Table of Contents
2 Second Exam
2.1 Chapter 5 - Portfolio topics
1 First exam
1.1 Chapter 1 - Investment overview
- Define the term "investments"
- Discuss how investments are created in the financial markets by the interaction of suppliers (typically households) and users of funds (typically governments and firms)
- List the dimensions that often differentiate financial markets and the securities created - maturity and risk
- Give broad characteristics of three categories of investments
- Debt is a fixed claim on the income and assets
- Equity is an ownership and residual claim on income and assets
- Derivatives derive value from underlying assets but have no claim on a company's physical assets
- Distinguish the goals for individual and institutional investors
- Explain the need for financial intermediaries in financial markets and how their introduction increases the variety and type of investments available (direct vs. indirect investments)
- Outline the steps involved in the investment process especially:
- types of goals for individual investors
- differentiating asset allocation and security selection
- recognizing typical constraints for investors
- If given a tax table, calculate taxable income for individuals
- Determine taxes on investment returns including capital gains, dividends, and interest income
1.2 Chapter 2 - Overview of securities
- Determine the cash flows of a bond - ALWAYS ASSUME SEMIANNUAL COUPONS UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED
- Identify the major issuers of bonds, explaining the key characteristics of each
- Explain the role of US government agencies in raising funds in the financial markets
- Find the equivalent tax-exempt yield of taxable bonds given an investor's tax rate
- List the rights of stockholders
- Differentiate important dates related to dividend payments on stock
- Determine the market capitalization of companies
- Understand all the information provided in a stock quote - e.g., Yahoo Finance quote (P/E ratio and div yield)
1.3 Chapter 3 - Economic analysis
- Explain top-down investment analysis and the sequence of decisions made
- List items that affect the growth of an economy (spending, capacity, etc.)
- Show how changes in currency values affect competition among domestic and international companies
- Discuss the importance of interest rates to the economy and the effects that the federal government has on interest rates
- Describe the fed funds market
- Explain a typical business cycle and the approximate sequence of events
- Explain the tradeoff between economic growth and inflation
- Differentiate cyclical and defensive stocks and provide examples of each
- Indicate how sector rotation strategies attempt to earn higher returns
- Construct price-weighted and value-weighted indices
- Adjust the divisor on a price-weighted index after a stock split
- Identify different types of indices: S&P 500, Wilshire 5000, DJIA, Russell 2000, int'l indices
1.4 Chapter 4 - Measuring risk & return
- Calculate HPRs
- Annualize HPRs using APR and EAR
- Set up the equation that determines IRR and use an excel to find IRR
- Summarize historical returns on investments using average (arithmetic and geometric), variance, and standard deviation and interpret these numbers
- Explain the role of risk aversion in the risk-return tradeoff in finance
- Have a general view of the relative historical performance of major asset classes (no need to memorize every number)
- Discuss the components of investor required returns - real rates of return, inflation, and risk premium
- List the many potential sources of risk that securities may be exposed to
2 Second Exam
2.1 Chapter 5 - Portfolio topics
- Calculate the return and risk of a two-stock portfolio
- Explain correlation and its impact on (1) diversification benefits and (2) the shape of the investment opportunity set
- Distinguish firm specific and market risk and describe how diversification reduces a security's risk
- Define the concept of beta and calculate the beta of a portfolio of securities
- Explain the risk and return tradeoff depicted in CAPM
- Use CAPM to determine the required rate of return of an investment based on its risk
- Graph the security market line and evaluate the attractiveness of individual securities
- Describe how the efficient frontier is determined and why it is important to investors
- Identify an investor's optimal portfolio using the efficient frontier and indifference curves
- Illustrate different levels of risk aversion using indifference curves
2.2 Chapter 6 - Fundamental Analysis
- Indicate the steps in performing fundamental analysis on a company
- Explain the general steps involved with top-down security analysis
- Discuss some key issues that are often important to consider when looking at specific industries
- Understand the information contained in a company's financial statements, including a line by line description of each item in a balance sheet and income statement
- Outline the structure of a cash flow statement - discuss differences between net income and cash
- Analyze the financial statements of a company using ratios in four areas: liquidity, asset management, debt management, and profitability
