derivative quiz

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds Chapter 26 Hedge Funds Multiple Choice Questions 1. ______ are the dominant form of investing in securities markets for most individuals but ______ have enjoyed a far greater growth rate in the last decade. A. Hedge funds; hedge funds B. Mutual funds; hedge funds C. Hedge funds; mutual funds D. Mutual funds; mutual funds E. None of these is correct. 2. Like mutual funds, hedge funds A. allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager. B. are commonly organized as private partnerships. C. are subject to extensive SEC regulations. D. are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors. E. are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors. 26-1

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Transcript of derivative quiz

Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

Chapter 26Hedge Funds

 

Multiple Choice Questions 

1. ______ are the dominant form of investing in securities markets for most individuals but ______ have enjoyed a far greater growth rate in the last decade. A. Hedge funds; hedge fundsB. Mutual funds; hedge fundsC. Hedge funds; mutual fundsD. Mutual funds; mutual fundsE. None of these is correct.

 

2. Like mutual funds, hedge funds A. allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager.B. are commonly organized as private partnerships.C. are subject to extensive SEC regulations.D. are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.E. are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.

 

3. Unlike mutual funds, hedge funds A. allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager.B. are commonly organized as private partnerships.C. are subject to extensive SEC regulations.D. are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.E. are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.

 

4. Alpha seeking hedge funds typically ______ relative mispricing of specific securities and ______ broad market exposure. A. bet on; bet onB. hedge; hedgeC. hedge; bet onD. bet on; hedgeE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

5. Hedge funds ______ engage in market timing ______ take extensive derivative positions. A. cannot; and cannotB. cannot; but canC. can; and canD. can; but cannotE. None of these is correct.

 

6. The risk profile of hedge funds ______, making performance evaluation ______. A. can shift rapidly and substantially; challengingB. can shift rapidly and substantially; straightforwardC. is stable; challengingD. is stable; straightforwardE. None of these is correct.

 

7. Shares in hedge funds are priced A. at NAV.B. a significant premium to NAV.C. a significant discount from NAV.D. a significant premium to NAV or a significant discount from NAV.E. None of these is correct.

 

8. Hedge funds are typically set up as ______ and provide ______ information about portfolio composition and strategy to their investors. A. limited liability partnerships; minimalB. limited liability partnerships; extensiveC. investment trusts; minimalD. investment trusts; extensiveE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

9. Hedge funds are ______ transparent than mutual funds because of ______ strict SEC regulation on hedge funds. A. more; moreB. more; lessC. less; lessD. less; moreE. None of these is correct.

 

10. ______ must periodically provide the public with information on portfolio composition. A. Hedge fundsB. Mutual fundsC. ADRsD. Hedge funds and ADRsE. Hedge funds and mutual funds

 

11. ______ are subject to the Securities act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 to protect unsophisticated investors. A. Hedge fundsB. Mutual fundsC. ADRsD. Hedge funds and ADRsE. Mutual funds and ADRs

 

12. Hedge funds traditionally have ______ than 100 investors and ______ to the general public. A. more; advertiseB. more; do not advertiseC. less; advertiseD. less; do not advertiseE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

13. The minimum investment in some new hedge funds is as low as $______, compared to a traditional minimum of $______. A. 50,000; 500,000 to 1 millionB. 25,000; 250,000 to 1 millionC. 175,000; 400,000 to 1 millionD. 10,000; 750,000E. 5,000; 2 million

 

14. Hedge funds differ from mutual funds in terms of ______. A. transparencyB. investorsC. investment strategyD. liquidityE. All of these are correct.

 

15. Hedge funds may invest or engage in A. distressed firmsB. convertible bondsC. currency speculationD. merger arbitrageE. All of these are correct.

 

16. Hedge funds are prohibited from investing or engaging in A. distressed firmsB. convertible bondsC. currency speculationD. merger arbitrageE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

17. Hedge funds often have ______ provisions as long as ______, which preclude redemption. A. crackdown; 2 monthsB. lock-up; 2 monthsC. crackdown; several yearsD. lock-up; several yearsE. None of these is correct.

