2021 CFA LII Mock Exam 2 - AM Session Maria Cadler Case Study
2021 CFA LII Mock Exam 2 - AM Session Maria Cadler Case Study
Fredrica: “When I get a new position, I’d love to recommend your services, as I
appreciate the independent economic research reports you provided to
my team. In the meantime, could you please write me a
recommendation that mentions what great equity research reports my
team provided to our clients?”
1.
In the initial update of her LinkedIn profile, Cadler most likely complied
with which of the CFA Institute Standards of Professional Conduct?
2.
A. Abby
B. Robert
C. Fredrica
3.
Cadler’s quick-thinking action most likely violated Standard V(A): Diligence and
Reasonable Basis because:
4.
A. Recommendation 1
B. Recommendation 2
C. Recommendation 3
Cheng then offers advice to the audience about the benefits of changing
employers, which she believes allows a person to move into higher positions
with greater responsibilities. She explains “Based on my experience, younger
employees get overlooked when employers are filling middle to senior
management positions. By moving to a different firm every three to five years,
you can typically join at a more senior level with higher pay. However, when
you move to a new firm, you need to be cautious so your employer and client
relationships are not harmed.”
Action 2: Utilize your own viewpoints based on your skills and experiences.
The podcast interviewer asks, “I know this is a bit off today’s topic, but I
was wondering, as a CFA® charterholder, how do you ensure you are serving
your clients’ interests as required by the CFA Code of Ethics and Standards of
Professional Conduct? For instance, what would you do if you learned in a
meeting with your client that due to a change in their circumstances, the
investment product they have invested in no longer meets their investment
goals and constraints outlined in their investment policy statement?”
After thanking the interviewer for the opportunity to speak, Cheng makes
the following final statement:
1.
A. No.
2.
A. Action 1
B. Action 2
C. Action 3
3.
A. Option 1
B. Option 2
C. Option 3
4.
Which component of Cheng’s final statement most likely causes her to violate
CFA Standards of Professional Conduct?
Regression
Statistics
Multiple R 0.737399823
R2 0.543758499
Standard error of
estimate
Observations 60
Standard
Coefficient Error p-value
Total 59 0.394924669
2. The model explains more than half of the variation in HighTech’s returns.
3. The NASDAQ index return and the HighTech return are positively correlated.
The committee asks Garfield whether he can use the model to predict the
return on HighTech’s stock. Ram Gupta, a committee member, asks: “What
would HighTech’s return be in a month when the return on the NASDAQ index
is 0.05633?”
Another committee member, Riko Samora, thinks that the simple
regression model omits important factors that might affect HighTech’s
performance. Samora believes that because more than 40% of HighTech’s
customers are in Tokyo, the value of the Japanese currency should influence
HighTech’s sales and that the model’s significance would considerably improve
if Garfield considers this fact.
Multiple R 0.753840729
R2 0.568275844
Adjusted R2 0.553127628
Observations 60
Standard
Coefficients Error t-Statistic p-Value
Garfield presents the new results to Samora, who asks him two
questions:
2. Do you suspect that the model has problems with multicollinearity or serial
correlation?
Garfield responds to the Samora’s questions by examining the F-, t-, and
DW statistics in the regression output to see whether they are significant.
1.
A. 0.0031.
B. 0.1802.
C. 0.0557.
2.
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
3.
B. 0.04154.
C. 0.06297.
4.
Using the results shown in Exhibit 2, the value of the F-statistic is closest to:
A. 9.63.
B. 37.51.
C. 16.76.
5.
Based on the results of the regression model shown in Exhibit 2, the best
conclusion Garfield can make about a hypothesis that the coefficient
JPY/USD change is zero is to:
6.
• Typical of the industry, airline fuel and lease costs are normally priced in US
dollars (USD).
• The landing fees paid at the vacation-area airports are in the local currency,
primarily euros (EUR).
• He reviews the change in the exchange rate for the USD to GBP during 2015,
shown in Exhibit 1, and wonders what the effect of this change was on
Thames’s operating income.
1-Jan-15 0.64
30-Jun-15 0.72
28-Feb-16 0.73
Because of the growing demand for vacation rentals in Spain during the
past year, Thames acquired 100% of Tagus SA (Tagus), a Spanish company
that owns a small vacation hotel and a few villas. Tagus has long-term debt
outstanding from a Spanish bank that financed the 2012 purchase of the
vacation properties, which will now be rented as part of the vacation packages
offered by Thames. Tagus incurs all costs related to operating and maintaining
the rental properties in EUR.