- Use Dupont analysis to decompose ROE into 3 ratios and identify advantages and disadvantages of a company
2.3 Chapter 7 - Stock Valuation
- Differentiate different stock "values" - par, book, intrinsic, and market
- Calculate the stock price using the dividend discount model - constant growth and multi-stage
- Recognize some of the implications when using the Gordon model
- Explain various approaches to determining the constant growth rate of dividends for a company
- Value stocks using the earnings valuation approach (a.k.a. dividends and earnings) - Project the cash flows for a stock including dividends and future stock price based on a sales forecast, profit margin, and a P/E ratio
- Discuss some of the issues that impact P/E ratios and make it difficult to estimate
- Use market multiple analysis to derive the value of stocks
- Determine if you would buy a stock: (1) intrinsic vs. market value or (2) IRR vs. required return
2.4 Chapter 8 - Technical Analysis
- Explain the overall purpose of technical analysts - using statistical data to monitor supply and demand of securities
- Briefly describe the purpose and trends in Dow Theory
- For each explicit strategy, know how to calculate the statistic and interpret its use for trading purposes
- Explain how trading volume is used by technical analysts to convey the significance of a price move
- Define and use specific technical indicators: advance/decline line or NH/NL, short sales, odd lots, arms ratio (trin), OBV
- Discuss the mechanics of short selling and how investors profit from stock price movements
- Identify different types of charts used by technical analysts: lines, bar, point and figure, moving averages
- Examine the role of support and resistance levels in identifying chart patterns
2.5 Chapter 9 - Market efficiency
- Describe the basic premise of market efficiency and the implications if true
- Differentiate three forms of market efficiency based on the type of information used
- Recognize specific anomalies for different forms of market efficiency: day of the week, January effect, P/E ratios, Value Line enigma
- Explain why testing market efficiency is difficult
3 Third exam
3.1 Chapter 10 - Bond valuation
- Determine the cash flows of a bond - ALWAYS ASSUME SEMIANNUAL COUPONS UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED
- Explain how the relationship between coupon and yield influences the price of a bond (premium, discount, par)
- Illustrate how STRIPS are created from coupon bearing bonds
- Provide an overview of bond ratings and discuss what they indicate
- Identify the components that determine the interest rates on bonds
- Discuss common shapes of the term structure that have been observed in US history
- Given the yield to maturity (yield), price a bond by discounting all the cash flows (Use PV function in Excel)
- Given the current price of a bond, calculate the yield (Use RATE function in Excel)
- Differentiate YTM, YTC, and realized yield - set up the IRR equation and solve using Excel
- Illustrate the relationship between bond prices and yields (draw a price-yield curve)
- Explain the call provision in bonds and explain why an issuer would exercise their option to call the bond prior to maturity
- Draw a price-yield curve for a callable bond and contrast it with a non-callable bond
- Calculate the interest rate sensitivity of a bond through Macaulay and modified duration
- Compare bonds that have different interest rate sensitivity
3.2 Chapter 11 - Investment companies
- Discuss some reasons for buying mutual funds vs. investing money yourself
- Describe different types of investment companies: UITs vs. managed funds
- Distinguish open end and closed end managed investment companies
- Explain how ETFs combine features of both open-end and closed-end funds
- Illustrate how loads and expenses can affect investment returns: front-end, back-end, and 12b-1 fees, plus operating/mgmt fees
- Calculate NAV and premium/discount for closed end funds
- Incorporate sources of return to compute HPR for closed end and open ended funds
- Provide an overview of general types of funds available: equity (growth vs. value, market cap), bonds, diversified
- Define other types of investment vehicles including REITs and hedge funds
3.3 Chapter 12 - Primary and secondary markets
- Explain the differences among the primary market, secondary market, third market, and fourth market
- Provide an overview of a primary market transaction - IPO or seasoned offering
- Discuss the roles of an investment banker in a primary market transaction
- Clarify the advantages and disadvantages of best efforts or a standby commitment
- Characterize the returns of IPOs
- List the roles filled by the specialist on the NYSE
- Distinguish bid vs. ask prices and determine the inside spread of NASDAQ
- Talk about how trades are done on secondary exchanges such as NYSE and NASDAQ
- Create T-accounts and determine equity in transactions involving margin
- Explain the advantages and disadvantages to margin purchases over cash purchases
- Determine the critical stock price when investors receive margin calls - short or long positions
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