 

18. Hedge fund strategies can be classified as ______. A. directional and nondirectionalB. stock or bondC. arbitrage or speculationD. stock or bond and arbitrage or speculationE. directional and nondirectional and stock or bond

 

19. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is betting one sector of the economy will outperform other sectors. A. directionalB. non-directionalC. stock or bondD. arbitrage or speculationE. None of these is correct.

 

20. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is attempting to exploit temporary misalignments in relative pricing. A. directionalB. nondirectionalC. stock or bondD. arbitrage or speculationE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

21. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is trying to exploit relative mispricing within a market, but is hedged to avoid taking a stance on the direction of the broad market. A. directionalB. nondirectionalC. market neutralD. arbitrage or speculationE. nondirectional and market neutral

 

22. An example of a ______ strategy is the mispricing of a futures contract that must be corrected by contract expiration. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

 

23. A hedge fund attempting to profit from a change in the spread between mortgages and Treasuries is using a ______ strategy. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

 

24. If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally high compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a relative value strategy would _______. A. short sell the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesB. short sell the Treasury bonds bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesC. buy the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesD. buy the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

25. Assume newly issued 30-year-on-the-run bonds sell at higher yields (lower prices) than 29 ½ year bonds with a nearly identical duration. A hedge fund that sells 29 ½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a ______. A. market neutral positionB. conservative positionC. bullish positionD. bearish positionE. None of these is correct.

 

26. A bet on particular mispricing across two or more securities, with extraneous sources of risk such as general market exposure hedged away is a ______. A. pure playB. relative playC. long shotD. sure thingE. relative play and sure thing

 

27. Assume newly issued 30-year-on-the-run bonds sell at higher yields (lower prices) than 29 ½ year bonds with a nearly identical duration. A hedge fund that sells 29 ½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a ______. A. market neutral positionB. conservative positionC. bullish positionD. bearish positionE. None of these is correct.

 

28. If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally low compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a relative value strategy would _______. A. short sell the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesB. short sell the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesC. buy the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesD. buy the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

29. Statistical arbitrage is a version of a ______ strategy. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

 

30. ______ uses quantitative techniques and often automated trading systems to seek out many temporary misalignments among securities. A. Covered interest arbitrageB. Locational arbitrageC. Triangular arbitrageD. Statistical arbitrageE. All arbitrage

 

31. Assume that you manage a $3 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.45 and an alpha of 1.5% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.025% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1220. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 14C. buying 1D. buying 14E. selling 6

 

32. Assume that you manage a $1.3 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.45 and an alpha of 1.5% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.025% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1220. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 6C. buying 1D. buying 6E. selling 4

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

33. Assume that you manage a $2 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.25 and an alpha of 2% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.05% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1300. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 8C. buying 1D. buying 8E. selling 6

 

34. Assume that you manage a $2 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.3 and an alpha of 2% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.05% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1500. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 7C. buying 1D. buying 7E. selling 11

 

35. Market neutral bets can result in ______ volatility because hedge funds use ______. A. very low; hedging techniques to eliminate riskB. low; risk management techniques to reduce riskC. considerable; risk management techniques to reduce riskD. considerable; considerable leverageE. None of these is correct.

 

36. Hedge funds exhibit a pattern known as a A. January effect.B. Santa effect.C. size effect.D. book-to-market.E. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

37. ______ bias arises because hedge funds only report returns to database publishers if they want to. A. SurvivorshipB. BackfillC. OmissionD. IncubationE. None of these is correct.

 

38. ______ bias arises when the returns of unsuccessful funds are left out of the sample. A. SurvivorshipB. BackfillC. OmissionD. IncubationE. None of these is correct.

 

39. Performance evaluation of hedge funds is complicated by ______. A. liquidity premiumsB. survivorship biasC. unreliable market valuations of infrequently traded assetsD. unstable risk attributesE. All of these are correct.

