risk-free security in Britain that would induce a U.S. investor to invest in the British security? A. 15.44% B. 13.50% C. 12.24% D. 7.62% E. None of the options 1.06 = (1 + r) × [1.53/1.62] 1; r = 12.24%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 25-19 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 43. The interest rate on a 1-year Canadian security is 7.8%. The current exchange rate is C$ = US $0.79. The 1-year forward rate is C$ = US $0.77. The return (denominated in U.S. $) that a U.S. investor can earn by investing in the Canadian security is A. 3.59%. B. 4.00%. C. 5.07%. D. 8.46%. E. None of the options 1.078[0.77/0.79] = x 1; x = 5.07%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 44. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4.5% and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 7.7%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.60. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.5525 B. 2.0411 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 1.045/1.077 = x/1.60; x = 1.5525. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 45. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 2,200 pounds one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 2,560 pounds and the pound is worth $1.60. A. 16.7% B. 20.3% C. 24.1% D. 41.4% E. None of the options ($4,096 $3,300)/$3,300 = 0.241, or 24.1%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: International investing - risks, returns, and benefits 46. The present exchange rate is C$ = U.S. $0.78. The 1-year future rate is C$ = U.S. $0.75. The yield on a 1-year U.S. bill is 5%. A yield of __________ on a 1-year Canadian bill will make investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. bill and the Canadian bill. A. 9.2% B. 8.3% C. 6.4% D. 11.3% E. None of the options 25-20 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 1.05 = [($0.75/$0.78)(1 + r)] 1; r = 9.2%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 47. You are a U.S. investor who purchased British securities for 4,000 pounds one year ago when the British pound cost $1.50. No dividends were paid on the British securities in the past year. Your total return based on U.S. dollars was __________ if the value of the securities is now 4,400 pounds and the pound is worth $1.62. A. 16.7% B. 18.8% C. 28.0% D. 40.0% E. None of the options ($7,128 $6,000)/$6,000 = 0.188, or 18.8%. AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships 48. Suppose the 1-year risk-free rate of return in the U.S. is 4% and the 1-year risk-free rate of return in Britain is 6%. The current exchange rate is 1 pound = U.S. $1.67. A 1-year future exchange rate of __________ for the pound would make a U.S. investor indifferent between investing in the U.S. security and investing in the British security. A. 1.6385 B. 2.0411 C. 1.7500 D. 2.3369 1.04/1.06 = x/1.67; x = 1.6385 AACSB: Knowledge Application Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation Blooms: Apply Difficulty: 2 Intermediate Gradable: automatic Topic: Global parities and relationships Chapter 25 Test Bank - Static Summary Category # of Questions 25-21 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com) lOMoARcPSD|7924206 AACSB: Knowledge Application 20 AACSB: Reflective Thinking 28 Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation 45 Blooms: Apply 19 Blooms: Remember 28 Blooms: Understand 1 Difficulty: 1 Basic 19 Difficulty: 2 Intermediate 26 Difficulty: 3 Challenge 3 Gradable: automatic 48 Topic: Diversification measures 1 Topic: Exchange quotes, rates, and risks 6 Topic: Global analysis 11 Topic: Global considerations and issues 1 Topic: Global markets 12 Topic: Global parities and relationships 7 Topic: Global risks 1 Topic: Global securities 3 Topic: International investing -- risks, returns, and benefits 6 25-22 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Downloaded by Louis Bertrand (louisbertrand923@gmail.com)