A) If their maturities and other characteristics were the same, a 5% coupon bond would have more interest rate price risk than a 10% coupon bond.
B) A 10-year coupon bond would have more reinvestment rate risk than a 5-year coupon bond, but all 10-year coupon bonds have the same amount of reinvestment rate risk.
C) A 10-year coupon bond would have more interest rate price risk than a 5-year coupon bond, but all 10-year coupon bonds have the same amount of interest rate price risk.
D) If their maturities and other characteristics were the same, a 5% coupon bond would have less interest rate price risk than a 10% coupon bond.
E) A zero coupon bond of any maturity will have more interest rate price risk than any coupon bond, even a perpetuity.
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True/False
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) A bond is likely to be called if its market price is below its par value.
B) Even if a bond's YTC exceeds its YTM, an investor with an investment horizon longer than the bond's maturity would be worse off if the bond were called.
C) A bond is likely to be called if its market price is equal to its par value.
D) A bond is likely to be called if it sells at a discount below par.
E) A bond is likely to be called if its coupon rate is below its YTM.
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Multiple Choice
A) Bond X has the greatest reinvestment rate risk.
B) If market interest rates decline, all of the bonds will have an increase in price, and Bond Z will have the largest percentage increase in price.
C) If market interest rates remain at 10%, Bond Z's price will be 10% higher one year from today.
D) If market interest rates increase, Bond X's price will increase, Bond Z's price will decline, and Bond Y's price will remain the same.
E) If the bonds' market interest rates remain at 10%, Bond Z's price will be lower one year from now than it is today.
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Multiple Choice
A) A 10-year, 10% coupon bond has less reinvestment rate risk than a 10-year, 5% coupon bond (assuming all else equal) .
B) The total return on a bond during a given year is the sum of the coupon interest payments received during the year and the change in the value of the bond from the beginning to the end of the year.
C) The price of a 20-year, 10% bond is less sensitive to changes in interest rates than the price of a 5-year, 10% bond.
D) A $1, 000 bond with $100 annual interest payments that has 5 years to maturity and is not expected to default would sell at a discount if interest rates were below 9% and at a premium if interest rates were greater than 11%.
E) 10-year, zero coupon bonds have higher reinvestment rate risk than 10-year, 10% coupon bonds.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) 1.90%
B) 2.09%
C) 2.30%
D) 2.53%
E) 2.78%
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Multiple Choice
A) 1.40%
B) 1.55%
C) 1.71%
D) 1.88%
E) 2.06%
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Multiple Choice
A) $5, 276, 731
B) $5, 412, 032
C) $5, 547, 332
D) $7, 706, 000
E) $7, 898, 650
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) All else equal, a bond that has a coupon rate of 10% will sell at a discount if the required return for bonds of similar risk is 8%.
B) The price of a discount bond will increase over time, assuming that the bond's yield to maturity remains constant.
C) For a given firm, its debentures are likely to have a lower yield to maturity than its mortgage bonds.
D) When large firms are in financial distress, they are almost always liquidated, whereas smaller firms are generally reorganized.
E) The total return on a bond during a given year consists only of the coupon interest payments received.
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Multiple Choice
A) Market interest rates rise sharply.
B) Market interest rates decline sharply.
C) The company's financial situation deteriorates significantly.
D) Inflation increases significantly.
E) The company's bonds are downgraded.
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Multiple Choice
A) 20-year, 10% coupon bond.
B) 20-year, 5% coupon bond.
C) 1-year, 10% coupon bond.
D) 20-year, zero coupon bond.
E) 10-year, zero coupon bond.
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Multiple Choice
A) The most likely explanation for an inverted yield curve is that investors expect inflation to increase.
B) The most likely explanation for an inverted yield curve is that investors expect inflation to decrease.
C) If the yield curve is inverted, short-term bonds have lower yields than long-term bonds.
D) Inverted yield curves can exist for Treasury bonds, but because of default premiums, the corporate yield curve can never be inverted.
E) The higher the maturity risk premium, the higher the probability that the yield curve will be inverted.
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Multiple Choice
A) Adding a call provision.
B) The rating agencies change the bond's rating from Baa to Aaa.
C) Making the bond a first mortgage bond rather than a debenture.
D) Adding a sinking fund.
E) Adding additional restrictive covenants that limit management's actions.
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) If rates fall after its issue, a zero coupon bond could trade at a price above its par value.
B) If rates fall rapidly, a zero coupon bond's expected appreciation could become negative.
C) If a firm moves from a position of strength toward financial distress, its bonds' yield to maturity would probably decline.
D) If a bond is selling at a premium, this implies that its yield to maturity exceeds its coupon rate.
E) If a coupon bond is selling at par, its current yield equals its yield to maturity.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) 1, 063.09
B) 1, 090.35
C) 1, 118.31
D) 1, 146.27
E) 1, 174.93
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) 0.99%
B) 1.10%
C) 1.21%
D) 1.33%
E) 1.46%
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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