 

40. The previous value of a portfolio that must be reattained before a hedge fund can charge incentive fees is known as a ______. A. benchmarkB. water stainC. water markD. high water markE. low water mark

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

41. The typical hedge fund fee structure is A. a management fee of 1% to 2%.B. an annual incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits beyond a stipulated benchmark performance.C. a 12-b1 fee of 1%.D. a management fee of 1% to 2% and an annual incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits beyond a stipulated benchmark performance.E. a management fee of 1% to 2% and a 12-b1 fee of 1%.

 

42. Hedge fund incentive fees are essentially A. put options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the current portfolio value.B. put options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the expected future portfolio value.C. call options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the expected future portfolio value.D. call options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the current portfolio value times one plus the benchmark return.E. straddles.

 

43. Regarding hedge fund incentive fees, hedge fund managers ______ if the portfolio return is very large and ______ if the portfolio return is negative. A. get nothing; get nothingB. refund the fee; get the feeC. get the fee; lose nothing except the incentive feeD. get the fee; lose the management feeE. None of these is correct.

 

44. Hedge funds often employ ______ that require investors to provide ________ notice of their desire to redeem funds. A. redemption notices; of several weeks to several monthsB. redemption notices; of several hours to several daysC. redemption notices; of several days to several weeksD. lock-up; several yearsE. lock-up; several hours

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

45. Pairs trading is associated with ________. A. triangular arbitrageB. statistical arbitrageC. data miningD. triangular arbitrage and data miningE. statistical arbitrage and data mining

 

46. ________ refers to sorting through huge amounts of historical data to uncover systematic patterns in returns that can be exploited by traders. A. Data miningB. Pairs tradingC. Alpha transferD. Beta shiftingE. Pairs trading and alpha transfer

 

47. Hedge fund performance may reflect significant compensation for ________ risk. A. liquidityB. systematicC. unsystematicD. defaultE. unsystematic and default

 

48. A ________ is an investment fraud in which a manager collects funds from clients, claims to invest those funds on their behalf, reports extremely favorable investment returns, but in fact uses the funds for his own use. A. ponzi schemeB. bonsai schemeC. statistical arbitrage schemeD. pairs trading schemeE. None of these is correct.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

49. Sadka (2009) shows that exposure to unexpected declines in ________ is an important determinant of average hedge fund returns and that the spreads in average returns across funds with the highest and lowest ________ may be as much as 6% annually. A. market risk; systematic riskB. market liquidity; liquidity riskC. unsystematic risk; unique riskD. default risk; default riskE. market risk; systematic risk and default risk; default risk

  

Short Answer Questions 

50. Explain the five major differences between hedge funds and mutual funds. 

 

 

  

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

Chapter 26 Hedge Funds Answer Key 

 

Multiple Choice Questions 

1. ______ are the dominant form of investing in securities markets for most individuals but ______ have enjoyed a far greater growth rate in the last decade. A. Hedge funds; hedge fundsB. Mutual funds; hedge fundsC. Hedge funds; mutual fundsD. Mutual funds; mutual fundsE. None of these is correct

Mutual funds are the dominant form of investing in securities markets for most individuals and hedge funds have enjoyed a far greater growth rate in the last decade.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: BasicTopic: Hedge funds 

2. Like mutual funds, hedge funds A. allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager.B. are commonly organized as private partnerships.C. are subject to extensive SEC regulations.D. are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.E. are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors

Like mutual funds, hedge funds allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: BasicTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

3. Unlike mutual funds, hedge funds A. allow private investors to pool assets to be managed by a fund manager.B. are commonly organized as private partnerships.C. are subject to extensive SEC regulations.D. are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.E. are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors

Unlike mutual funds, hedge funds are commonly organized as private partnerships and are typically only open to wealthy or institutional investors.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: BasicTopic: Hedge funds 

4. Alpha seeking hedge funds typically ______ relative mispricing of specific securities and ______ broad market exposure. A. bet on; bet onB. hedge; hedgeC. hedge; bet onD. bet on; hedgeE. None of these is correct

