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Test your basic knowledge |
CFA Level2 Vocab
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certifications
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cfa
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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study here
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. In reference to short-term cash man-agement - an investment strategy characterized by monitoring and attempting to capitalize on mar-ket conditions to optimize the risk and return relationship of short-term investments.
Operating breakeven
Earnings management activity
Payout ratio
Active strategy
2. An increase in a company's earnings that results as a consequence of the idio-syncrasies of a merger transaction itself rather than because of resulting economic benefits ofthe combination.
Monitoring costs
Income
Bootstrapping earnings
Book value equity per share
3. Financial instru-ments that an entity chooses to measure at fairvalue per lAS 39 or SFAS 159. Generally - the elec-tion to use the fair value option is irrevocable.
Designated fair value instruments
Salvage value
Direct debit program
Multivariate distribution
4. A market index portfolio.
Underlying earnings (or persistent earnings - continu-ing earnings - or core earnings)
Passive portfolio
Proportionate consolidation
Market value of invested capital
5. The present value of an investment's cash inflows (benefits) minus the present value of its cash outflows (costs).
Growth investors
Net present value (NPV)
Bottom-up investing
Statistic
6. The seller of a derivative contract. Also refers to the position of being short a derivative.
Stratified random sampling
Discount rate
Short
Segment margin
7. Method used to estimate the overall capitalization rate by dividing the sale price of a comparable income property into the net operating income.
Benchmark value of the multiple
Delta-normal method
Market-extraction method
Discrintinant analysis
8. A record of the change in official reserves - which are the government's holdings offoreign currency.
Cheapest to deliver
Normal distribution
Frequency polygon
Official settlements account
9. The purchase of the accumulated shares of a hostile investor by a company that is targeted for takeover by that investor - usually at a substan-tial premium over market price.
Flip-over pill
Equitizing cash
Asian call option
Greenmail
10. Purchases of one product that are per-mitted by the seller only if the consumer buys another good or service from the same firm.
Tie-in sales
Skewed
Effective annual rate
Direct income capitalization approach
11. A tax that is imposed by the importing coun-try when an imported good crosses its interna-tional boundary.
Binomial random variable
Tariff
Normalized
Historical method
12. A financial statement that reconciles beginning-of-period and end-of-period balance sheet values of cash; provides information about an entity's cash inflows and cash outflows as they pertain to oper-ating - investing - and financing activities.
Statement of cash flows (cash flow statement)
Tax risk
Ordinary least squares (OLS)
Takeover premium
13. The number of shares that would beoutstanding if all potentially dilutive claims oncommon shares (e.g. - convertible debt - convert-ible preferred stock - and employee stock options)were exercised.
Diluted shares
Real GDP per person
Asset-based loan
Intangible assets
14. A process used in a deliverable forward contract in which the long pays the agreed-upon price to the short - which in turn delivers the underlying asset to the long.
Log-linear model
Expiration date
Delivery
Breakup value or private market value
15. The day that employees actually exer-cise the options and convert them to stock.
Histogram
Exercise date
Standard normal distribution (or unit normal distribu-tion)
Temporal method
16. The company's total cost of capital in money terms.
Centralized risk management or companywide risk management
Put-call parity
Sample excess kurtosis
Capital charge
17. The market for short-term debt instruments (one-year maturity or less).
Grouping by function
Money market
Normal backwardation
Linear association
18. The amount at which an asset or liability is valued according to account-ing principles.
Carrying amount (book value)
Operating return on assets (operating
Protective put
Government sector surplus or deficit
19. An arrangement whereby someone - an agent - acts on behalf of another per-son - the principal.
Agency relationships
Impairment
Exercise or exercising the option
Private sector surplus or deficit
20. When disbursements are paid tooquickly or trade credit availability is limited -requiring companies to expend funds beforethey receive funds from sales that could cover theliability.
ackwardation
Efficiency
Economic order quantity-reorder point
Pull on liquidity
21. The risk associated with accounting standards that vary from country to country or with any uncertainty about how certain transac-tions should be recorded.
Equity
Accounting risk
Stock options (stock option grants)
Sole proprietorship
22. The minimum rate of return required by an investor to invest in an asset - given the asset's riskiness.
Number of days of inventory
Sector neutral
Required rate of return
ackwardation
23. With reference to investment selection processes - an approach that starts with macro selection (i.e. - identifying attractive geo-graphic segments andVor industry segments) and then addresses selection 0 the most attractive investments within those
Strap
Ordinary least squares (OLS)
Top-down analysis
Finance lease (capital lease)
24. An entity (partnership - corporation - or other legal form) where control is shared by two or more entities called venturers.
Joint venture
Exposure to foreign exchange risk
Treasury shares
Standard normal distribution (or unit normal distribu-tion)
25. Each value on a binomial tree from which suc-cessive moves or outcomes branch.
Node
Adjusted beta
Efficiency
Report format
26. A strategy in which a position is hedged by making frequent adjustments to the quantity of the instrument used for hedging in relation to the instrument being hedged.