Since the acquisition, all of Tagus’s revenue comes from Thames’s sales
in Britain of the vacation packages. Tagus receives the amounts in GBP. But
Tagus hopes to expand and start renting out any excess capacity of the
properties, or newly acquired properties, to local tourists in the next few years.
Crawley notices that Thames is using the temporal method to translate Tagus’s
financial statements prior to consolidation and asks another analyst, Dee
Chopra, if this is appropriate.
Balance
Balance Sheet Sheet Income Statement
Year-End
Date of (31 Six-Month Period Ending
Acquisition (30 December
June 2015) 2015) 31 December 2015
Earnings 1,320
before taxes
Dividends 500
As the final step in his review, Crawley starts a ratio analysis of Thames
and Tagus, and he asks Chopra which ratios, if any, would be unaffected by
Thames’s choice of translation method for Tagus.
1.
A. EUR.
B. GBP.
C. USD.
2.
Which of the following statements about the effect of the change in the USD to
GBP exchange rate during the year is most accurate? Operating income
for Thames would:
3.
C. adjust the landing fees expense to reflect the change in exchange rate
when they are paid.
4.
5.
The most likely effect of the change in the exchange rate between the EUR and
GBP arising from Thames’s investment in Tagus in 2015 will be a
translation:
6.
The best answer Chopra can give to Crawley’s question about which ratio
would be unaffected is the:
B. current ratio.
Brown pulls up the current draft of the report for Red Hill. The
introduction covers some of the key concepts in corporate finance. It then
explains the pecking order theory and its rationale for managers’ preferences
for various financing methods.
Brown estimates that Red Hill’s current cost of capital is 15%, and the
company could access debt at a rate of 8% as long as its debt-to-equity (D/E)
ratio does not exceed 40%. The corporate tax rate is 22%. As a reference point
for the report, she calculates the cost of equity assuming the maximum D/E
ratio.
In reviewing the contract details for Red Hill’s CEO, who was hired in the
prior year, Brown confirms the existence of a five-year noncompete clause. She
makes a note that this information should be highlighted in the equity offering
documents.
1.
Which of Jamieson’s concerns about the effect of changing Red Hill’s capital
structure is least accurate? The concern related to:
A. the cost of equity.
2.
The theory explained in the draft report introduction suggests that managers
favor financing methods that minimize:
A. risk.
B. cost.
C. information content.
3.
The cost of equity that Brown calculates for the report is closest to:
A. 12.5%.
B. 17.2%
C. 17.8%
4.
A. bonding costs.
B. residual losses.
C. monitoring costs.
White states, “Given the small size of most private firms, the client’s
general strategy is to purchase the private firm and have its sales increase
quickly, which reduces the average cost of the product or service. The best
situation is if the firm eventually becomes large enough to start increasing its
return on invested capital, which is a pre-tax measure that increases as
earnings increase with no additional capital investment.”
White says to Marshall, “If the firm uses futures contracts to offset
possible increases in future costs, the firm may not necessarily need to
increase the price of its products.”
Marshall then states that she is using the most recent five years of sales
growth for determining a terminal value in her analysis. White tells her that
she needs to consider that the economic expansion of the last 10 years has
greatly benefited the company she is analyzing over that period. Marshall
agrees and the meeting concludes.
1.
A. hybrid approach.
B. top-down approach.
C. bottom-up approach.
2.
A. correct.
3.
A. lower.
B. higher.
C. similar.
When the present values of the coupon payments are summed and
added to the present value of the principal payment at maturity, the
result should equal the current price of the bond. In order to calculate the
arbitrage-free value of a bond, we determine the future coupon and principal
payments for the bond. If the yield curve is positively sloped, the appropriate
interest rate used to discount each cash flow will be different. However, in the
event the yield curve is flat, all cash flows will be discounted in the same
manner as in the traditional approach to valuing bonds.”
Holly comments: “Last year, South Africa issued multiple two-year and
four-year Green Bonds denominated in US dollars with annual coupons. The
four-year bonds were callable, while the two-year bonds had no embedded
options.