Alpha seeking hedge funds typically bet on relative mispricing of specific securities and hedge broad market exposure.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

5. Hedge funds ______ engage in market timing ______ take extensive derivative positions. A. cannot; and cannotB. cannot; but canC. can; and canD. can; but cannotE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds can engage in market timing and can take extensive derivative positions.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

6. The risk profile of hedge funds ______, making performance evaluation ______. A. can shift rapidly and substantially; challengingB. can shift rapidly and substantially; straightforwardC. is stable; challengingD. is stable; straightforwardE. None of these is correct

The risk profile of hedge funds can shift rapidly and substantially, making performance evaluation challenging.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

7. Shares in hedge funds are priced A. at NAVB. a significant premium to NAVC. a significant discount from NAVD. a significant premium to NAV or a significant discount from NAVE. None of these is correct

Shares in hedge funds are priced at NAV.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: BasicTopic: Hedge funds 

8. Hedge funds are typically set up as ______ and provide ______ information about portfolio composition and strategy to their investors. A. limited liability partnerships; minimalB. limited liability partnerships; extensiveC. investment trusts; minimalD. investment trusts; extensiveE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds are typically set up as limited liability partnerships and provide minimal information about portfolio composition and strategy to their investors.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

9. Hedge funds are ______ transparent than mutual funds because of ______ strict SEC regulation on hedge funds. A. more; moreB. more; lessC. less; lessD. less; moreE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds are less transparent than mutual funds because of less strict SEC regulation on hedge funds.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

10. ______ must periodically provide the public with information on portfolio composition. A. Hedge fundsB. Mutual fundsC. ADRsD. Hedge funds and ADRsE. Hedge funds and mutual funds

Mutual funds must periodically provide the public with information on portfolio composition.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

11. ______ are subject to the Securities act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 to protect unsophisticated investors. A. Hedge fundsB. Mutual fundsC. ADRsD. Hedge funds and ADRsE. Mutual funds and ADRs

Mutual funds are subject to the Securities act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 to protect unsophisticated investors.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

12. Hedge funds traditionally have ______ than 100 investors and ______ to the general public. A. more; advertiseB. more; do not advertiseC. less; advertiseD. less; do not advertiseE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds traditionally have less than 100 investors and do not advertise to the general public.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

13. The minimum investment in some new hedge funds is as low as $______, compared to a traditional minimum of $______. A. 50,000; 500,000 to 1 millionB. 25,000; 250,000 to 1 millionC. 175,000; 400,000 to 1 millionD. 10,000; 750,000E. 5,000; 2 million

The minimum investment in some new hedge funds is as low as 25,000 compared to a traditional minimum of 250,000 to 1 million.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

14. Hedge funds differ from mutual funds in terms of ______. A. transparencyB. investorsC. investment strategyD. liquidityE. All of these are correct

Funds differ from mutual funds in terms of transparency, investors, investment strategy, and liquidity.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

15. Hedge funds may invest or engage in A. distressed firmsB. convertible bondsC. currency speculationD. merger arbitrageE. All of these are correct

Hedge funds may invest or engage in distressed firms, convertible bonds, currency speculation, and merger arbitrage.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

16. Hedge funds are prohibited from investing or engaging in A. distressed firmsB. convertible bondsC. currency speculationD. merger arbitrageE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds may invest or engage in distressed firms, convertible bonds, currency speculation, and merger arbitrage.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

17. Hedge funds often have ______ provisions as long as ______, which preclude redemption. A. crackdown, 2 monthsB. lock-up; 2 monthsC. crackdown; several yearsD. lock-up; several yearsE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds often have lock-up provisions as long as several years, which preclude redemption.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

18. Hedge fund strategies can be classified as ______. A. directional and nondirectionalB. stock or bondC. arbitrage or speculationD. stock or bond and arbitrage or speculationE. directional and nondirectional and stock or bond

