Econ and Business Info Flashcards

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1
Q

Examples of Fiscal Policy

A

Tax
Government spending

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2
Q

What are leading indicators?

A

SP500
Unemployment claims

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3
Q

What are coincident indicators?

A

GDP
Manufacturing
Unemployment rate

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4
Q

What are lagging indicators?

A

Inventory
Duration of unemployment

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5
Q

What are systematic risks?

A

Also known as market risks or undiversifiable risks, are factors that affect the entire market or a large segment of it, rather than just a particular company or industry. Examples are interest rate, market, currency.

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6
Q

What are unsystematic risks?

A

Business, regulatory, political

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7
Q

If the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) wants to curb inflation, what do they do?

A

Inflation means too much money supply, to decrease money supply: issue high interest bonds –> more people will buy bonds –> FRB will keep that money –> less money supply –> value of USD goes up –> increase trade deficit

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8
Q

What does an inverted yield curve imply?

A

Signals an upcoming recession because it reflects investors’ expectations of weaker economic conditions in the future.

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9
Q

When there is a triggering event, how soon do you have to file the 8k?

A

4 business days

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10
Q

What are Current Assets?

A

Can convert into cash within a year:

Cash
Inventory
AR
Marketable Securities

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11
Q

What are Current Liabilities?

A

Within a year:

AP
Wages
This year’s interest on loans

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12
Q

(Current Assets + Fixed Assets) - (Current Liabilities + Long term Liabilities) =

A

Shareholder’s equity:

Long term stocks
Retained earnings

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13
Q

What is Current Ratio?

A

A company’s short term liquidity:

CA/CL
2:1 is good

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14
Q

What is Quick Ratio?

A

(CA-inventory)/CL
AKA acid test
1:1 is good

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15
Q

What is future value and how do you calculate it?

A

The value of an investment at a future date:

FV = PV * (1+IRR)^t

Ex: I invest $100 today. Interest rate is 10% a year. In 5 years, this $100 will be worth $161

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16
Q

What is Net Present Value?

A

You estimate the future cash flow of a project, turn that cash flow into present day value and add it up, and see if the final result is worth the investment. You don’t need to do the hard calculation, but here is what you need to know:

Ex: you are given a bond, and its interest rate, and is given the PV of this bond. Say it’s $1120. Then you are told that you can buy this bond now for $1100. Then NPV is $20, which means it’s worth the investment.

If NPV is positive, it’s a good one. Otherwise stay away.

17
Q

What is IRR

A

IRR is basically annualized return.

Ex: you have an opportunity, put in $1000, you’ll get $500 in year 1, and $600 in year 2. IRR is the average annual return, in this case 6.39%.

If you have another opportunity, and it offers a guaranteed return higher than 6.39%, then you would want to go with that.

Another example: YTM is IRR for a bond!

18
Q

NPV vs IRR

A

Both are used to compare two investments.

NPV compares current cost vs estimated value in $.

IRR compares annualized returns in %.

19
Q

NPV vs DCF

A

NPV = DCF - Initial investment

DCF = PV but discount it to present day value

20
Q

What is Beta and how do you calculate it?

A

Beta is used to measure volatility:

Beta = Your volatility / SP500 volatility

21
Q

What is Alpha and how do you calculate it?

A

Alpha is used to measure business risk (e.g., new product release, management change)

Current beta - Historical beta = Alpha

22
Q

Qualified vs Unqualified vs Adverse Annual Audits

A

Qualified = identified issues or discrepancies

Unqualified = accurate and compliant with accounting standards.

Adverse = worst … it means you are purposely misrepresenting info

23
Q

Keynesian Theory

A

To get out of recession, government should tax less and spend more.