2 5.97% 6% 7.01%
3 6.91% 7% 9.03%
4 7.81% 8% 11.06%
Dubai 1% 90.842
Shanghai 2% 92.684
Step 1: Using prices of the benchmark bonds, determine the current par curve.
Step 2: Estimate interest rate volatility, and calculate the potential paths of
future rates.
Step 3: Starting with the current market price, calculate each successive
node’s value.”
The interest rate tree must then be calibrated to fit the actual yield curve
while being consistent with an underlying interest rate model.”
1.
A. Yes.
B. No, with respect to the discount rate used with a flat yield curve.
C. No, with respect to the discount rate used with a positively sloped
yield curve.
2.
B. Shanghai
C. New York
3.
Which of Zhang’s three steps to value bonds with embedded options is least
likely correct?
A. Step 1
B. Step 2
C. Step 3
4.
When describing calibrating the interest rate tree, Holly is least likely correct
with respect to the:
A. volatility assumption.
B. assumption of log-normality.
AAA AA A BBB BB
1 ? ? ? 1.004016 ?
River asks Bank to collect data for the term structure of credit spreads.
Bank plots the data and is surprised to find that some curves are higher than
others and that across the term structure, some are upward sloping while
others are flat or downward sloping. River provides his interpretation of the
graph to Bank and makes the following comments:
Comment 1: “Credit quality tends to be a key driver of credit spreads. For
high-quality securities, investors do not demand much higher
compensation for longer maturities because those companies have less
sensitivity to the credit cycle, therefore resulting in only slightly upward
sloping curves.
Comment 2: The liquidity of an issuer can influence the curve as even wider
bid/ask spreads for certain issuers can impact the curve’s shape. If an
issuer currently plans to refinance front end issues with longer
maturities, the issuer’s credit curve will flatten.
1.
Based on Bank’s strategy report, what should River conclude regarding the
direction of benchmark yields and spreads over the benchmark
yield, respectively? Yields and spreads, respectively, most likely will be:
2.
Based on the data in Exhibit 1, the expected price return on the BBB-rated
bonds in River’s portfolio over his horizon attributable to ratings
migration is closest to:
A. 1.01%.
B. –4.10%.
C. –6.57%.
3.
Based on the data in Exhibits 2 and 3, is the corporate bond River considers
buying most likely offered at fair value?
A. Yes.
4.
Which comment made by River regarding the term structure of credit spreads
is least likely correct?
A. Comment 1
B. Comment 2
C. Comment 3
Snyder begins the meeting by asking about the risks and costs of private
equity investing. Clark acknowledges that private equity contains risk factors
and cost considerations that are less prevalent than those in public equities.
One risk factor is illiquidity, since private equity investments are not traded on
an active secondary market. Thus, an important consideration is the timing of
exits relative to a private equity investor’s time horizon. Another risk factor is
diversification. Because of the highly concentrated nature of a typical private
equity fund, investors have little opportunity to benefit from diversification. A
cost consideration is management fees; private equity is generally regarded as
being more costly than public mutual funds and ETFs. Both types of funds
charge administrative costs as a percentage of an investment’s net asset value.
Exhibit 1. Fees and Returns for Three Private Equity Funds ($ millions)
Management Fee 2% 2% 2%
Clark continues the discussion by stating that private equity returns are
typically analyzed and measured on the basis of return multiples. The return
multiples most frequently used by limited partner investors are paid in capital
(PIC); distributed to paid-in (DPI); residual value to paid-in (RVPI); and total
value to paid-in (TVPI). Clark then produces another table (Exhibit 2), which
illustrates cash flow and distribution data for Funds D and E and that is used
to calculate the return multiples.
1.
Clark’s explanation of private equity risks and costs is least likely correct with
respect to:
A. illiquidity.
B. diversification.
C. management fees.
2.
A. Fund A.
B. Fund B.
C. Fund C.
3.
Based on Exhibit 2, the RVPI for Fund D and Fund E, respectively, is closest to:
A. Yes.
1.
Which of Ferguson’s observations about equities and business cycles
is most likely correct?
A. Observation 1
B. Observation 2
C. Observation 3
2.
A. risk premium.
B. GDP volatility.
C. future Inflation.
3.
Is McKenna most likely accurate in her description of the bond-like and equity-
like characteristics of commercial real estate investment?
A. Yes.
4.
In her discussion about the present value formula for commercial real
estate, McKenna is least likely correct regarding her description of the:
A. numerator.