Hedge fund strategies can be classified as directional and nondirectional.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

19. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is betting one sector of the economy will outperform other sectors. A. directionalB. non-directionalC. stock or bondD. arbitrage or speculationE. None of these is correct

A hedge fund pursuing a directional strategy is betting one sector of the economy will outperform other sectors.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

20. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is attempting to exploit temporary misalignments in relative pricing. A. directionalB. nondirectionalC. stock or bondD. arbitrage or speculationE. None of these is correct

A hedge fund pursuing a nondirectional strategy is attempting to exploit temporary misalignments in relative pricing.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

21. A hedge fund pursuing a ______ strategy is trying to exploit relative mispricing within a market, but is hedged to avoid taking a stance on the direction of the broad market. A. directionalB. nondirectionalC. market neutralD. arbitrage or speculationE. nondirectional and market neutral

A hedge fund pursuing a market neutral strategy is trying to exploit relative mispricing within a market, but is hedged to avoid taking a stance on the direction of the broad market.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

22. An example of a ______ strategy is the mispricing of a futures contract that must be corrected by contract expiration. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

An example of a convergence strategy is the mispricing of a futures contract that must be corrected by contract expiration.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

23. A hedge fund attempting to profit from a change in the spread between mortgages and Treasuries is using a ______ strategy. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

A hedge fund attempting to profit from a change in the spread between mortgages and Treasuries is using a relative value strategy.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

24. If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally high compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a relative value strategy would _______. A. short sell the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesB. short sell the Treasury bonds bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesC. buy the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesD. buy the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesE. None of these is correct

If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally high compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a nondirectional strategy would short sell the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securities.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

25. Assume newly issued 30-year-on-the-run bonds sell at higher yields (lower prices) than 29 ½ year bonds with a nearly identical duration. A hedge fund that sells 29 ½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a ______. A. market neutral positionB. conservative positionC. bullish positionD. bearish positionE. None of these is correct

A hedge fund that sells 29½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a market neutral position.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

26. A bet on particular mispricing across two or more securities, with extraneous sources of risk such as general market exposure hedged away is a ______. A. pure playB. relative playC. long shotD. sure thingE. relative play and sure thing

A bet on particular mispricing across two or more securities, with extraneous sources of risk such as general market exposure hedged away is a pure play.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

27. Assume newly issued 30-year-on-the-run bonds sell at higher yields (lower prices) than 29 ½ year bonds with a nearly identical duration. A hedge fund that sells 29 ½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a ______. A. market neutral positionB. conservative positionC. bullish positionD. bearish positionE. None of these is correct

A hedge fund that sells 29½ year bonds and buys 30 year bonds is taking a market neutral position.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

28. If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally low compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a relative value strategy would _______. A. short sell the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesB. short sell the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesC. buy the Treasury bonds and buy the mortgage-backed securitiesD. buy the Treasury bonds and short sell the mortgage-backed securitiesE. None of these is correct

If the yield on mortgage-backed securities was abnormally low compared to Treasury bonds, a hedge fund pursuing a non-directional strategy would buy the Treasury and short sell the mortgage-backed securities.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: UnderstandDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

29. Statistical arbitrage is a version of a ______ strategy. A. market neutralB. directionalC. relative valueD. divergenceE. convergence

Statistical arbitrage is a version of a market neutral strategy.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

30. ______ uses quantitative techniques and often automated trading systems to seek out many temporary misalignments among securities. A. Covered interest arbitrageB. Locational arbitrageC. Triangular arbitrageD. Statistical arbitrageE. All arbitrage

Statistical arbitrage uses quantitative techniques and often automated trading systems to seek out many temporary misalignments among securities.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

31. Assume that you manage a $3 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.45 and an alpha of 1.5% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.025% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1220. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 14C. buying 1D. buying 14E. selling 6

The hedge ratio is [$3M/(1220 × 250)] × 1.45 = 14.26. Thus, you would need to sell 14 contracts.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: ApplyDifficulty: ChallengeTopic: Hedge funds 

32. Assume that you manage a $1.3 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.45 and an alpha of 1.5% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.025% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1220. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 6C. buying 1D. buying 6E. selling 4

The hedge ratio is [$1.3M/(1220 × 250)] × 1.45 = 6.18. Thus, you would need to sell 6 contracts.