Discrintinant analysis
Settlement date or payment date
Dynamic hedging
Out-of-the-money
27. A bank commitment to extend credit up to a pre-specified amount; the commitment is considered a short-term liability and is usually in effect for 364 days (one day short of a full year).
Committed lines of credit
Survivorship bias
Covered interest arbitrage
Market-oriented investors
28. (Aka forward rate agreement)
Interest rate forward
Liruit down
Risk-neutral valuation
Reorganization
29. Quantiles that divide a distribution into five equal parts.
Quintiles
Markowitz decision rule
Multi-step format
Rate of return
30. A company's chosen propor-tions of debt and equity.
Value investors
Efficiency
Shortfall risk
Target capital structure
31. A level of inventory beyond anticipated needs that provides a cushion in the event that it takes longer to replenish inventory than expected or in the case of greater than expected demand.
Present value of growth opportunities (or value of growth)
Safety stock
Random variable
Mean-variance analysis
32. An acquisition in which the acquirer gives the target company's shareholders some combination of cash and securities in exchange for shares of the target company's stock.
Payout ratio
Purchasing power loss
Stock purchase
Clientele effect
33. A swap in which the underlying is a commodity such as oil - gold - or an agricultural product.
Overnight index swap (OIS)
Annuity
Economic growth
Commodity swap
34. The buyer of a derivative contract. Also refers to the position of owning a derivative.
Long
Net realizable value
Proxy statement
Spreadsheet modeling
35. An association or relationship between variables that cannot be graphed as a straight line.
Nonlinear relation
Expanded
Vertical common-size analysis
Mutually exclusive projects
36. Regulation that seeks to keep the rate of return in the industry at a com-petitive level by not allowing excessive prices to be charged.
Dutch Book theorem
Rate-of-return regulation
Sales
Leveraged buyout (LBO)
37. Assets less liabilities; the residual interest in the assets after subtracting the liabilities.
Build-up method
Vesting date
Equity
Statistical factor models
38. A procedure by which a population is divided into subpopulations (strata) based on one or more classification criteria. Sim-ple random samples are then drawn from each stratum in sizes proportional to the relative size of each stratum in the populati
Put
Local currency
Frequency distribution
Stratified random sampling
39. A form of restructuring that involves the creation of a new legal entity and the sale of equity in it to outsiders.
Settlement period
Band-of-investment method
Equity carve-out
Ratio spread
40. A swap in which one party agrees to pay the total return on a security. Often used as a credit derivative - in which the underlying is a bond.
Definition of value (or standard of value)
Price-setting option
Total return swap
Net operating assets
41. A forecasting process in which the next period's value as predicted by the forecasting equation is substituted into the right-hand side of the equation to give a predicted value two periods ahead.
Chain rule of forecasting
Sensitivity analysis
Simple random sampling
Agency relationships
42. The Eurodollar rate at which London banks lend dollars to other London banks; considered to be the best representative rate on a dollar borrowed by a private - high-quality borrower.
London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR)
Earnings at risk (EAR)
Put
Payout ratio
43. A profitabili ty ratio calcu-lated as EBIT divided by the sum of short-and long-te debt and equi ty.
Forward price or forward rate
Tree diagram
Put-call parity
Return on total capital
44. Asset allocation in which the invest-ment in the market is increased if one forecasts that the market will outperform T-bills.
Bond yield plus risk premium approach
Stock purchase
Market timing
Synthetic forward contract
45. With respect to the format of a bal-ance sheet - a format in which assets - liabilities - and equity are listed in a single column.
Guideline transactions method
Quartiles
Exports
Report format
46. The value of exports of goods and ser-vices minus the value of imports of goods and services.
Asset purchase
Net exports
U.S. GAAP and uniting of interests under IFRS
Economic exposure
47. A theory of economic growth based on the view that the growth of real GDP per person is temporary and that when it rises above subsistence level - a population explo-sion eventually brings it back to subsistence level.
Active risk squared
Add-on interest
Trailing P/E (or current PIE)
Classical growth theory
48. A theory of economic growth based on the idea that real CDP per person grows because of the choices that people make in the pursuit of profit and that growth can persist indefinitely.
Current account
Leading
New growth theory
Time-period bias
49. An opportunity to conduct an arbitrage; an opportunity to earn an expected positive net profit without risk and with no net investment of money.
Arbitrage opportunity
Standard deviation
Poison puts
Safety-first Rules
50. The fixed price or rate at which the transaction scheduled to occur at the expiration of a forward contract will take place. This price is agreed on at the initiation date of the contract.
Forward price or forward rate
Sample statistic or statistic
Earnings expectation management
Bayes' formula