Solution Manual for Essentials of Investments, 11th Edition

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Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments CHAPTER 2 ASSET CLASSES AND FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS 1. Common stock is an ownership share in a publicly held corporation. Common shareholders have voting rights and may receive dividends. Preferred stock represents nonvoting shares in a corporation, usually paying a fixed stream of dividends. While corporate bonds are long-term debt issued by corporations, the bonds typically pay semi-annual coupons and return the face value of the bond at maturity. 2. While the DJIA has 30 large corporations in the index, it does not represent the overall market nearly as well as the more than 5000 stocks contained in The Wilshire index. The DJIA is simply too small. 3. Money market securities are short-term, relatively low risk, and highly liquid. Also, their unit value almost never changes. 4. The major components of the money market are Treasury bills, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, bankersโ€™ acceptances, Eurodollars, repos, reserves, federal funds, and brokersโ€™ calls. 5. American Depositary Receipts, or ADRs, are certificates traded in U.S. markets that representownership in shares of a foreign company. Investors may also purchase shares of foreign companies on foreign exchanges. Lastly, investors may use international mutual funds to own shares indirectly. 6. The coupons paid by municipal bonds are exemptfrom federal income tax and from state tax in many states. Therefore, the higher the tax bracketthat the investor is in, the more valuable the tax-exempt feature to the investor. 7. The London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR)โ€”a key reference rate in the money marketโ€”is the rate at which large banks in London are willing to lend money among them.The Federal funds rate is the rate of interest on very short-term loans among financial institutions in the U.S.A. 8. General obligation bonds are backed by the taxing power of the local governments, while revenue bonds have proceeds attached to specific projects. A revenue bond has fewer guarantees, it is riskier in terms of default, and,therefore,you expect itto have a higher yield. 9. Corporations may exclude 70% of dividends received from domestic corporations in the computation of their taxable income. 10. Limited liability means that the most shareholders can lose in event of the failure of the corporation is their original investment. Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments 11. (a)A repurchase agreement is the sale of a security with a commitment to repurchase the same security at a specified future date and a designated price. 12. Money market securities are referred to as โ€•cash equivalentsโ€– because of their great liquidity. The prices of money market securities are very stable, and they can be converted to cash (i.e., sold) on very short notice and with very low transaction costs. 13. Equivalent taxable yield = Rate on municipal bond 1๏ผ Tax rate = rm = .0425 =.0654 or 6.54% 1๏ผt 1 ๏ผ0.35 14. After-tax yield = Rate on the taxable bond x (1 ๏ผ Tax rate) a. The taxable bond. With a zero tax bracket, the after-tax yield for the taxable bond is the same as the before-tax yield (5%), which is greater than the 4% yield on the municipal bond. b. The taxable bond. The after-tax yield for the taxable bond is:0.05x (1 โ€“ 0.10) = 0.045 or 4.50%. c. Neither. The after-tax yield for the taxable bond is:0.05x (1 โ€“ 0.20) = 0.4 or 4%. The after-tax yield of taxable bond is the same as that of the municipal bond. d. The municipal bond. The after-tax yield for the taxable bond is: 0.05 x (1 โ€“ 0.30) = 0.035 or 3.5%. The municipal bond offers the higher after-tax yield for investors in tax brackets above 20%. 15. The after-tax yield on the corporate bonds is: 0.09 x (1 โ€“ 0.30) = 0.063 or 6.3%. Therefore, the municipals must offer at least 6.3% yields. 16. Using the formula of Equivalent taxable yield (r) = a. r = b. r = c. r = d. r = 0.04 rm 1๏ผt , we get: =0.04 or4.00% 1๏ผ0 0.04 1 ๏ผ0.10 0.04 1 ๏ผ0.20 0.04 1 ๏ผ0.30 = 0.0444 or 4.44% = 0.05 or 5.00% = 0.0571 or 5.71% Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments 17. a. You would have to pay the asked price of: 105.48 = 105.48% of par = $1,054.84 b. The coupon rate is 3.125%, implying coupon payments of $31.25 annually or, more precisely, $15.625(= 31.25/2) semiannually. c. Given the asked price and coupon rate, we can calculate current yield with the formula: Annual coupon income Current yield = = 3.125/105.4844= 0.0296 = 2.96% Price 18. a. The closing price today is $194.55, which is $0.37 aboveyesterdayโ€™s price. Therefore, yesterdayโ€™s closing price was: $194.55๏ผ $0.37 = $194.18. b. You would buy 25shares: $5,000/$194.55 = 25.70. c. Your annual dividend incomeon 25shares would be 25x $3.36 = $84.00. d. Earnings per share can be derived from the price-earnings (PE) ratio: Given price/Earnings = 20.03 and Price = $194.55, we know that Earnings per Share = $194.55/20.03 = $9.71 19. a. At t = 0, the value of the index is: ($90 + $50 + $100)/3 = 80 At t = 1, the value of the index is: ($95 + $45 + $110)/3 = 83.33 V1 The rate of return is: ๏ผ 1 = (83.33/80) โ€“ 1 = 0.0417 or 4.17% V0 b. In the absence of a split, stock C would sell for $110, and the value of the index would be the average price of the individual stocks included in the index: ($95 + $45 + $110)/3 = $83.33. After the split, stock C sells at $55; however, the value of the index should not be affected by the split. We need to set the divisor (d) such that: 83.33 = ($95 + $45 + $55)/d d = 2.34 c. The rate of return is zero. The value of the index remains unchanged since the return on each stock separately equals zero. Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments 20. a. Total market value at t = 0 is: ($90 x 100) + ($50 x 200) + ($100 x 200) = $39,000 Total market value at t = 1 is: ($95 x 100) + ($45 x 200) + ($110 x 200) = $40,500 V1 Rate of return = ๏ผ 1 = ($40,500/$39,000) โ€“ 1 = 0.0385 or 3.85% V0 b. The return on each stock is as follows: V1 RA= ๏ผ 1 = ($95/$90) โ€“ 1 = 0.0556 or 5.56% V0 V1 RB = ๏ผ 1 = ($45/$50) โ€“ 1 = โ€“0.10 or โ€“10.00% V0 RC = V1 ๏ผ 1 = ($110/$100) โ€“ 1 = 0.10 or 10.00% V0 The equally-weighted average is: [5.56% + (โ€“10.00%) + 10.00%]/3 = 1.85% 21. The fund would require constant readjustment since every change in the price of a stock would bring the fund asset allocation out of balance. 22. In this case, the value of the divisor will increase by an amount necessary to maintain the index value on the day of the change. For example, if the index was comprised of only one stock, it would increase by 2.06 points: ($180 โ€“ $34) / $34 = 4.29. 23. Bank discount of 87 days: 0.034 x 87 days 360 days = 0.008217 a. Price: $10,000 x (1โ€“0.008217) = $9,917.83 b. Bond equivalent yield= Face value ๏ผ Purchase price Purchase price x T $10,000 ๏ผ$9,917.83 = 87 days = 0.0348 or 3.48% $9,917.83 x365 days 24. a. The higher coupon bond: The 10-year T-bond with a 6% coupon b. The call with the lower exercise price: The call with the exercise price of $35 c. The put option on the lower priced stock: The put on the stock selling at $50 Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments 25. The December maturity futures price is $3.8575 per bushel. If the contract closes at $3.95 per bushel in December, your profit / loss on each contract (for delivery of 5,000 bushels of corn) will8 be: ($3.95โ€“$3.8575) x 5000 = $462.50gain. 26. a. Yes. As long as the stock price at expiration exceeds the exercise price, it makes sense to exercise the call. Gross profit is: ($144โ€“ $140) x 100 shares = $400 Net profit = ($4 โ€“ $4.80)x 100 shares = $80loss Rate of return = โ€“$.80/$4.80 = โ€“0.1667or 16.67% loss b. Yes, exercise. Gross profit is: ($144โ€“ $135) x 100 shares = $900 Net profit = ($9 โ€“ $8.05)x 100 shares= $95 gain Rate of return = $.95/$8.05 = 0.1108 or 11.08 % gain c. A put with an exercise price of $140 would expire worthless for any stock price equal to or greater than $140 (in this case $144). An investment in such a put would have a rate of return over the holding period of โ€“100%. 27. a. b. c. d. Long call Long put Short put Short call 28. There is always a chance that the option will expire in the money. Investors will pay something for this chance of a positive payoff. 29. Long call for $4: a. b. c. d. e. Value of call at expiration 0 0 0 5 10 Initial Cost Profit 4 4 4 4 4 -4 -4 -4 1 6 Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments Long put for $6: Value of put at expiration a. 10 b. 5 c. 0 d. 0 e. 0 Initial Cost Profit 6 6 6 6 6 4 -1 -6 -6 -6 30. The spread will widen. Deterioration of the economy increases credit risk, that is, the likelihood of default. Investors will demand a greater premium on debt securities subject to default risk. 31. Seven (of ten) stocks have a 52-week high at least 50% above the 52-week low. It can be concluded that individual stocks are much more volatile than a group of stocks. 52-wk high 32.67 16.48 30.74 25.20 64.46 34.05 14.99 20.81 196.97 33.00 52-wk low 20.10 7.30 17.00 17.26 40.66 22.06 3.62 11.65 132.68 28.19 Price ratio (High-Low)/Low 63% 126% 81% 46% 59% 54% 314% 79% 48% 17% 32. The total before-tax income is $4. The corporations may exclude 70% of dividends received from domestic corporations in the computation of their taxable income; the taxable income is therefore: $4 x 30% = $1.20. Income tax in the 30% tax bracket: $1.2 x 30% = $0.36 After-tax income = $4 โ€“ $0.36 = $3.64 After-tax rate of return = $3.64/$40 = 0.091 or 9.10% 33. A put option conveys the right to sell the underlying asset at the exercise price. A short position in a futures contract carries an obligation to sell the underlying asset at the futures price. 34. A call option conveys the right to buy the underlying asset at the exercise price. A long position in a futures contract carries an obligation to buy the underlying asset at the futures price. Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Asset Classes and Financial Instruments CFA 1 Answer: c. Taxation Copyright ยฉ 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

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