 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

33. Assume that you manage a $2 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.25 and an alpha of 2% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.05% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1300. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 8C. buying 1D. buying 8E. selling 6

The hedge ratio is [$2M/(1300 × 250)] × 1.25 = 7.69. Thus, you would need to sell 8 contracts.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: ApplyDifficulty: ChallengeTopic: Hedge funds 

34. Assume that you manage a $2 million portfolio that pays no dividends, has a beta of 1.3 and an alpha of 2% per month. Also, assume that the risk-free rate is 0.05% (per month) and the S&P 500 is at 1500. If you expect the market to fall within the next 30 days you can hedge your portfolio by ______ S&P 500 futures contracts (the futures contract has a multiplier of $250). A. selling 1B. selling 7C. buying 1D. buying 7E. selling 11

The hedge ratio is [$2M/(1500 × 250)] × 1.3 = 6.93. Thus, you would need to sell 7 contracts.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: ApplyDifficulty: ChallengeTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

35. Market neutral bets can result in ______ volatility because hedge funds use ______. A. very low; hedging techniques to eliminate riskB. low; risk management techniques to reduce riskC. considerable; risk management techniques to reduce riskD. considerable; considerable leverageE. None of these is correct

Market neutral bets can result in considerable volatility because hedge funds use considerable leverage.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

36. Hedge funds exhibit a pattern known as a A. January effectB. Santa effectC. size effectD. book-to-marketE. None of these is correct

Hedge funds exhibit a pattern known as a Santa effect.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

37. ______ bias arises because hedge funds only report returns to database publishers if they want to. A. SurvivorshipB. BackfillC. OmissionD. IncubationE. None of these is correct

Backfill bias arises because hedge funds only report returns to database publishers if they want to.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

38. ______ bias arises when the returns of unsuccessful funds are left out of the sample. A. SurvivorshipB. BackfillC. OmissionD. IncubationE. None of these is correct

Survivorship bias arises when the returns of unsuccessful funds are left out of the sample.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

39. Performance evaluation of hedge funds is complicated by ______. A. liquidity premiumsB. survivorship biasC. unreliable market valuations of infrequently traded assetsD. unstable risk attributesE. All of these are correct

Performance evaluation of hedge funds is complicated by liquidity premiums, survivorship bias, unreliable market valuations of infrequently traded assets, and unstable risk attributes.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

40. The previous value of a portfolio that must be reattained before a hedge fund can charge incentive fees is known as a ______. A. benchmarkB. water stainC. water markD. high water markE. low water mark

The previous value of a portfolio that must be reattained before a hedge fund can charge incentive fees is known as a high water mark.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

41. The typical hedge fund fee structure is A. a management fee of 1% to 2%B. an annual incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits beyond a stipulated benchmark performanceC. a 12-b1 fee of 1%D. a management fee of 1% to 2% and an annual incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits beyond a stipulated benchmark performanceE. a management fee of 1% to 2% and a 12-b1 fee of 1%

The typical hedge fund fee structure is a management fee of 1% to 2% and annual incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits beyond a stipulated benchmark performance.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

42. Hedge fund incentive fees are essentially A. put options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the current portfolio valueB. put options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the expected future portfolio valueC. call options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the expected future portfolio valueD. call options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the current portfolio value times one plus the benchmark returnE. straddles

Hedge fund incentive fees are essentially call options on the portfolio with a strike price equal to the current portfolio value times one plus the benchmark return.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

43. Regarding hedge fund incentive fees, hedge fund managers ______ if the portfolio return is very large and ______ if the portfolio return is negative. A. get nothing; get nothingB. refund the fee; get the feeC. get the fee; lose nothing except the incentive feeD. get the fee; lose the management feeE. None of these is correct

