Financial Risk Management Pt. 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Risk and return are a function of both market conditions and the risk preferences of the parties involved

A

risk - the chance of financial loss

return - the total gain/loss experienced on behalf of the owner of an asset over a given period (typically, greater risk yield = greater return)

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2
Q

What are the 3 different risk preference behaviors?

A

risk-indifferent: reflects an attitude toward risk in which an increase in the level of risk does not result in an increase in management’s required rate of return

risk-averse: reflects an attitude toward risk in which an increase in the level of risk results in an increase in management’s required rate of return; this requires higher expected returns to compensate for greater risk (most managers fall in this category)

risk-seeking: reflects an attitude toward risk in which an increase in the level of risk results in a decrease in management’s required rate of return; willing to settle for lower expected returns as the level of risk increases

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3
Q

What is interest rate risk (or yield risk)?

A

represents the exposure of the owner of the instrument to fluctuations in the value of the instrument in response to changes in interest rates

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4
Q

What is market/systematic/nondiversifiable risk?

A

the exposure of a company to fluctuations in value as a result of operating within an economy; it is a risk inherent in operating within the economy (related to factors such as war, inflation, international incidents, political events)

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5
Q

What is unsystematic/firm-specific/diversifiable risk?

A

represents the portion of a company’s risk that is associated with random causes and can be eliminated through diversification; it is attributable to industry-specific events (strikes, lawsuits, regulatory actions, loss of a key account)

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6
Q

What is credit risk?

A

it affects borrowers; as credit ratings decline, the interest rate demanded by lenders increases with other terms being generally less favorable to the borrower including the potential of collateral being required

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7
Q

What is default risk?

A

it affects lenders; this is when debtors may not repay the principal or interest due on their indebtedness on a timely basis

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8
Q

What is liquidity risk?

A

if affects lenders; this is when they desire to sell their security but cannot do so in a timely manner or when material price concessions have to be made to do so

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9
Q

What is price risk?

A

represents the exposure that investors have to a decline in the value of their individual securities or portfolios; factors unique to individual investments and/or portfolios contribute to this which becomes an even greater concern with increased market volatility (related to unsystematic risk)

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10
Q

What is stated interest rate (aka nominal rate)?

A

represents the rate of interest charged before any adjustment for compounding or market factors

computation: it is the rate shown in the agreement of indebtedness

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11
Q

What is effective interest rate?

A

represents the actual finance charge associated with a borrowing after reducing loan proceeds for charges and fees related to a loan origination

computation: dividing the amount of interest paid based on the loan agreement by the net proceeds received

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12
Q

What is annual percentage rate?

A

represents a non-compounded version of the effective annual percentage rate; the annual percentage rate is the rate required for disclosure by federal regulations

computation: the effective periodic interest rate times the number of periods in a year; annual percentage rate emphasizes the amount paid relative to funds available

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13
Q

What is effective annual percentage rate?

A

represents the stated interest rate adjusted for the number of compounding periods per year (abbreviated APR)

computation: effective annual interest rate = [1 + (stated interest rate / compounding periods per year)]^compounding periods per year - 1

^ = shows item after it is an exponent

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14
Q

What is simple interest (amount)?

A

represented by interest paid only on the original amount of principal without regard to compounding

computation: simple interest = original principal * (interest rate per time period) * (number of time periods)

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15
Q

What is compound interest (amount)?

A

represented by interest earnings or expense that is based on the original principal plus any unpaid interest earnings or expense

computation: future value = original principal (1 + interest rate)^number of periods

^ = shows item after it is an exponent

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16
Q

The required rate of return is calculated by adding the following risk premiums to the risk-free rate:

A

maturity risk premium (MRP) - the compensation that investors demand for exposure to interest rate risk over time; the risk increases with the term to maturity

purchasing power risk or inflation premium (IP) - the compensation investors require to bear the risk that price levels will change and affect asset values or the purchasing power of invested dollars

liquidity risk premium (LP) - the additional compensation demanded by lenders for the risk that an investment security cannot be sold on a short notice without making significant price concessions; liquidity is defined as the ability to quickly convert an asset to cash at FMV

default risk premium (DRP) - the additional compensation demanded by lenders for bearing the risk that the issuer of the security will fail to pay interest and/or principal due on a timely basis

17
Q

What is diversifiable risk?

A

represents the portion of a single asset’s risk that is associated with random causes and can be eliminated through diversification

18
Q

How can an investor mitigate interest rate risk?

A

by investing in floating rate debt securities which do not change in value when interest rates change and also generate higher coupon payments when interest rates rise

19
Q

How can an investor mitigate market risk?

A

because it is inherent in the marketplace and overall economy, it isn’t easy to mitigate; market risk cannot be mitigated through diversification; one way to control it is to invest in derivatives that provide gains to the investor when the market declines; short selling is another strategy that provides returns when the market declines

20
Q

How can an investor mitigate unsystematic risk?

A

it can be minimized through diversification; a negative effect on one firm/industry/investment would have less of an effect on the value of the portfolio as a whole

21
Q

How can an investor mitigate credit risk?

A

it can be managed through improvements in credit ratings; when credit ratings are higher, borrowing can occur at more favorable terms

22
Q

How can an investor mitigate default risk?

A

it can be done several ways; one way is for a lender to lend only to borrowers with low risk of default; another option is to adjust the interest rates charged to better reflect the risk of each borrower so that higher risk borrowers will pay higher interest rates

23
Q

How can an investor mitigate liquidity risk?

A

this is higher for investments that don’t have active markets; it can be mitigated by allocating a greater percentage of capital to investments that trade on active markets

24
Q

How can an investor mitigate price risk?

A

it can be minimized through diversification; it can also be mitigated through short selling or derivatives such as put options (it gives its owner the right to sell a specific security at fixed conditions of price and time)