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Test your basic knowledge |
Finance Basics
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
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. The larger the expected cash flows - and the lower the perceived risk the higher the stock's price
Working Capital
Hostile Takeover
Dividends Per Share (DPS)
Stock Valuation
2. Net income / Common shares outstanding
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Stock Market
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Formulas for Calculating Stockholders' Equity (SE)
3. An investor whose views determine the actual stock price
Bondholders
Expected Stock $
Expected Stock Price Formula
Marginal Investor
4. Sole Proprietorships - Partnerships - Corporations (incl. S Corp. and Non-profits - Limited Liability Companies (LLC) and Limited Liability Partnerships
Expected % Gain of Stock Price
Legal Structures of Business Organizations
Security Analysis
Income Statement
5. Shows the amount of equity the stockholders had at the start of the year - the items that increased or decreased it and the equity at the end of the year
6. Charge used to reflect the cost of long term assets used up in the production process over their useful life (not a cash outlay). Accelerated generally used for the IRS and straight line for investors
Book Value Per Share (BPS)
Perceived Valuation
Amoritization
Depreciation
7. Current assets - Current liabilities
Corporation or C Corporation
Stock Valuation
Net Working Capital (NWC)
Sole Proprietorships
8. The best way to structure portfolios or 'baskets' of stocks and bonds
Equilibrium
Hostile Takeover
Sets of Financial Statements
Portfolio Theory
9. A special designation that allows small businesses that meet qualifications to be taxed as if they were a proprietorship or a partnership rather than a corporation - exempt from corporate tax - must have less than 100 stockholders to qualify
Important Business Trends
Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)
Balance Sheet
S Corporation
10. Finding the proper values of individual securities
Areas of Finance
Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)
Stockholders
Security Analysis
11. The issue of whether stock and bond markets at any given time are 'too high' or 'too low' or 'about right' - Behavioral Finance is a tool often used to aid in this analysis
Investments
Federal Reserve System
Stock Market
Market Analysis
12. What investors would expect if they had all of the information that existed about a company
Net Operating Working Capital (NOWC)
Asset Valuation
Equilibrium
True Valuation
13. Accomplished through a combination of current liabilities - long-term debt - and common equity
Intrinsic Value
Asset Funding
Operating Income /(EBIT)
Convertible Bonds
14. Amount of cash that could be withdrawn from a firm without harming its ability to operate and to produce future cash flows/ how much cash a firm can distribute to its investors - [ EBIT x (1-T) + Depreciation & Amoritization] - [Capital expenditures
Free Cash Flow (FCF)
Perceived Valuation
Formulas for Calculating Stockholders' Equity (SE)
Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)
15. New investments - raise funds through financing - repurchased debt or equity - or paid dividends. How much cash the firm started the year with - how much it ended up with and what it did to increase or decrease its cash. A report that shows how th
Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)
Statement of Cash Flows
Net Operating Working Capital (NWOC)
Retained Earnings
16. An individual who targets a corporation for takeover because it is undervalued
Federal Reserve System
Corporate Raider
Partnership
Expected Stock Price Formula
17. Categorized as current assets because are used & then replaced
Financial Management/Corporate Finance
Working Capital
S Corporation
Legal Structures of Business Organizations
18. Investor psychology is examined in an effort to determine if stock prices have been bid up to unreasonable heights in a speculative bubble or driven down to unreasonable lows in a fit of irrational pessimism
Annual Report
Financial Management/Corporate Finance
Important Business Trends
Behavioral Finance
19. An uninicorporated business owned by one individual. 3 advantages - Easy and inexpensive to form - subject to few government regulations - and subject to lower income taxes than corporations. 3 disadvantages - Unlimited personal liability for the bu
Sole Proprietorships
Asset Valuation
Dividends Per Share (DPS)
Free Cash Flow (FCF)
20. An estimate of a stock's 'true' value based on accurate risk adn return data - it can be estimated but not measured precisely - estimate by stock analysts - a long term concept - management should maximize this value not the market price
Intrinsic Value
Sets of Financial Statements
Financial Management/Corporate Finance
Sole Proprietorships
21. Law passed by Congress that requires CEO's & CFO's to certify their firms financial statements are accurate and deal with the consequences if the statements are not accurate
Corporate Raider
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Operating Income /(EBIT)
Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)
22. An unincorporated business owned by 2 or more persons. 3 advantages - Easy and inexpensive to form - subject to few government regulations - and subject to lower income taxes than corporations. 3 disadvantages - Unlimited personal liability for the
Important Business Trends
Partnership
Asset Funding
Hostile Takeover
23. Receive fix payments regardless of how well the company does - often in conflict with stockholders
Federal Reserve System
Stockholders
Bondholders
3 Reasons to Form a Corporation
24. Regulates banks and controls the supply of money
Convertible Bonds