Regarding hedge fund incentive fees, hedge fund managers get the fee if the portfolio return is very large and lose nothing except the incentive fee if the portfolio return is negative.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

44. Hedge funds often employ ______ that require investors to provide ________ notice of their desire to redeem funds. A. redemption notices; of several weeks to several monthsB. redemption notices; of several hours to several daysC. redemption notices; of several days to several weeksD. lock-up; several yearsE. lock-up; several hours

Hedge funds often employ redemption notices that require investors to provide notice of several weeks to several months notice of their desire to redeem funds.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

45. Pairs trading is associated with ________. A. triangular arbitrageB. statistical arbitrageC. data miningD. triangular arbitrage and data miningE. statistical arbitrage and data mining

Pairs trading is associated with statistical arbitrage and is based on data mining.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

46. ________ refers to sorting through huge amounts of historical data to uncover systematic patterns in returns that can be exploited by traders. A. Data miningB. Pairs tradingC. Alpha transferD. Beta shiftingE. Pairs trading and alpha transfer

Data mining refers to sorting through huge amounts of historical data to uncover systematic patterns in returns that can be exploited by traders.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

47. Hedge fund performance may reflect significant compensation for ________ risk. A. liquidityB. systematicC. unsystematicD. defaultE. unsystematic and default

Hedge fund performance may reflect significant compensation for liquidity risk.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

48. A ________ is an investment fraud in which a manager collects funds from clients, claims to invest those funds on their behalf, reports extremely favorable investment returns, but in fact uses the funds for his own use. A. ponzi schemeB. bonsai schemeC. statistical arbitrage schemeD. pairs trading schemeE. None of these is correct

A ponzi scheme is an investment fraud in which a manager collects funds from clients, claims to invest those funds on their behalf, reports extremely favorable investment returns, but in fact uses the funds for his own use.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

49. Sadka (2009) shows that exposure to unexpected declines in ________ is an important determinant of average hedge fund returns and that the spreads in average returns across funds with the highest and lowest ________ may be as much as 6% annually. A. market risk; systematic riskB. market liquidity; liquidity riskC. unsystematic risk; unique riskD. default risk; default riskE. market risk; systematic risk and default risk; default risk

Sadka (2009) shows that exposure to unexpected declines in market liquidity is an important determinant of average hedge fund returns and that the spreads in average returns across funds with the highest and lowest liquidity risk may be as much as 6% annually.

 

AACSB: AnalyticBloom's: RememberDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds  

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Chapter 26 - Hedge Funds

Short Answer Questions 

50. Explain the five major differences between hedge funds and mutual funds. 

The five major categories of differences are transparency, investors, investment strategies, liquidity, and compensation structure. Mutual funds are more highly regulated by the SEC and thus are required to be far more transparent. Hedge funds provide only minimal information about portfolio composition or strategy. Investors in hedge funds differ in that investment minimums were traditionally set at $250,000 to $1,000,000. While newer hedge funds are starting to reduce the minimum investment to $25,000, this minimum is outside the reach of many mutual fund investors. Mutual funds must provide an investment strategy and are restricted in the use of leverage, short selling, and in their use of derivatives. However, hedge funds are less restricted and frequently make large bets that can results in large losses over the short term. Mutual funds are liquid and investors can redeem shares at NAV and have proceeds within seven business days. Conversely, hedge funds often impose lock-up periods as long as several years and require redemption notices of several months even after the lock-up period is over. Thus, hedge funds are far less liquid. While mutual funds charge a management fee, hedge funds add an incentive fee as well. This incentive fee is similar to a call option and the portfolio manager receives a "performance" bonus if the portfolio outperforms the chosen benchmark.

Feedback: This question tests the students understanding of the major differences between hedge funds and mutual funds.

 

AACSB: Reflective ThinkingBloom's: UnderstandDifficulty: IntermediateTopic: Hedge funds 

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