Financial Risk Management Pt. 1 Flashcards
Risk and return are a function of both market conditions and the risk preferences of the parties involved
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)
What are the 3 different risk preference behaviors?
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
What is interest rate risk (or yield risk)?
represents the exposure of the owner of the instrument to fluctuations in the value of the instrument in response to changes in interest rates
What is market/systematic/nondiversifiable risk?
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)
What is unsystematic/firm-specific/diversifiable risk?
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)
What is credit risk?
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
What is default risk?
it affects lenders; this is when debtors may not repay the principal or interest due on their indebtedness on a timely basis
What is liquidity risk?
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
What is price risk?
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)
What is stated interest rate (aka nominal rate)?
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
What is effective interest rate?
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
What is annual percentage rate?
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
What is effective annual percentage rate?
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
What is simple interest (amount)?
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)
What is compound interest (amount)?
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