Stock Valuation
Legal Structures of Business Organizations
Federal Reserve System
25. The value of any asset is the present value or the stream of cash flows that the asset provides to its owners over time. In general the valuation is different if it is the 'market value' or the 'book value'
Sole Proprietorships
Balance Sheet
Asset Funding
Asset Valuation
26. For example - based on 50% probability of failure/success and current bond value of $1000 - a current stock price of $10 and projected new stock price of $2000 if successful
Expected Stock Price Formula
Convertible Bonds
Business Ethics
Amoritization
27. Represents the amount that stockholders paid the company when shares were purchased and the amount or earnings the company has retained since its origination
28. Debt securities that give the bondholder an option to exchange their bonds for shares of common stock
Intrinsic Value
Convertible Bonds
Behavioral Finance
Security Analysis
29. Earnings Before Interest - Taxes - Depreciation & Amoritization = Sales revenues - operating costs
EBITDA
Sole Proprietorships
Areas of Finance
3 Reasons to Form a Corporation
30. How did sales perform and did it make a profit? A report summarizing a firm's revenues - expenses and profits during a reporting period (generally a quarter or a year)
Income Statement
Book Value Per Share (BPS)
S Corporation
Security Analysis
31. 1 for the IRS - the other for reporting to investors
Shareholder Wealth Maximization
Sets of Financial Statements
Book Value Per Share (BPS)
Market Analysis
32. The markets where interest rates - along with stock and bond prices are determined
Retained Earnings
Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)
Federal Reserve System
Capital Markets
33. Current assets - (Current liabilities - Notes payable)
Security Analysis
Behavioral Finance
Federal Reserve System
Net Operating Working Capital (NWOC)
34. Current assets - (Current liabilities - Notes payables)
Net Operating Working Capital (NOWC)
Partnership
Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)
Sole Proprietorships
35. A company's attitude and conduct toward its employees - customers - community - and stockholders
Business Ethics
Statement of Cash Flows
Sole Proprietorships
Working Capital
36. What investors DO expect given the limited information they actually have
Shareholder Wealth Maximization
S Corporation
3 Reasons to Form a Corporation
Perceived Valuation
37. Expected % Gain of Stock Price = Increase of stock $ less original stock $ ($1 - 000 - $10) divided by original stock price (/ $10 x 100%) (100% is a constant)
Expected Stock $
Expected % Gain of Stock Price
Stockholders
Stock Market
38. Issued annually by a corporation to its stockholders - containing basic financial statements as well as management's analysis of the firm's past operations and future prospects. Provides 4 basic reports - Balance Sheet - Income Statement - Stateme
EBITDA
Annual Report
Sets of Financial Statements
Formulas for Calculating Stockholders' Equity (SE)
39. Dividends paid to common shareholders / Common shares outstanding
Behavioral Finance
Expected Stock Price Formula
Dividends Per Share (DPS)
3 Reasons to Form a Corporation
40. A legal entity created by a state - separate and distinct from its owners and managers - having unlimited life - easy transferability of ownership an limited liability. Major drawback is double taxation - earnings are taxed and dividends paid out
Stock Valuation
Convertible Bonds
Corporation or C Corporation
Equilibrium
41. Acquisition of a company over the opposition of its management
Formulas for Calculating Stockholders' Equity (SE)
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Hostile Takeover
Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)
42. Focuses on decisions relating to how much and what types of assets to acquire - how to raise the capital needed to purchase assets - and how to run the firm so as to maximize its value
Stockholders
Financial Management/Corporate Finance
3 Reasons to Form a Corporation
Behavioral Finance
43. Profit a company would generate if it had no debt and held only operating assets - = EBIT x (1-T)
Asset Funding
Investments
Net Operating Profit After Taxes (NOPAT)
Balance Sheet
44. A non-cash charge similar to depreciation except that it is used to write off the costs of intangible assets over their useful life
Sets of Financial Statements
Areas of Finance
Amoritization
Marginal Investor
45. Indicates how large a company is. What assets the company owns & who has claims on those assets as of a given date. Displayed in 2 columns with the assets (what the company owns) on the left side and the firms liabilities and equity on the right side
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
EBITDA
Portfolio Theory
Balance Sheet
46. Bears = pessimists - Bulls = optimists
Balance Sheet
Stock Market
Equilibrium
Stockholders
47. Receive more when the company does better - often in conflict with bondholders
Expected Stock $
Stockholders
Sets of Financial Statements
Stock Market
48. A relatively new type of organization that is a hybrid between a partnership and a corporation. It has limited liability like corporations - but is taxed like partnerships. Investors have votes in proportion to their share of ownership
Marginal Investor
Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)
Net Operating Working Capital (NOWC)
Expected Stock $
49. Indicates a rapidly growing company (investing in new assets) which is ok as long as the company eventually utilizes the assets to become profitable and contribute to its FCF
Negative FCF
S Corporation
Capital Markets
Operating Income /(EBIT)
50. Success (0.5 x $2000) + Failure (0.50 x $0) = $1 - 000 (New Stock Price)
Asset Valuation
Net Working Capital (NWC)
Expected Stock $
Behavioral Finance